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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67797 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67797)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Watson's Magazine, Vol. IV, No. 2,
-April, 1906, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Watson's Magazine, Vol. IV, No. 2, April, 1906
-
-Authors: Various
- Thomas E. Watson
-
-Release Date: April 7, 2022 [eBook #67797]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: hekula03 and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images
- made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WATSON'S MAGAZINE, VOL. IV,
-NO. 2, APRIL, 1906 ***
-
-
-
-[Illustration: ABRAHAM LINCOLN]
-
-was the radical of his day. Many of the views expressed in his letters
-and speeches would strike a “good Republican” of today as extremely
-radical.
-
-ARE YOU ACQUAINTED
-
-with the great commoner’s views on political and religious liberty,
-on alien immigration, on the relation of labor and capital, on the
-colonization of negroes, on free labor, on lynch law, on the doctrine
-that all men are created equal, on the importance of young men in
-politics, on popular sovereignty, on woman suffrage?
-
-All of his views are to be found in this edition of “LINCOLN’S LETTERS
-AND ADDRESSES,” the first complete collection to be published in a single
-volume. Bound in an artistic green crash cloth, stamped in gold. Printed
-in a plain, readable type, on an opaque featherweight paper.
-
-For $1.95, sent direct to this office, we will enter a year’s
-subscription to WATSON’S MAGAZINE and mail a copy of LINCOLN’S LETTERS
-AND ADDRESSES, postage prepaid. This handsome book and Watson’s
-Magazine—both for only $1.95. Send today. Do it now.
-
- TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE
- 121 West 42d St., New York City
-
-
-
-
-WATSON’S MAGAZINE
-
-
-THE MAGAZINE WITH A PURPOSE BACK OF IT
-
- _THOMAS E. WATSON_ _Editor_
- _JOHN DURHAM WATSON_ _Associate Editor_
- _RICHARD DUFFY_ _Managing Editor_
- _ARTHUR S. HOFFMAN_ _Assistant Editor_
- _C. Q. DE FRANCE_ _Circulation Manager_
- _TED FLAACKE_ _Advertising Manager_
-
-April, 1906
-
- _Frontispiece_ _W. Gordon Nye_
-
- _Editorials_ _Thomas E. Watson_ _161_
-
- _Sam Spencer_—_The Ungrateful Negro_—_An Indignant Wisconsin_
- _Editor_—_The Man and The Land_—_Random Comment_
-
- _Machine Rule and Its Termination_ _George H. Shibley_ _193_
-
- _A Basket and a Fortune_ _Louise Forsslund_ _201_
-
- _Control or Ownership_ _Charles Q. De France_ _209_
-
- _The Sacrifice_ _Jack B. Norman_ _212_
-
- _Our Civilization_ _Count Lyof Tolstoy_ _218_
-
- _A Coal Miner’s Story_ _Charles S. Moody, M. D._ _219_
-
- _The Pessimist; His View-Point_ _227_
-
- _Those That Are Joined Together_ _Charles Fort_ _228_
-
- _The Money Power_ _L. H. B._ _240_
-
- _The Russian Apostle of Populism_ _Thomas C. Hutton_ _241_
-
- _Lucianna’s Keep_ _Elliot Walker_ _244_
-
- _Who Pays the Taxes?_ _William H. Tilton_ _253_
-
- _Letters from the People_ _258_
-
- _Educational Department_ _Thomas E. Watson_ _275_
-
- _Home_ _Louise H. Miller_ _277_
-
- _Books_ _Thomas E. Watson_ _290_
-
- _The Easter Hope_ _Cora A. Matson Dolson_ _300_
-
- _The Say of Other Editors_ _301_
-
- _News Record_ _306_
-
- _Along the Firing Line_ _Circulation Manager_ _318_
-
- Application made for Entry as Second-Class Matter, February 17,
- 1906, at the Post Office at New York, N. Y., under the Act of
- Congress of March 3, 1879.
-
- Copyright, 1906, in U. S. and Great Britain. Published by TOM
- WATSON’S MAGAZINE, 121 WEST 42D STREET, N. Y.
-
- TERMS: $1.50 A YEAR; 15 CENTS A NUMBER
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: The Mockers of the Law and Despoilers of the People Have
-in Their Pay Vast Numbers to Vent Spleen and Venom on the Man that Dares
-to Speak Truth.]
-
-
-
-
-_WATSON’S MAGAZINE_
-
- VOL. IV APRIL, 1906 NO. 2
-
-
-
-
-_Editorials_
-
-BY THOMAS E. WATSON
-
-
-_Sam Spencer_
-
-Not long ago the Voting Trustees of the Southern Railway Company wrote to
-Samuel Spencer, President of that robber combine, in the following terms:
-
-“We congratulate you upon the success achieved in the extension and
-operation of the property which have resulted in nearly doubling the
-extent of its lines, trebling its gross earnings, and increasing its
-net earnings above fixed charges, _over five hundred and twenty-five
-per cent._ in the period of eleven years which have elapsed since its
-formation.”
-
-Bully for Sam!
-
-He set out to please the men who bought him, and he has done it.
-
-The Wall Street rascals who grabbed up the railroads in the Southern
-States knew very well that they themselves could not do the work which
-was required for the success of their schemes. The Belmonts and the
-Morgans could not in person approach the editors, the politicians, the
-legislators and the federal judges.
-
-Strategy requires that local men be used in the looting of any given
-state or section. One traitor inside the citadel is worth ten thousand
-soldiers on the outside, when the object is to take the citadel. To bribe
-somebody from within to open the gates is far more effective, vastly more
-to be desired, than to attempt to breach the walls or batter down the
-gates.
-
-Consequently when Western states are to be plundered, the Wall
-Street corporations use Western men as their tools. Local Western
-corruptionists sell out to Wall Street, and do in Western states the
-dirty work of their Wall Street masters.
-
-So in the South, the Wall Street robber-gangs do not operate in person;
-they act through Southern agents.
-
-In pursuance of this subtle policy, the Wall Street corporations, who
-gobbled up the various lines which now compose the Southern Railway
-System, put at the head of it a Southern man, a Georgian, of the name of
-Samuel Spencer.
-
-They chose wisely. They generally choose wisely. The expert workman does
-not better know how to select his tools than such men as Belmont, Morgan,
-Ryan, Rogers and Rockefeller know how to pick out the men who can do what
-Wall Street expects.
-
-The Wall Street rascals had faith in Sam Spencer, and Sam has justified
-that confidence.
-
-Never did any robber-chief have an abler lieutenant than Belmont, the
-Rothschild agent, has had in Sam.
-
-The task to which they set him was hard. It demanded that he freeze his
-heart and stifle his conscience. It demanded that he shut out from his
-view of life every other purpose whatsoever, save the heaping up of
-dividends for a ravenous gang of Wall Street rascals.
-
-To make his work seem good in the sight of the men who had bought him it
-was necessary that he combine railroads which the law said should not be
-combined, that he destroy competition where the law said it should live,
-that he charge excessive rates to shippers and passengers when the law
-said the rates should be reasonable.
-
-He has done this in spite of the law, in spite of the people.
-
-How?
-
-[Illustration: “One traitor inside the citadel is worth ten thousand
-soldiers on the outside.”]
-
-Editors have been bribed into collusion or silence; politicians have been
-softened with boodle; lobbyists have been kept in clover; legislators
-have been duped or corrupted. Railroad Commissions have been seduced or
-defied, federal judges have been mellowed with favors, blandishments,
-indirect temptings which poor human nature can seldom resist.
-
-Bully for Sam!
-
-He is victorious all along the line. From Washington City he rules the
-South. In his native State of Georgia he is monarch of all he surveys.
-He made Terrell governor, and he means to make Howell governor. He
-controlled nearly all the daily papers, but he wanted another—so he had
-Jim English to cut the ground from under the feet of John Temple Graves
-and scoop the _Atlanta News_.
-
-Hamp McWhorter is his hireling, and Hamp keeps the mechanism of
-corruption oiled. Hamp keeps the Legislature in pliant mood. Hamp jollies
-and greases the local politician. Hamp peddles the free passes. Hamp
-picks and chooses the “local attorneys.” Hamp “sees” the editor who
-appears to require “seeing.”
-
-But the Brain and Will of the whole plot are those of Sam Spencer.
-
-For eleven years that God-given brain and will have been concentrated
-upon one purpose, only one—to heap up riches for Wall Street rascals!
-Great has been the result. Sam Spencer’s masters are so highly pleased
-with his work that THEY congratulate HIM!
-
-How interesting! It seems to me that _they_ are the fellows to be
-congratulated. Sam has doubled the amount of their property, he has
-trebled the gross income from that property, and has increased their
-_net_ revenues _over 525 per cent_!
-
-Colossal profits these. _How were they made?_
-
-By such a system of dishonesty, extortion, law-breaking, and reckless
-disregard of human life as has rarely been known, even in the history of
-modern commercialism.
-
-The merchants and farmers throughout the Southern States have been
-ruthlessly robbed. The melon growers, the fruit men, the truck gardeners
-have, in thousands of cases, been so hounded and harried and victimized
-by excessive charges, secret rebates and discriminations in favor of
-other shippers, that they have been literally driven out of the field,
-broken and despairing.
-
-Roadbeds, bridges, safety appliances, have been so wantonly neglected
-that almost every mile of the Southern Railway System from Washington
-southward has known its tragedy, where men, women and children were
-dashed to sudden, horrible death.
-
-It was not the hard necessity of poverty that drove Sam Spencer to a
-policy so heartless as this. He had the means wherewith to put his roads
-in first-class order, had he wished to spend the funds in that way. It
-was not necessary for him to rob the men who were obliged to patronize
-his roads. If a fair, legitimate profit upon actual investment was
-all that he sought, he could have got it without doing the slightest
-injustice to any human being.
-
-But he wanted more than that. A reasonable return upon the actual
-investment was not enough. So, he neglected the bridge until it fell,
-with its sickening horror, its shrieking mass of passengers doomed to
-frightful death. He neglected the safety appliances, and the full force
-of workmen, until some rotten crosstie, or defective rail, or open
-switch, or telegram which the dulled brain of an overworked engineer
-failed to comprehend, brought about derailments and collisions, with the
-heartrending consequence of crushed and burning cars, of crushed and
-burning men, women and children.
-
-[Illustration: “The merchants and farmers throughout the Southern states
-have been ruthlessly robbed.”]
-
-Had the same proportion of the earnings been used to improve the
-property, as is the universal custom in Europe, there would have been the
-same security to the passenger that there is in Europe.
-
-But the net profit to Wall Street would have been only a fair return upon
-the money actually invested—as it is in Europe.
-
-Wall Street demands more than that. Sam Spencer’s task was to get what
-Wall Street wanted.
-
-Have I not already said that Wall Street knows how to pick out its man?
-
-It never chose a better tool for its purpose than Sam Spencer.
-
-He has doubled the _amount_ of their property.
-
-That is good.
-
-But he has done better than that.
-
-He has trebled the gross earnings.
-
-And that is good, too.
-
-But he has done still better than that.
-
-He has increased the NET earnings more than FIVE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIVE
-PER CENT!
-
-Good, _better_, BEST.
-
-That enormous profit had to be made out of somebody.
-
-Freight rates and passenger rates are taxes which the transportation
-companies levy upon freight and passengers. When Sam Spencer added 525
-per cent. to the net revenue of his masters, he had to tax it out of the
-people who patronized the Southern Railroad.
-
-Who were these people? Mostly, Southern people. The tax was levied upon
-the South, and paid by the South.
-
-Sam Spencer is a Southern man?
-
-Bless you, yes!
-
-Wall Street hired him to systematize the robbery of his own people, and
-he has done it.
-
-[Illustration: “We lost fewer lives to the invading host of Sherman than
-we have lost to the railroads under Sam Spencer.”]
-
-During the eleven years of his rule he has plundered his own people of
-more money than they lost by Sherman’s “Marching through Georgia.”
-
-The people of the South have lost more to the Wall Street railway
-corporations than they lost to the whole of Sherman’s army.
-
-The battles of the Civil War were bloody, for it was Greek meet Greek,
-and it was, in truth, the tug of war. Especially were the battles bloody
-when Sherman came down against us, for he brought Western troops—the best
-that the Union had.
-
-But we lost fewer lives to the invading host of Sherman than we have lost
-to the railroads during the eleven years that Sam Spencer has been one
-of their most relentless and unscrupulous lieutenants.
-
-He and his allies in plunder and crime killed and wounded, last year, the
-staggering total of 92,000 human beings.
-
-The ghastly record grows bloodier every year.
-
-Human life is nothing; dividends are everything.
-
-_Five hundred and twenty-five per cent!_
-
-And Sam Spencer’s bosses pat _him_ on the back and congratulate _him_.
-
-Ah, yes; they were feeling good. They expanded. They bubbled over.
-
-As who should say: “Sam, you are a trump. When we bought you, we believed
-we had bought a good thing; now we know it. You have been tried, and you
-have proven true. We set you to the task of plundering your own people,
-and you have not flinched from the job. You have skinned them to the
-queen’s taste. You have doubled our estate, trebled the earnings, and so
-squeezed the train-crews, the section hands, the roadbed, the shipper and
-the passenger, that you have swelled our profits more than 525 per cent.
-We congratulate _you_—and, WE pocket the money.”
-
-
-_The Ungrateful Negro_
-
-_From a Newspaper_
-
-THE AMERICAN FLAG INSULTED BY NEGRO BISHOP IN MACON.
-
-DENOUNCED GLORIOUS EMBLEM AS A CONTEMPTIBLE RAG AT THE STATE NEGRO
-CONVENTION.
-
-MACON, GA., Feb. 16.—In an address before the five hundred delegates
-attending the convention of negroes in this city to discuss racial
-problems, Bishop H. M. Turner declared the American Flag to be a dirty
-and contemptible rag. He further said that hell was an improvement on the
-United States when the negro was involved.
-
-In closing he said:
-
- “I have heard of both white and black men perpetrating rape
- upon innocent, angelic women, but no negro in this country has
- been tried by the courts and found guilty of the heinous crime
- of rape in fifteen years.
-
- “I know that bloody-handed and drunken mobs have said so, but
- what Christian people would accept what they say? Yet there
- are millions of men who pretend to be moral and claim to be
- sensible in this country, who go to these drunken mobs to get
- information relative to the conduct of colored men.”
-
-How it came to pass is a question which human wisdom may not solve, but
-in the earliest dawn of history we find the races of men separated by
-color and by characteristics, very much as they are at this time.
-
-In spite of all the comings and goings, the migrations and conquests,
-the discoveries and colonizations, the world is pretty nearly the same
-old world, so far as the distinct races of men are concerned. The Jew is
-still the Jew, the Gentile still the Gentile. All the currents of the
-ages have not washed the yellow man white, nor turned the red man yellow,
-nor the black man red. The hot sun of the tropics pours down upon the
-heads of the sons of men as fervidly as in the days of Abraham, Isaac
-and Jacob, but it has not been able to kink the hair, flatten the nose,
-blubber the lips or blacken the hide of a single man, woman or child of
-the Aryan race. The Chinaman, racially, is what he was in the time of
-Confucius; the Hindoo is yet the dark man whom Khrishna sought to lead to
-the higher life.
-
-In Africa, the home of the negro, there has been a monotonous repetition
-of the same old facts which historians learned from monumental
-inscriptions and indestructible tablets thousands upon thousands of years
-old.
-
-The African negro has always been a distinct type, an inferior type,
-a savage type, a non-progressive type. Left to himself, he wore no
-clothing, built no houses, had no commerce, systematized no production
-of any sort and never had the faintest conception of doing anything to
-improve himself or his condition. He killed for the day the game he
-needed for the day. For the future, he made as little provision as the
-Indian and the Esquimau.
-
-Beyond the herding of cattle he had no instinct for accumulation. His
-normal state was that of warfare against some other black tribe. His
-religion was the grossest superstition. He offered up to his heathen gods
-the sacrifice of the negro child; and when his appetite for four-legged
-animals was sated, he changed his diet by cooking and eating another
-negro.
-
-Where the sexual relations of the men and women were not promiscuous,
-they were polygamous. Strictly speaking, there was no such thing as
-morals known among them. Property rights which certain men had, or
-claimed, in certain women might be respected, but the conception of
-virtue was not reached.
-
-They never evolved an alphabet. They never advanced beyond the crudest,
-rudest, most brutal tribe-life.
-
-They had chiefs, or kings; and these kings exercised, despotically, the
-power of life and death over their ignorant subjects.
-
-They had conjurers and witch doctors, and it was one of the time-honored
-customs that the witch doctors should “smell out,” for death, the
-wretched creatures whom the king wanted to kill, or whom the witch
-doctors themselves wished to put out of the way.
-
-Thousands upon thousands of years ago, negro warriors sold their negro
-captives into slavery. Negro husbands would offer their wives and
-daughters to foreign travelers. Negro fathers would sell their children.
-In some of the oldest monumental inscriptions of the human race, the
-negro appears as the chained slave of foreign masters.
-
-Anybody on earth who wanted to buy him could do it. His king was ready to
-sell him; his father was ready to sell him. The Egyptian, the Greek, the
-Roman owned black slaves as far back as the records go; and the historian
-Gibbon did no more than express the universal experience and opinion of
-the ages when he wrote that the negro was a distinctly inferior race.
-
-[Illustration: “His normal state was that of warfare against some other
-black tribe.”]
-
-Of all the negroes that have ever lived Tchaka was the greatest. He ruled
-in Africa, in the eighteenth century.
-
-He was a man of immense natural power. His ambition was boundless, his
-soul untroubled by fear or scruple. Absolute master of a strong tribe, he
-hurled it against other tribes, one after another, until he had conquered
-and devastated an imperial territory. In his march to dominion, it is
-estimated that he caused the slaughter of a million human beings, all of
-whom were his brothers in black. But he never built a city; never put a
-ship on the sea; never made two blades of grass grow where one had grown
-before. He founded no institutions of any kind. He was densely ignorant
-and superstitious himself, and he had no conception of anything higher or
-better.
-
-To kill, to conquer, to feast, to indulge bestial lust, to inspire
-terror, to exploit and mercilessly abuse the abject servility of the
-negroes over whom he ruled were his “pleasures of living.”
-
-It was believed that he caused the death of his own mother; it is _known_
-that when he buried her he buried fourteen young negro girls with
-her—_buried them alive_!
-
-It is _known_ that, during the “period of mourning” which followed, he
-caused the death of some thousands of maddened and helpless negroes. It
-is also known that his sisters got his brothers to assassinate him. Then
-one of these brothers murdered the other, and so became king of that
-happy land.
-
-In Africa where the negro is still to be seen in his natural state, you
-can still buy negroes from negroes. Husbands will yet sell wives, fathers
-will yet barter daughters and sons. The buying and selling of negroes
-goes on now just as it did in the days of the Pharaohs. There is not
-so much of it as there used to be—to the regret, doubtless, of African
-chiefs who have negroes they would like to sell.
-
-[Illustration: One of the San Domingo Nobility.]
-
-Not long ago there was a story which went the usual rounds. An English
-traveler was about to set out from a certain coast town of Africa upon
-a journey into the interior. He expected to be gone for several months.
-In fitting himself out with camp equipage, he bought a negro girl to
-carry along—to serve as his mistress. Her father sold her, and the
-only surprise that was caused by the transaction was the amount paid.
-The Englishman gave about one hundred dollars for the girl and it was
-generally considered an extravagant figure. As to the girl, she seemed
-proud to have been selected, and gratified at having been sold so high.
-When the Englishman had finished his trip, he probably sold her at a
-discount to some other white man who desired a complete camp outfit.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Excepting those portions of Africa wherein the white man has set his
-foot and impressed his will, the negro is at this day the same lustful,
-brutal, besotted cannibal and voodoo slave that he was thousands of years
-ago.
-
-In Jamaica, the white man has to steer for him, and control him.
-
-He did not even know what to do with bananas till Col. Baker, a white
-man, came along and taught him.
-
-In Liberia, he has gone back to heathenism and savagery, because the
-white man’s strong hand is not there to guide and control.
-
-In San Domingo, he had—as a starting point—one of the fairest
-civilizations the world has known. Aided by the yellow fever, the black
-man drove out the white; and now he has gone back into chaos, voodooism,
-cannibalism and imbecility.
-
-In the United States, negroes can run a bank, for they can see white men
-running banks all around them and they are quick at imitation.
-
-How is it in San Domingo, where the black man rules the white?
-
-Apparently there is not a bank in San Domingo. If there is, it cannot be
-trusted. Why do I say this?
-
-Because that portion of the San Domingan custom-house receipts which was
-to be paid to the creditors of the negro republic had to be deposited in
-a New York bank for safe-keeping.
-
-In the United States, the negroes can run colleges, manufacturing
-establishments, automobile street-car lines, newspapers and magazines.
-Why? Because they see how the whites run colleges, manufactories, and
-automobiles, newspapers and magazines.
-
-In San Domingo there is no Tuskeegee, Hampton or Howard. In San Domingo
-there are no flourishing manufactories created and operated by negroes;
-and no up-to-date automobile street-car lines, such as the negroes
-started in Nashville, Tennessee.
-
-The negroes of San Domingo ought to have a commerce—one of the most
-profitable in the world; but they haven’t. Their navy is a myth,
-and their army a joke. One revolution chases after another with such
-confusing rapidity that when our Senate meets to debate the ratification
-of the San Domingan treaty which Roosevelt had arranged, the “President”
-with whom Roosevelt had made the treaty is a fugitive, whose “Cabinet”
-has compelled him to take to the woods.
-
-There used to be an “Order of Nobility” in San Domingo, with its Marquis
-of Lemonade and its Duke of Marmalade; but as these eminent Noblemen have
-failed to show up in the later turmoils I fear their titles have become
-extinct, or that the “Order of Nobility” has been abolished.
-
-Which is a pity. It would have been something worth living for to have
-seen the Duke of Marmalade paying a visit to this country, receiving the
-adoring attentions which New York’s “Swell Set” pay to all “noblemen”
-whomsoever.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Nowhere else in the universe is the negro treated so well as in the
-United States.
-
-He was once a slave, but his own people sold him. Either he was a captive
-in war who would have been slain, broiled and eaten, if the English or
-Dutch sailor had not come along and offered to buy him; or he was in the
-power of his chief, his father or his brother, and was by them offered
-for a price.
-
-Some of the blacks who were brought to this country may have been
-kidnapped, but, as a rule, there was no need for kidnapping. Negroes
-could be bought for a song all along the Coast and all through the
-interior of Africa. The most successful “kidnapper” was New England rum.
-
-Yes, it is a literal historical fact that the negro was sold into slavery
-by his own people, just as Joseph was sold by his brethren.
-
-In the long run what was the consequence to the negro?
-
-He was changed from a savage into a semi-civilized man.
-
-In his native land he had been an ignorant serf whose life depended upon
-the temper of a despotic brute—his chief.
-
-He exchanged a slavery for a slavery; and the slavery to which he was
-brought lifted him from a brute into a man.
-
-We taught him how to work; we taught him how to read; we taught him how
-to think; we taught him how to live.
-
-To free him from the bondage into which his own brethren had sold him,
-a million white men rose in arms. There were four years of terrible,
-horrible strife; half a million white men fell in battle; six billions
-of dollars were devoured in the flames of Civil War; and over all that
-period of strife, and over the host which finally triumphed, waved the
-flag which the freed negro—freed at such frightful cost—now safely
-denounces as a dirty and contemptible rag!
-
-When the “Brothers’ War” was over and while the former owner of the
-slaves was prostrate, those who had fought that the black man might be
-free, clothed him in the garments of citizenship, giving him the ballot,
-giving him office, giving him power, at the same time that tens of
-thousands of white men were outlawed.
-
-“Show to the world that you are capable of government,” said the white
-philanthropist to the blacks; and the result was a hideous carnival of
-mismanagement, incompetency and gross rascality which at last made even
-the professional white philanthropist sick and ashamed.
-
-Taking out of the hands of the blacks the political power which he had
-shown himself unfit to wield, the whites have ever since occupied toward
-him the attitude of a guardian over a ward, manifesting for him a helpful
-sympathy, aiding his advancement with substantial contributions, leading
-him upward and onward by precept, example and wholesome control.
-
-Schools were established for him. Churches were built for him. White men
-and white women devoted their lives to lifting the black man, the black
-woman, the black child into the nobler, purer paths. White men taxed
-themselves to put an end to the negro’s ignorance and superstition. The
-white man opened his purse to endow colleges for the negro’s special
-benefit. The white man opened the door of opportunity to the black, and
-gave him a chance in every field of human endeavor.
-
-[Illustration: “We taught him how to work; we taught him how to read; we
-taught him how to think; we taught him how to live.”]
-
-Not for one month could the negro prosper in the United States, if the
-white man became his enemy.
-
-In one month, we could by concert of action, so smite the negro that his
-mushroom growth would wither like the severed gourd-vine. The maddest
-thing, the most suicidal thing that the black man could do would be to
-arouse the enmity of the whites.
-
-When that day comes, if it shall ever come, the white man will not any
-more stop to count the cost of annihilating, or of driving out the
-blacks, than Spain halted to count the cost of smiting and driving out
-the Moor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the United States the negro is seen at his best, because of the
-constant example, guidance and control of the whites.
-
-Nowhere else on the planet has the negro the religious establishment
-which he has copied from us, with our earnest help.
-
-Nowhere else has he the educational system which he has patterned after
-ours, aided at every step by us.
-
-Nowhere else has he the banks, manufactures, newspapers, magazines,
-modernized farms, elegant professional offices which he has fashioned
-upon our models, amid our plaudits of approval and encouragement.
-
-By the hundreds, by the thousands, the negro has been admitted to
-positions of honor and trust. He has been in the Senate; he has been in
-the House of Representatives; he has been in the State Legislatures; he
-has served on juries; he is in the army; he is on the police force.
-
-In the proud, aristocratic city of Charleston doth not the redoubtable
-Dr. Crum, a negro, sit at the Receipt of Customs, drawing a fatter
-salary than was ever enjoyed by Matthew, the Apostle of Christ?
-
-[Illustration: “To free him from bondage half a million white men fell in
-battle.”]
-
-There are no Dr. Crums in Africa or Liberia. And in San Domingo it is
-the white man who sits at the receipt of customs—nobody being willing to
-trust the negro with his own money.
-
-Hath not our Roosevelt declared that when Judson Lyons, Register of the
-Treasury, goes out, another negro shall take his place? _Thus it shall
-continue to happen that Uncle Sam’s paper money will not be good in law
-until a negro has set his name to it._
-
-Once upon a time, a white man, in the United States, gave a negro school
-a million dollars in a lump. Doctor Booker Washington got the money. I
-wonder how long the learned Doctor would have to live in Africa, Liberia,
-or San Domingo before he could get a million dollars with which to
-operate a school.
-
-Really, it sometimes occurs to me that if such negroes as Bishop Turner
-are honest in their denunciations of the United States, they would pack
-up their belongings and go right back to dear old Africa, the home of the
-race. Nothing on earth prevents their doing so.
-
-Rather than go to hell _I_ would go to Africa; and if I believed I was
-living in a land which was worse than hell, I would even try San Domingo,
-for a change.
-
- * * * * *
-
-What _bosh_, nonsense and self-assertive insolence is embodied in Bishop
-Turner’s denunciation of the Flag and of the Government!
-
-Poor, down-trodden negro!
-
-What a doleful howl he sets up when he is asked to ride in a separate
-car; and when he is told that separate churches, separate schools,
-separate hotels, and separate social life is best for both races. How he
-raves and froths at the mouth when we tell him that for his own sake, as
-well as ours, we who have, with desperate difficulty and hardship and
-sacrifice, built up our civilization, cannot afford to allow it to fall
-into the power of the inferior race. We have seen what they did with
-this same Civilization in San Domingo when the French Revolution, most
-unwisely, entrusted it to the blacks.
-
-Reconstruction days taught us that the San Domingan experience would
-be repeated here, if the negro rule continued. To save ourselves from
-such a calamity, _and to save the negro from himself_, we put back into
-the hands of the whites that civilization which had been the outcome of
-centuries of effort on the part of the whites.
-
-And when the Negro Convention of today has not met to howl but to
-brag, what a beautiful, brilliant picture their orators can paint, as
-they proclaim the progress and prosperity of the negro. What wonderful
-statistics they use to prove that the negro has advanced in knowledge
-more rapidly than the whites of Russia, of Hungary, of Italy and of
-Spain! What a glittering array of accumulated millions do they claim, in
-lands, chattels and hereditaments! With what vociferous gusto do they
-“point with pride” to their farms, their stores, their banks, their
-newspapers, their magazines! To listen to them when they have assembled
-to jubilate instead of to howl, you would suppose that, so far as the
-negro was concerned, the horn of plenty was full, the land flowing
-with milk and honey. Even Bishop Turner, with an amazingly unconscious
-inconsistency, fills his letter of so-called denial with boastings of
-the handsome homes in which the negroes live, the furniture which the
-white man just ought to go and see, the “library” which would delight the
-scholar, the piano music and the organ melodies which, in negro homes,
-soothe the ear and charm the sense.
-
-Let us admit that every bit of this bragging and boasting is founded upon
-solid fact. Then, in the name of common sense, let me inquire: “_Where,
-oh, where, is the negro race doing all these marvelous things?_”
-
-In what country, under what flag, is he piling up these millions of
-money? Under what government is he outstripping the Russian, the
-Spaniard, the Austrian? Where is it that he has bought so many farms,
-established so many banks, built such fine houses, secured such
-attractive furniture, and gotten an organ for ’Liza Jane and a piano for
-Susan Ann?
-
-Is it in Africa? No. In Liberia? _No._ In San Domingo? No.
-
-The negro is doing the splendid things to which he “points with pride”
-_in that country whose flag is a dirty rag, in that land which is worse
-than hell_!
-
-Poor, down-trodden negro!
-
-He makes an idle wager in Baltimore that he will kiss a white girl, in a
-white hotel; and he walks up to her in the public dining room, puts his
-hands upon her and kisses her!
-
-In Chicago, he sits down in a white restaurant, and beckons a white
-woman waitress to come and wait upon him; and when she refuses, he goes
-straight to a magistrate, swears out a warrant, has the girl arrested,
-and sends her to prison!
-
-Poor down-trodden negro! In New York City, and perhaps in other cities,
-negro men hold white women in a state of slavery, _to minister to their
-lusts_; and the political power of these negroes is so great that the
-lawful authorities have been utterly unable to free these white slaves
-from the bestial degradation in which they are held by their black
-masters.
-
-In Washington City—but that would require a chapter to itself. If there
-is a Paradise on this earth, a Garden of Eden filled with ceaseless joy
-for the non-producing, insolent, self-assertive blacks, it is our Capital
-City of Washington, where more than two thousand negro men and women draw
-Government pay in federal offices.
-
-Oh, that Bishop Turner had described to the Macon Convention one of
-those “Receptions” at the mansion of Judson Lyons, Register of the
-Treasury—such as Judson often held. Oh, that the Bishop had told the
-Convention how many of Judson’s colored guests came in automobiles,
-which were left lining the sidewalk and obstructing the street. Oh, that
-the Bishop had described to the Convention the similarity between the
-negro “Reception” at the mansion of the Register of the Treasury and the
-white reception of the President of the United States!
-
-[Illustration: “Poor down-trodden negro!... he is sometimes compelled to
-take dinner with John Wanamaker and lunch with Theodore Roosevelt.”]
-
-Poor, down-trodden negro! In this land which is worse than hell, it
-actually happens that he is sometimes compelled to take dinner with John
-Wanamaker, and to lunch with Theodore Roosevelt!
-
- * * * * *
-
-The amazement within me grows as I dwell upon the black man’s woes, and
-I marvel that Doctor Washington, Judson Lyons, Bishop Turner “and others
-among ’em” do not pack right up and go straight back to dear old Africa.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And to think that the man who declared this country to be worse than
-hell is a “negro preacher.” I had supposed that if there was any human
-being who found the United States an ideal abode, it was the “negro
-preacher.” He is the one incumbent whom I had been led to believe had a
-mighty rich thing in salary, and a still richer thing in “_perqueesits_.”
-If I had been asked to go out and find the man who could unreservedly
-indorse the proposition that life _is_ worth living, I should have struck
-a bee line for the nearest negro preacher.
-
-Of course, if I had been unable to find _him_, my next choice would have
-been the negro school-teacher.
-
-The army of negro preachers is a shining host, waving palms of victory,
-and apparently happy; the army of negro school-teachers is another
-shining host, waving palms of victory, and apparently happy.
-
-The white man’s money, directly and indirectly, supplies the sinews of
-war to both these shining hosts—a fact which it did not suit the purpose
-of Bishop Turner to mention in the convention which had met to howl, and
-which, consequently, was bound to howl.
-
-In Africa, in Liberia, in San Domingo, negro preachers have not
-flourished, increased, or put their hands upon so many good things as
-they have done in poor, little, old North America. And the shining hosts
-of negro school-teachers, flush with the white man’s money, do not wave
-any palms of victory beyond the limits of the country which is worse than
-hell, the country whose flag is a dirty, contemptible rag “where the
-negro is involved.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Take out of your pocket a five-dollar or one-dollar treasury note, or
-certificate, and look at the name signed to give it validity.
-
-“_Judson W. Lyons, Register of the Treasury._”
-
-Do you find it?
-
-Well, that name has been a legal necessity to every treasury note issued
-by the Federal Government during the last eight years.
-
-Judson W. Lyons is a negro.
-
-For the last eight years he has been holding the high, responsible and
-well-paid office of Register of the Treasury of the United States.
-
-Nevertheless, this Judson W. Lyons went down to Macon, Georgia, to attend
-a convention of negroes, and in this convention he heard Bishop H. M.
-Turner, a negro, denounce the flag of his country as “A CONTEMPTIBLE AND
-DIRTY RAG;” and Judson did not open his mouth to protest.
-
-He also heard this ungrateful Bishop declare that—“_Hell is an
-improvement on the United States when the negro is involved_.”
-
-Still, Judson W. Lyons sat there in apparent acquiescence—he an officer
-of the Government!
-
-Now when you are told that every blessed son and son-in-law of Bishop H.
-M. Turner was appointed to office under President Cleveland, and when you
-bear in mind that Judson Lyons has so long been in the enjoyment of a
-Federal office which pays him $8,000 per year, you can form a fair idea
-of a radical defect in negro character. It is _Ingratitude_.
-
-Bishop Turner has been treated with the utmost consideration by the
-whites. He enjoys a larger income than he could hope to draw as witch
-doctor in Africa, or as voodoo man in San Domingo. He lives on the fat of
-the land, grows juicy himself, and yet runs no risk of being hot-potted
-by hungry brethren—as he would in his native land of Africa. He dresses
-in a manner which would have stunned King Tchaka; and to see him take his
-ecclesiastical ease in a Pullman car is a sight for the sore-eyed.
-
-_What is the Bishop angry about?_
-
-Apparently for the reason that “drunken mobs” in the North, South, East
-and West diabolically persist in accusing the negro of committing rape.
-
-The Bishop says that the negro is innocent. Being innocent, he is
-necessarily as innocent as a new-born babe. The Bishop declares that “no
-negro has been tried by the courts and found guilty of this crime of rape
-in fifteen years.”
-
-This statement makes the other twin for Booker Washington’s assertion
-that “not more than six” graduates of negro colleges have ever gone
-wrong. A more precious pair of Siamese-twin lies have not been put in
-type since the decease of the late lamented Baron Munchausen.
-
-My opinion is that Bishop Turner, if he continues to cultivate the evil
-spirit which broke loose in the Macon Convention, will some day know,
-by experience, whether hell IS an improvement over the United States;
-but, before that time comes, I would suggest that he step down to San
-Domingo and soak himself in the luxuries of that region for awhile, as a
-preparation for the other place.
-
-[Illustration: “In New York a negro is at the head of the white slave
-traffic.”]
-
-_Note._—Public opinion expressed itself so hotly concerning his attack
-on the flag that Bishop Turner felt driven into a perfunctory and
-involved denial; but having read this so-called denial I am convinced
-that the bishop did use substantially the words reported, because of
-the significant fact that his so-called denial contains language quite
-as offensive, quite as insulting, as that which he surlily pretends to
-disclaim. Had this been the first time that Bishop Turner had denounced
-the Government that has done so much for his race, had it been the
-first time he had outrageously vilified the people among whom he lives,
-there might be room for doubt concerning the Macon speech. But Bishop
-Turner has for years been speaking and writing in precisely the vein
-which appears in the reports that went out from Macon. He has become
-conspicuous as a chronic assailant of the whites. Therefore I have not
-the slightest doubt that he used at Macon in substance, if not in the
-very words, the reports as telegraphed all over the country.
-
-
-_An Indignant Wisconsin Editor_
-
-Mr. John L. Sturtevant, whose card informs the interested universe that
-he, the said John L., is editor of _The Waupaca Post_, of Waupaca, Wis.,
-flew into a passion when he read the February number of this Magazine.
-
-The why and the wherefore of his sudden rage are best explained in a
-red-hot letter which I now give in full, just as it came sizzling from
-the frying pan:
-
- Feb. 17, 1906.
-
- _Thomas E. Watson, New York._
-
- DEAR SIR: In the February number of your magazine, on page 400,
- under the caption “Best on Earth” you state: “The big Milwaukee
- First National Bank burst and the people lost $1,450,000.” The
- statement is absolutely false. F. G. Bigelow, president of the
- bank, appropriated that amount from the bank’s funds to his own
- use, but the bank did not burst nor did the “people,” in the
- sense in which you use the word, lose one cent. The loss fell
- upon the stockholders and was fully paid from the surplus which
- the bank had accumulated during an honorable and successful
- career. Your magazine is full of just such reckless and
- libelous statements as this, which make thoughtful readers look
- with distrust upon the few truths it contains. Intentionally,
- or otherwise, you constantly do grave injury to many people and
- the pity of it is your readers who do not think or reason are
- led along the paths of populism, socialism and anarchy.
-
- Sincerely yours,
-
- J. L. STURTEVANT.
-
-Touching the falsehood to which the furious John L. refers, I have this
-to say: My article was based upon a “special” sent out from Chicago which
-went the rounds of the Press, and which was not contradicted.
-
-The “special” from which I took the facts, appeared, on December 19,
-1905, in the _Augusta Herald_, one of the most reliable and conservative
-Democratic daily papers in the United States.
-
-The indignant Sturtevant does not deny that the bank was looted of the
-sum stated by me, but because I said that “the people” lost the money
-he charges me with having made a statement that was “absolutely false.”
-Sturtevant alleges that the money was not stolen from “the people” but
-from “the stockholders!”
-
-He is equally indignant because I said that the bank “burst.” He alleges
-that the stockholders were able to stand the theft of nearly a million
-and a half dollars, and that the bank didn’t burst.
-
-An Editor of a Magazine is at a disadvantage when compared to the Editor
-of _The Waupaca Post_, of Waupaca, Wisconsin. Sturtevant evidently stands
-at the head-waters of information, and gets his news fresh from the
-spring. That’s one of the luxuries of living and editing at Waupaca.
-
-A poor devil of a Georgia editor, like me, has to take his information
-second-hand. In spite of all that I can do, it is impossible for me to be
-there, all over the world, when things are happening.
-
-Sturtevant was close to Milwaukee when Bigelow looted his bank, and
-therefore, knew at first hand what the facts were. On the contrary, I
-was thousands of miles off, and had to rely upon telegraphic despatches,
-published in reputable newspapers.
-
-In the “special” from Chicago which appeared in the _Herald_, of Augusta,
-Ga., December 19, 1905, this language appears:
-
-“The three big bank WRECKS which are still fresh in the public mind on
-account of their size and recent date are: the Enterprise National Bank
-of Allegheny, Penn.; The First National Bank of Topeka, Kans.; the FIRST
-NATIONAL BANK OF MILWAUKEE, WIS.!”
-
-Then in a tabulated statement, the “special” gave sums which were
-classified as “losses.”
-
-In this separate list of “losses” occasioned by “THE BANK WRECKS,” the
-First National Bank of Milwaukee, heads the table with $1,450,000.
-
-Therefore, instead of my statement in the Magazine being reckless and
-false, it was carefully based upon a “special” sent out from Chicago
-in December, which at the time my paragraphs were written had gone
-unchallenged for more than a month.
-
-Even when corrected by Mr. Sturtevant, how much good is done to the
-National Banking system whose claim to be “the best on earth” I was
-ridiculing? My point was that the lootings of this boasted “best system
-on earth” were so frequent and so colossal that it was absurd to claim
-that the system was “the best on earth.” How does the Waupaca Champion of
-looted banks improve matters by explaining that the president of the bank
-merely stole a million and a half from _the stockholders_?
-
-How does he weaken my attack by saying that the bank was able to stand
-the huge robbery?
-
-Is bank rottenness saved from denunciation because the looted bank
-happened to be rich enough to survive the blow?
-
-Is bank gutting made respectable because the stockholders alone were
-gutted?
-
-Suppose the stockholders had not been rich enough to make good the
-loss; suppose the bank had not possessed “a surplus” of that immense
-size—wouldn’t “the loss” have fallen upon “the people,” and wouldn’t the
-bank have “burst”?
-
-Ah, Mr. Sturtevant! When you say that a National Bank has gained such
-tremendous profits out of the privilege of creating money and lending
-it to the people at high rates of interest that a robbery which runs up
-into the millions does not stagger it in the least, you simply convince
-the intelligent reader that National Banks reap far greater gains out of
-Special Privilege than their champions are in the habit of admitting.
-
-As to the “other” reckless and libelous statements which the Waupaca
-Editor says I have been making in the Magazine, I can only invite him to
-name them.
-
-The Magazine is here to stay, and it is not conscious of having made
-reckless and libelous statements.
-
-The columns are open to brother Sturtevant, and to all others, who wish
-to challenge any statements made therein.
-
-Whenever I am shown to be wrong, I will gladly make correction, and, if
-need be, apology.
-
-If, on the contrary, the other fellow happens to be wrong, I will
-endeavor, in a mild, conciliatory but earnest spirit to show him his
-error.
-
-Brother Sturtevant, of Waupaca, asserts that I am constantly doing grave
-injury to many people.
-
-I appeal to Sturtevant to furnish me a list—a partial one, at least—of
-the people whom I am constantly injuring so gravely.
-
-If he can establish the fact that in the 200,000 words or more, which I
-have written for the Magazine, a grave injury has been inflicted upon any
-man, woman or child, I stand ready to make the fullest amends.
-
-_Make good, brother Sturtevant!_
-
-
-The Man and the Land
-
-Certain good friends of mine were shocked, a few months ago, when they
-learned that I was one of those monsters who believe in the private
-ownership of land.
-
-Some of them deplored my ignorance, and urged me to go straightway and
-read “Progress and Poverty.” Well, I had read Henry George’s book soon
-after its publication, and had once had the precious advantage of serving
-a term in Congress with the great Tom Johnson; yet I never had been able
-to see the distinction, _in principle_, between the private ownership of
-a cow and the private ownership of a cow-lot.
-
-Some men are just that stupid, and when Ephraim gets “sot” on a thing of
-that kind, even Louis Post, of _The Public_, has to let him alone.
-
-Certain other friends made the point on me that I did not understand
-Count Tolstoy. That is possible. In his various ramblings into various
-speculative matters, Tolstoy, like our own Emerson, gets lost, sometimes,
-in mazes of his own making; and he uses language which may delight
-professional commentators, but which is sorely vexatious to an average
-citizen who really wants to know what the philosophers are driving at.
-
-Tolstoy is careful to avoid _History_. The flood of light which might be
-thrown upon the land question by the records of the human race is shut
-out altogether.
-
-And _this_ is the weak spot in the armor of every champion who enters
-the list against the Private Ownership of Land. If History makes any one
-thing plain, it is that a Civilization was never able to develop itself
-on any other basis than that of Private Ownership.
-
-Like other champions of his theory, Tolstoy forgets the elemental traits
-of Human Nature. He forgets how _unequal_ we are by Nature; how we
-differ, in character, capacity, taste and purpose; how few there are who
-will labor for the “good of all,” and how universal is the rule that each
-man labors, first of all, for _himself_.
-
-He forgets that every beast of the field has its prototype in some
-members of the human family; he forgets that the _man_-tiger is now more
-numerous than the four-footed sort; that the _man_-fox is more cunning
-than his wild brother; that the _man_-wolf hunts with every human herd;
-that the _man_-sloth is marked by nature with her own indelible brand;
-that some men are born timid as the deer are; that some are born without
-fear as the lion is; that the human hog grunts and gorges, and makes
-himself a nauseating nuisance, on the streets, in hotels, in the Pullman
-cars—in fact everywhere, but most of all where people have to eat and
-sleep.
-
-This is the fundamental error which doctrinaires are prone to make. _They
-forget what Human Nature actually is, always has been, and perhaps,
-always will be._
-
-They argue about ideal conditions, unmindful of the fact that ideal
-conditions require ideal men—and that we haven’t got the ideal men.
-
-Every society, every state, must from necessity be made up of the Good,
-the Bad, and the Indifferent and the law-makers of that society, that
-state, will from necessity be compelled to frame laws suited to _that_
-community. Hence, the laws will not be absolutely the best, considering
-the question as an abstract question, but they will be the best which
-_that_ community is capable of receiving.
-
-All legislation, like all Society, is a compromise.
-
-In a state of Nature I would be absolutely free. But I would be alone. To
-protect myself in person, property or family, I would have to rely upon
-my individual arm. My absolute freedom would be an absolute isolation and
-a relative helplessness.
-
-I would find that I could not endure such a life. I would therefore seek
-companionship among other men who felt the same needs that I felt, and we
-would come together for the “good of all.” One hundred families coming
-together in this way form the nucleus of Society, of the State. Each man
-gives up a portion of his individual freedom when he enters this union of
-families which forms such a nucleus.
-
-Why does he surrender a portion of his wild, natural, individual freedom?
-Why does he agree to be bound by the will of the Community instead of
-his _own_ will? Why does he consent to be _governed_ by the public when
-he had previously been his own ruler? He does it because it is to his
-interest to do it. He finds that, while he has surrendered much, he
-has gained more. _The Community_ throws around him the protection of a
-hundred strong arms where previously he had but his own.
-
-_The Community_, in a hundred ways, ministers to his wants, his
-weaknesses, his desires, his prosperity.
-
-In other words, the Community gives more than it took.
-
-Association which improves the Community tends to improve each member
-thus associated; and from this association come all those blessings which
-we call Civilization.
-
-Resolve the Association back into its elements; let each individual
-separate from the mass; let each one say, “I’m my own man,”—and what
-becomes of Civilization?
-
-It perishes, of course.
-
-Now where will Tolstoy find the basis of Society _in Nature_?
-
-In the human instinct for _getting-together_. And that instinct seems to
-grow out of our hopes, and our fears, our profound belief that we _need_
-our fellow-man, and that we are not strong enough to stand alone, _no
-matter how much we would like to do so_.
-
-Deep down in your heart you will find the primeval, natural craving for
-independence, individuality, separate living, separate doing. With the
-great common mass of humanity this tendency has been weakened by disuse
-until it is not an active principle. It is like a muscle which has lost
-its strength from inaction. Hence, the common man goes with the herd,
-just as a flock of sheep follows the bell-wether.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Society, then is a matter of convention: _Nature_ did not frame it.
-
-Nor does _Nature_ impose upon us the relation of Husband and Wife.
-
-Why do we adopt the present marriage system, which differs in so many
-respects from Nature, and from former practices of the human race?
-
-Simply because we believe it to be _an improvement_. We _know_ it is
-better than the promiscuous intercourse of the sexes: we _believe_ it
-to be better than Polygamy; we _hope_ that it will some day be a more
-radiant success than the Divorce Courts would seem to indicate.
-
-Now as to the land.
-
-Undoubtedly, the earth was given to the human family as a home for the
-family. Undoubtedly, Nature teaches that the earth belongs in common to
-the entire human race.
-
-Thus it was in the beginning. But, just as the wild horse became the
-property of the bold tribesman who caught it and tamed it; just as the
-natural fruit of the forest belonged to him who gathered it; just as the
-cave or hollow tree became the dwelling of the first occupant, so the
-well in the thirsty plain became the property of him that had dug down to
-the waters; and the pasturage which one had taken up might not be taken
-away from him by another.
-
-Mine was the bark hut which my labor had built; mine the canoe which my
-hands had hollowed out; mine the bow and arrows which I had fashioned;
-mine the herds and flocks, the goats and asses which I had tamed and
-reared and cared for till they had multiplied.
-
-Should the idler, or the thief of the tribe, take from me that which my
-labor had produced? Must _my_ canoe belong to the whole tribe? Must my
-garment which I had made out of the skins of the wild beast belong to the
-sloth who loafed in the tent while I risked my life in the woods?
-
-_Nature said_, NO!
-
-Nature, speaking through elemental instinct said: “That which _your_
-labor made is _yours_.”
-
-Yours the hut, yours the canoe, yours the garment of skins, yours the bow
-and arrows—and that was the beginning of _Private Property in Personalty_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But look again at the ways of Nature and of the tribe.
-
-Pasturage failed after awhile; natural fruits were no longer sufficient
-to sustain life; game disappeared from the forest; fish grew scarce in
-the streams. Something had to be done to make good the shortage. The
-soil was there, suggesting cultivation. The products of Nature must be
-supplemented by human industry. But before the soil could be cultivated,
-the trees had to be cut away; cattle and wild beasts had to be fenced
-out; the virgin earth had to be made the bride of toil before the
-fruitful seed would bring forth harvests.
-
-Now _who was to do the work_?
-
-The Idler wouldn’t; the Feeble couldn’t; the Hunter didn’t; _the strong,
-clear-headed Laborer made the farm_.
-
-Those who assail private ownership of land say that “the man who makes a
-farm doesn’t make it in the sense that one makes a basket or a chair.”
-They see clearly that, if they admit that _the pioneer who goes into the
-wilderness or the swamps and creates a farm, is to be put on the same
-footing as the man who goes into the woods, gets material and makes a
-canoe, or a chair or a basket_, it is “farewell world” to their theory
-about the land. Therefore they say that THE FARM WAS ALREADY THERE,
-waiting for the farmer. All the farmer had to do was to go there and
-tickle the soil with a hoe, and it laughed with the harvest.
-
-How very absurd! You might just as well say that the willows that
-bent over the waters of the brook _were baskets waiting for the tardy
-basketmaker to come and get them_. You might just as well say that the
-hide on the cow’s back was a pair of ladies’ shoes waiting for the lady
-to come and fit them to her dainty feet.
-
-Must we get rid of our common sense, our practical knowledge, before we
-can argue a case of this sort? Do not these doctrinaires know that they
-are denying physical facts, plain everyday experience, when they say
-that a piece of wild land in the desert, in the swamps, on the mountain
-side, or in the woody wilderness _is a farm waiting for the farmer_?
-Sheer nonsense never went further. But they are compelled to this extent
-because of the necessities of their case. They see at once that if ever
-they admit my position that _the laborer takes raw materials with which
-nature supplies him, and out of those raw materials creates something
-that did not exist before_, then the laborer is entitled to that which
-his labor creates.
-
-Now, do you mean to tell me, that for thousands of years there were farms
-waiting the pioneers here in North America? Consider for a moment what
-the New England, or the Southern, or the Western farmer had to do before
-he had _made a farm_. He had to go into the woods with an axe in one hand
-and a rifle in the other. Very frequently he was shot down before he
-could make his farm, just as Abraham Lincoln’s grandfather was killed.
-Very frequently he died from the fever engendered in the woods before he
-had made his farm, just as Andrew Jackson’s father did, in the effort _to
-make a farm_ in the wilderness of North Carolina. Supposing the farmer
-was able to snatch up his gun quick enough to shoot the Indian who was
-trying to shoot him, and supposing that his constitution was strong
-enough to resist the malarial atmosphere in which he had to labor while
-creating that farm, what was the process through which he went _in making
-that farm_? He had to cut off an enormous growth of timber. He had to
-grub up stumps and roots. He had to plow and cross-plow the soil until it
-had become a seed bed. He had to inclose the farm to keep out the wild
-animals which would have devoured his crop. If in a rocky section, he had
-to remove the stones which encumbered the ground. If in a damp, swampy
-section, he had to exercise skill, as well as labor, in draining the
-soil. After four or five years, the laborer _had made a farm_—something
-_as different from the wild land which he found in the woods as the pine
-tree is from the lumber which lies upon the lumber-yard_; as different as
-the wool on the sheep’s back is from the coat which you wear; something
-as different as the willow and the bamboo are from the chairs and the
-baskets which are made from them.
-
-Now, the doctrinaires say that it would be a sufficient reward to that
-laborer _to give him the crop that he made on the land_. Would it? For
-what length of time will you give him those crops? If you ask the
-laborer, he will say, “_I made this farm_; I risked my life in the work:
-I shortened my days by the labor, the exposure, the drudgery of making
-this farm. I never would have gone to this amount of toil if I had not
-believed that society would secure me in the possession of the farm after
-I made it.”
-
-Having established him in his security of possession, which I say is
-tantamount to title, suppose that laborer wants to change his farm for
-a stock of manufactured goods, or for silver and gold, or for horses,
-or for another piece of land, do you mean to say he shall not have the
-right to do it? If so, you limit his title, and you have not the right
-to do so. _That which he made he ought to have the right to dispose of
-on such terms as please him._ His title having originated in the sacred
-rights of labor, you should not limit his enjoyment or his disposition
-of that which his labor created. If you recognize his right to exchange
-one product of his labor for another, you recognize his right to exchange
-all products of his labor for others. In other words, by plain course
-of reasoning, you arrive at the principle that the bargain and sale of
-lands is founded upon the right of the laborer to exchange the product of
-his labor with those who may have product of labor which he could use to
-better advantage than he can use his own.
-
-Now, let us see. The laborer who made the farm dies. What shall become of
-it? Away back in the origin of property, OCCUPANCY was the first title
-recognized. As long as one individual, or one tribe, occupied a certain
-spot their right to use it was recognized, but no longer. When possession
-was abandoned, the next individual, or the next tribe who occupied that
-spot, had the right of possession. When tribes ceased to wander about,
-the occupancy of the spot which the tribe had taken possession of became
-permanent.
-
-Therefore, the title to that spot grew up in the tribe along with
-permanent possession. _No civilization was ever created by wandering
-tribes._ It is only when the tribe fixes its permanent residence in
-some particular spot, recognized as exclusively its own, that there is
-any such thing as law and order and civilization. It is clear enough
-when we consider one tribe in its relations to other tribes. Let us
-consider the tribe in its relations to its members. Each individual in
-the beginning had a title _by occupancy_ to the spot which he cultivated,
-and this security of possession lasted so long as the occupancy lasted.
-If the tribesman abandoned his spot of land, with the intent to surrender
-the same, then the next fortunate tribesman who came along could take
-possession of it and hold it. But, in the course of time, this created
-great inconvenience, because, as favored spots became more desirable,
-the competition to get them was fiercer. Hence, there were feuds, bloody
-struggles, disorders in the tribe. Consequently, by natural evolution
-society was forced, first, to recognize the right of the individual as
-long as he wished to occupy the spot which he had taken possession of;
-second _to provide for the succession to that title when the spot became
-vacant_.
-
-The learned men tell us that, at the death of the occupant, his own
-family, _his own children_, being naturally the first who would know that
-he was dead, _were naturally the first who would take possession after
-his death_. Therefore, the sons of the deceased tenant always became
-the first occupants of the vacant land which had been left vacant by
-the death of their father. This succession of the sons to the fathers
-becoming universal, was finally recognized by the law of the tribe; and
-in the course of time it was recognized further in the law which allowed
-the tenant to make a will and to say who should take his property after
-his death.
-
-Thus by slow and almost imperceptible degrees, the tribe recognized,
-first, the right of the man who had made a farm to hold it as long as
-he lived; second, the right of his children to follow in his footsteps
-and to receive the benefit of that which their father had created by
-his labor; third, and last, came the law of wills and testaments which
-allowed the tribesman to say what should go with his property after his
-death.
-
-If the occupant died without heirs and without having made a will, the
-land went back to the tribe, or the state, to be disposed of as public
-property. This principle is recognized to this day in the doctrine of
-escheats.
-
-Property in land differs in nowise from property in horses and cows.
-The law of property is the same naturally in real estate as in personal
-estate, and I can conceive of no revenue in any community which is so
-just as that which lays itself with an equal burden upon all kinds of
-property in proportion to the amount thereof. In the beginning, one
-tribesman, like Abraham or Lot, might have his cattle browsing upon a
-thousand hills, while another tribesman might have made a little farm
-in some secluded valley, or upon some thirsty, rocky mountain-side
-where vines were planted, or where olive trees bore their fruit to the
-industrious citizen who had year in and year out watched and tended their
-growth. Would there be any justice in compelling those little farmers to
-supply the revenue for the common purpose of the tribe, and not compel a
-contribution _pro rata_ from the men who owned “exceeding many flocks and
-herds”?
-
-The trouble about these doctrinaires is that they start at the present
-day and reason backward, while I start at the fountain head and reason
-down. I take things as history shows them to have been; they take things
-as they think they ought to have been.
-
-The doctrinaire further says that if the tribesman who made a farm had
-been satisfied to fence in his farm, only, _the common_ would have
-remained after all had been supplied. In this country, we have millions
-of acres of “commons” now waiting any one “member of the tribe” who wants
-to go and take his share. The truth of it is, the doctrinaire doesn’t
-want to go out into the wild land and _make a farm_. He wants to stay
-where he is, and _take one that some other fellow has made_. Especially
-doth he crave a slice of the Astor estate, which doctrinaires have
-talked of so much that they can almost identify their shares therein.
-
-One of the doctrinaires quotes the following from “Progress and Poverty”:
-“If a fair distribution of land were made among the whole population,
-giving to each his equal share, and laws enacted which would impose a
-barrier to the tendency to concentration, by forbidding the holding by
-anyone of more than a fixed amount, what would become of the increased
-population?”
-
-I do not consider it any part of my task to assail the position taken
-in “Progress and Poverty,” but I think it a satisfactory answer to the
-foregoing question to say that in the very nature of things posterity
-must be the heirs-at-law of the conditions of those who went before. To
-say that we can so frame a social fabric as flexibly and automatically
-to give an equal share of everything to every child born into the world
-hereafter, regardless of whether that child’s parents were thrifty,
-industrious, virtuous people, or, on the other hand, were thriftless,
-indolent, vicious people, seems to me to be one of the wildest dreams
-that ever entered the human mind. No matter how equal material conditions
-might be made today by legislation, the inherent inequality in the
-capacities of men, physically, mentally, spiritually, would evolve
-differences tomorrow. There is no such thing as equality among men, and
-no law will ever give it to them. What the father gains the children
-lose; and the grandchildren may regain. While one man runs the race of
-life and wins it; another man, equally tall and strong will run the race
-and lose it. Just why, it is, in some cases, difficult to tell.
-
-Some men naturally lead; some naturally follow; some naturally command;
-others naturally obey: some are naturally strong; others are naturally
-weak. The law of life to some is activity; others say that they were
-born tired; and there is a certain pathos in their excuse for indolence,
-for they _were_ born tired. One man is naturally brave—physically,
-morally—and he will venture. Another man is naturally a coward—physically
-or morally—and he will not venture. A dozen different traits, or
-combination of traits, make failure or success in life, and to say that
-success or failure, vice and virtue, good and bad, are the results of
-environment and social conditions, is as misleading, _as a general
-statement of fundamental facts_, as to say that the dove and the hawk,
-the tiger and the sheep, the rattlesnake and the harmless “black runner”
-are the results of environment. Nature in its act of creation made the
-difference between the fowls of the air, the beasts of the field, the
-fish of the sea, the men and women who inhabit the earth. From the
-remotest ages, of which we have record, human nature has been the same
-that it is today. Paganism presented precisely the same types of man in
-its savagery and its civilization that Christianity now presents in its
-savagery and civilization. “There is nothing new under the sun,” and the
-very theories which the doctrinaires now think are matters of modern
-discovery, unknown to our ancestors, and which would have been adopted
-had our ancestors been as wise as we, were discussed in the days of
-Aristotle and had the very best thought of the sages of antiquity.
-
-Let it be remembered, however, that I have always qualified the Private
-Ownership of Land by acknowledging the supremacy of the State. The tribe,
-the community, the State, the Government holds supreme power over the
-life and liberty of citizens, and over the ownership of the soil. The
-State calls for me to give up my individual pursuits, my individual
-liberty, my individual preference, and to take my place as a soldier in
-the ranks of the army. I am compelled to obey; that is an obligation
-which rests upon me as a member of society. Thus the State can demand
-my life of me whenever the State declares that it is necessary for the
-defence of the State. In like manner, the State can restrain me of my
-liberty. For instance, in times of epidemics, we have shotgun quarantine
-which destroys my liberty of movement. I would be shot down like a dog
-if I sought to break through the lines of quarantine, although to make
-such an escape might mean my individual salvation, whereas obedience to
-law amounts to sentence of death. In this case, as in the other, the
-State practically demands my life as an individual as a sacrifice for
-the good of the greater number of citizens. So, as to property, no man
-holds an absolute title to land as against the State. The Government,
-acting for all the tribe, for all the people, can tear down or burn my
-house to stop the spread of fire. It can confiscate my property for
-public purposes, when the public need requires it. It can take my land
-for public buildings, for canals, for railroads, or for new dirt roads
-through the country. My rights in the premises would be recognized in
-the payment to me of damages. My individual rights would be assessed in
-so many dollars and cents. Thus my home, which might be almost as dear
-to me as my life, would be coldly valued in money, and although I left
-it with bitter regrets, even with bitter tears and a bitter sense of
-wrong, I would have to surrender my individual preference to what is
-supposed to be by constituted authorities the necessity of the State.
-This right of the public to take away any portion of the soil from the
-individual, and to dedicate it to the use of the public, is called
-the right of Eminent Domain, and is a remnant of the old system which
-recognized that the title to all the lands was in the King. Of course the
-King stood for the State. Centered in the personal sovereign were those
-sovereign rights which belong to the people as a whole, and the people
-as a whole, represented by the King, were admitted to be the owners
-of the ultimate fee in the land, and could compel any individual to
-surrender his individual holdings for the benefit of the entire people,
-just compensation having first been paid to the individual. It is in that
-sense that I say private ownership of land is just as holy a principle,
-just as equitable, as private ownership in the basket which I made from
-the rushes I gathered along the stream, or from the splints which I rived
-out from the white oak; just as sacred as my right to the boat which I
-hollowed out from the forest tree, or the bark hut, or the hut of skins,
-which my labor erected to shelter me and my family.
-
-The doctrinaire asks: “Could he not be as secure in his possession if the
-land were owned and exaction made by all the people?” Certainly. That is
-my contention. The whole tribe _did_ exercise dominion over the land, but
-to encourage the individual member of the tribe to improve a particular
-portion of the wild land, the tribe agreed to protect the individual in
-that which his labor had created, namely a _farm_. My contention now is
-that the ultimate ownership of the land is in all the people; but society
-had a perfect right to divide it on such terms as were thought best and
-to guarantee to each individual “security of possession,” or _title_, to
-that which he had produced. The great trouble with Mr. Doctrinaire is
-that he does not begin at the beginning. If he would study the condition
-of the human race as it gradually evolved from the patriarchal state, the
-tribal state, the nomad state, into that fixed and complex status which
-we now call “Christian Civilization,” he would readily understand how
-private ownership of land was the axis upon which the improvement of the
-conditions of the individual and of the State turned. As long as tribes
-wandered about from province to province, with their herds of goats, or
-sheep, or cattle, nibbling the grass which nature put up, and moving
-onward to another pasture as fast as one was exhausted, there could be
-nothing but tent life, nothing but personal property. The house had to
-move every time the family moved. Therefore, when the herds devoured the
-grass in one place, and the tribe had to move to another, tents were
-struck, the few household goods were packed on the backs of the wives, or
-on the backs of other beasts of burden, and the family moved. When man
-and beast multiplied to such an extent that nature no longer supplied a
-sufficiency of food, it became necessary for the tribe to settle down,
-and to divide the territory upon which they settled among the various
-members of the tribe. That was done in Germany, as well as in various
-other countries, but I take Germany because the German tribes were our
-own ancestors. They divided the lands every year. It was seldom the case
-that the same tribesman occupied the same home for more than one year.
-Like the Methodist preachers of today, their homes were always on the
-go. The farmer’s home in those days was precisely like the Methodist
-preachers’ homes today—a matter to be fixed at the annual conference.
-The Methodist preacher who today is preaching in the town may next year
-be sent into the remote rural precincts: the mountain parson may next
-year be sent to the seaboard. The church is fixed and the parsonage is
-stationary, but the preacher and his wife and his children are forever
-moving. Now in precisely the same manner the tribesmen of the German
-tribes used to be going from farm to farm, and there were no considerable
-improvements made while that state of affairs existed. Why? Because we
-are just so constituted that we do not care to build houses for other
-people to live in, if we know it. When we start out to beautify a home,
-we may never enjoy it, but we expect to do so at the time, and without
-that expectation there would be no beautiful homes.
-
-Mr. Doctrinaire thinks because each tribesman would try to grab the
-best piece of land, there was original injustice in allowing private
-ownership. If he will think for a moment, he will realize that the native
-selfishness of man does not make against the private ownership of land
-to any further extent than it does to the private ownership of personal
-property. When the tribesmen went out to hunt, each hunter sought
-to bring down the finest stag. Each hunter naturally wanted to hunt
-where the best game was to be found. Hence those eternal wars between
-the Indian tribes which brought down the population on the American
-continent. Hence also those feuds and tribal wars which desolated the
-East in the times of nomad life.
-
-We find Abraham and Lot in a bitter dispute over a certain pasture; but
-as to the well which Abraham “had digged” there was no resisting his
-claim, that _well was his property_. Why? Because in the quaint language
-of the Bible, “He had digged that well.” In other words, while nature put
-the water in under the soil, and while nature made the soil itself, it
-was Abraham’s judgment which selected the place where he could find the
-water, and it was Abraham’s labor that removed the earth which covered
-the water. In other words, Abraham _made the well_, in precisely the same
-sense that the pioneer in the wilderness _makes a farm_.
-
-But, as I said, the competitive principle, each one wanting to get what
-is best, reveals itself in all directions. Every fisherman has always
-wanted the best fishing grounds. Nations have been brought to war by this
-cause, to say nothing of tribal disputes and individual contests.
-
-Nowhere have I contended that it was private ownership of land that
-made it possible for the laborer to claim and retain the product of his
-labor. I could not have said that because I know quite well that personal
-property preceded property in land. In other words, the laborers acquired
-a full title to the rude garments in which they clothed themselves, the
-rude implements which they used in the chase, their weapons, canoes,
-etc., long before they ever made farms. This has been explained fully
-elsewhere and does not at all antagonize the statement that _after_
-a tribesman has acquired by his labor an interest in the land, _the
-government of the tribe may be so arranged that the produce of the
-land will be taken away from the land-owner as fast as he produces
-it_. Instead of robbery by taxation in land—products preceding private
-ownership in land—the reverse is the case. To fleece the laborer of what
-he produces on his farm was the after-thought of those who governed the
-tribe.
-
-This is shown by the wretchedness of the peasant class in Russia today.
-Historians tell us that the Russian peasant formerly owned a very
-considerable portion of the land, just as the French peasants did,
-and in addition to the individual ownership which was in the Russian
-peasantry, there was a large quantity of communal land which belonged
-to each community of peasants as a whole. In the process of time, the
-ruling class in Russia put such burdens upon the peasant proprietor that
-he gradually lost his land and became a serf. Of course, Mr. Doctrinaire
-recalls that in 1860 the serfs of Russia were freed, and they were given
-a large portion of the land which had been taken away from them by the
-Russian nobles. They also held the communal lands. What has been the
-result? The ruling classes have put such heavy burdens in the way of dues
-and taxes upon the peasants that their ownership of the land, communal
-and individual, has brought them none of the blessings which they
-anticipated. Thus we have a striking and contemporaneous illustration of
-the great truth which I have sought to emphasize, namely, that the mere
-ownership of land does not emancipate the people.
-
-Arthur Young, the famous “Suffolk Squire,” rode horseback over the rural
-districts of France, just before the Revolution broke out. He found
-that the French peasants owned their own farms. He made a close and
-sympathetic study of their condition.
-
-And what was that condition?
-
-Wretched to the very limit of human endurance. The king, the noble, and
-the priest were literally devouring the Common People. Privilege, Titles,
-Taxes, Feudal dues were driving the masses to despair, to desperation.
-
-Yet the French peasant had “access to the land.”
-
-In England, at that time, the peasants did not own land, and yet their
-condition was incomparably better than that of the French.
-
-Why? Because they were _not_ ground down by Taxes and Feudal dues.
-
-Could you ask a more convincing illustration?
-
-Mr. Doctrinaire makes the point that when one member of the tribe decided
-to undertake the arduous task of making a farm out of a few acres of the
-millions which belonged to the tribe, this industrious member of the
-community “robbed” all the others when he claimed as his own that which
-his hands had made. I can see no more “robbery” in this case than in that
-of another tribesman who went and cut down one of the millions of forest
-trees which belonged to the tribe, and with painful labor hollowed out
-this tree and created a canoe. At the time the one tribesman made the
-canoe, every other tribesman had the same chance to do the same thing.
-At the time the one tribesman went into the woods and made a farm every
-other tribesman had the same right. If Mr. Doctrinaire thinks that the
-first occupant of any particular spot did not have the right to locate a
-farm, he might as well say that the first finder of the cavern, or the
-hollow tree, did not have the right to occupy that which he had first
-found, and yet he knows perfectly well that this right of discovery and
-occupancy was always recognized from the beginning of time and that
-from the very nature of things it had to be recognized to prevent the
-bloodiest feuds in every tribe. (A curious survival of this Right of
-Discovery is to be seen even now in the claim to the “Bee Tree” by the
-first to find it.)
-
-Mr. Doctrinaire says, impliedly, that if the tribesman had fenced in no
-more than the spot out of which he had made a farm, injustice would not
-have been done to the tribe: but he says the tribesman went further and
-fenced in a great deal more—“vast areas,” which he could not use, and
-also “claimed” these as his own. How does Mr. Doctrinaire know that?
-I did not state anything of the sort. Nor does the historian state
-anything of the sort. I was tracing title to land to its origin, and
-I contended that the origin of title to land was labor. Consequently,
-my contention was that the tribesman fenced in that which his labor
-had redeemed from the wilderness—his original purpose in fencing it in
-being _partly_ to identify what was his own, _partly_ to assert his
-exclusive possession, _but chiefly_ to protect his crop from the ravages
-of the wild animals that were still roaming at large in the forest. Mr.
-Doctrinaire must remember that the fencing of the farm was one of the
-most tremendous difficulties that the pioneer met with. _He_ had no
-barbed wire; _he_ had no woven wire, _he_ had no convenient sawmill from
-which he could haul plank. No; _he_ had to cut down enormous trees, and
-by the hardest labor known to physical manhood, he had to split those
-trees into rails, and with these rails fence in that little dominion
-which he rescued from “the wild,” that little oasis in a great desert of
-savagery.
-
-To put up the fence was heroic work. To keep it up was just as heroic,
-for forest fires destroyed it from time to time, and the pioneer had
-to replace the barrier against the encroachment of animal life and the
-inroads of savagery with as great a tenacity and as sublime a courage as
-that of the people of Holland, who tore their country from the clutches
-of the ocean and barred out the sea with dikes. Tell me, that after the
-pioneer had created this little paradise of his—rude though it might have
-been—amidst the terrors and the toils and sacrifices of that life in the
-wilderness, _it should be taken from him by the first man who coveted it,
-and who said, “HERE, TAKE YOUR CROP, THAT IS ALL YOU ARE ENTITLED TO:
-TAKE YOUR CROP AND GIVE ME YOUR FARM!”_ Would that have been _right_, at
-the time private property was first recognized by our people in Germany?
-Would that have been right at the time our pioneer farmers in New England
-and Virginia created their farms, endured difficulties and dangers which
-make them stand out in heroic outline on the canvas of history? No, by
-the splendor of God! It would have been robbery and nothing less than
-robbery for the tribe to have confiscated the farm which the pioneer
-of America had made—partly with his rifle, partly with his axe, partly
-with his spade—and throw it into the common lot where the idler and the
-criminal would have just as much benefit from it as the pioneer _who had
-made the farm_.
-
-As to _the abuse of land ownership_, that is an entirely different
-question. I agree that there should be no monopoly of land for
-speculative purposes. The platform of the People’s Party has constantly
-kept that declaration as a part of its creed. The abuse of land ownership
-is quite a different thing from land ownership itself. I am not defending
-any of its abuses. I am simply saying that _the principle_ is sound. All
-those things which belong to the class of _private utilities_ should
-be left to private ownership, because I believe in individualism; but
-all those things which partake of the nature of public utilities should
-belong to the public.
-
-Mr. Doctrinaire says that railroads have their power based in the fixed
-principle of private ownership of land. I deny this utterly. It was
-always necessary for the civilized community to have public roads.
-Even the Indians had their great trails which were in the nature of
-public roads. A public road never of itself did anything injurious to a
-community. The taking of land for a public road confers a benefit upon
-the entire community. It is for that reason it is laid out. The amount
-of land which is taken for a road, whether you cover it with blocks of
-stone, as the Romans did, or whether you cover it with iron rails, as
-modern corporations do, can inflict no injury whatever upon the community
-_unless you go further_. For instance, if you erect toll gates on the
-public highways and vest in some corporation the right to charge toll
-on freight and passengers at those toll rates, then you have erected a
-tyranny which can rob the traveler and injure the community. In that
-case, you can clearly see it is _not the road_, it is _not the land over_
-which the road passes, that is hurting the individual and the public.
-_The thing which hurts is that franchise_ which empowers the corporation
-to tax the citizens and the property of the citizens as they pass along
-that highway. In like manner, the road which the transportation companies
-use could never have inflicted harm upon individuals or communities. _The
-thing which hurts is the franchise_ which empowers the corporation to rob
-the people with unjust freight and passenger tolls as they pass along the
-highway.
-
-Mr. Doctrinaire mires up badly in trying to evade the point which I
-made about Italy. I contended that while it was true that great estates
-were the ruin of Italy, there had to be some general cause at work,
-injurious to the average man, before the soil could be concentrated into
-these great estates. This is very obvious to anyone who will stop to
-think a moment. Mr. Doctrinaire thinks that the great estates in Italy
-were acquired by simply claiming the land and fencing it in, by “each
-individual claiming far more than he could use.” If all the land of
-Italy had been claimed and enclosed, the power that these land claimers
-had over subsequent comers is obvious; but _how_ did “the claimers” get
-the lands? The most superficial knowledge of Roman History ought to
-convince Mr. Doctrinaire that _Italy was cut up into small holdings_
-until one branch of the government, the aristocracy, represented by the
-Senate, gathered into its own hands by persistent encroachment all the
-powers of the State. After that had been done, they fixed the machinery
-of government so that the aristocracy were almost entirely exempt from
-public burdens, whereas the common people had to bear not only their
-just portion, but also the portion which the aristocracy shirked.
-The ruling class, the patricians, not only escaped their burdens in
-upholding the State but they _appropriated to themselves_ the revenue
-which the Roman State exacted from the lower class, the plebeians. The
-result was that the Italian peasant found himself unable to sustain the
-burdens which the government put upon him and he abandoned his farm,
-just as the French peasant quit the land, for the same reason, prior
-to the French Revolution. In other words, _the small proprietor had to
-sell out to the patrician_, and the patricians got these great estates
-in the same manner that Rockefeller, for instance, got the estate
-which he now holds at Tarrytown. The Standard Oil King did not simply
-stretch his wires and “claim” land. He bought out the people who found
-themselves unable or unwilling to hold their lands. Rockefeller stood
-relatively on the same ground of advantage held by the Roman patricians.
-Governmental favoritism, and special privilege, the power of money which
-he had attained through unjust laws, made him more able to buy than the
-individual owners around him were to hold. _Therefore he absorbed the
-small estates_, and his estate became the “great estate,” just as such
-great estates were created in Italy.
-
-Mr. Doctrinaire can see the process going on around us. He can see how
-great estates absorb small estates. Our legislation for one hundred years
-has been in the interest of capital against labor. A plutocracy which
-enjoys the principal benefits of government, and contributes almost
-nothing to the support of the government, has been built up: charters
-have been granted by which large corporations exploit the public; and in
-this way great estates, whether in stocks or bonds, or gold, or land,
-have been created.
-
-The same principles, the same favoritism, the same privilege, working
-in different ways, brought about the same results in France before the
-Revolution, in Rome before its downfall, in Egypt, in Persia, in the
-Babylonian Empire. If there is any one word which can be appropriately
-used as an epitaph for all the dead nations of antiquity, that word is
-“_privilege_.” The government was operated by a ruling class for the
-benefit of that class, and the result was national decay, national death.
-
-Mr. Doctrinaire asks me: “How did the ruling class at Rome come
-to control the money?” I might answer by asking him: “How did the
-controlling class in the United States come into control of the money?”
-He would certainly admit that they have got control of it. How did
-they get it? They took into their own hands, in the days of Alexander
-Hamilton, the control of governmental machinery. They erected a tariff
-system to give special privileges to manufacturers. Out of this has come
-the monopoly which the manufacturers enjoy of the American market, and
-the natural evolution of the tariff act which Alexander Hamilton put upon
-our statute book more than one hundred years ago, produced The Trusts.
-
-Again, the power to create a circulating medium to be used as money and
-to expand and contract this circulating medium, thereby controlling the
-rise and fall of markets, was a vicious principle embedded into our
-system by, Alexander Hamilton, more than one hundred years ago.
-
-Again, the granting of charters to private companies to exploit
-public utilities is another means by which our patrician class has
-secured the control of money. Now at Rome there was a similar process.
-Instrumentalities were different, the names of things were different,
-but the ruling class at Rome had the power of fixing the taxes, and they
-appropriated to themselves the proceeds of these taxes. They had the
-power of legislation in their hands and exploited the public for their
-own benefit. In this way they secured, of course, the control of money.
-The one advantage of paying no tax themselves and of appropriating to
-themselves the taxes which they levied upon the plebeians was sufficient
-to give them not only the control of money, but the control of the land
-and of the man. In fact that tremendous power, to fix the taxes and to
-appropriate the public revenue, is all that the ruling class of any
-country need have in order to establish an intolerable despotism over
-the unfavored classes.
-
-Mr. Doctrinaire has the fatal habit of crawling backwards with his logic.
-He says that the Roman Patrician could not have controlled the money
-until he got control of the land. The slightest reflection ought to
-convince him that this cannot be true. No class of men ever secured the
-control of money by merely controlling the land. Just the reverse is the
-universal truth. Without any exception whatsoever governmental machinery,
-the taxing system, usury, expansion and contraction of the currency hold
-the land-owner at their mercy. The land-owner, as such, never had them at
-his mercy and he never will.
-
-Another instance of the crawl-backwards method of reasoning is given
-when Mr. Doctrinaire says that _usury grew out of land monopoly instead
-of land monopoly growing out of usury_. When a man gets himself into
-such a state of mind that he can deliberately write a statement of that
-sort for publication, he is beyond reach of any ordinary process of
-conviction and conversion. My statement was that usury is a vulture that
-has gorged itself upon the vitals of nations since the beginning of time.
-Mr. Doctrinaire says this is not true. On the other hand, he says that
-land monopoly came first, and _then_ usury. If the rich people got all
-the land first, so that they had a land monopoly, upon whom did they
-practice usury? _How could they fatten on those who had nothing?_ If Mr.
-Doctrinaire is at all familiar with the trouble between the Russians and
-the Jews in Russia he knows that one of the accusations brought by the
-Russian against the Jew is that the Russian land-owner has been devoured
-by the money-lending Jew. If he knows anything about our agricultural
-troubles in the South and in the West, he knows that the Southern and
-Western farmer complains that he has been devoured by usury. If he
-knows anything about the history of the Russian serf, he knows that the
-money-lending patricians made serfs out of the small land-owners by
-usury. If he will study the subject, he will find that in Rome, Egypt and
-Assyria the small land-owner was devoured by usury, had to part with his
-property and thus surrender to those who were piling up great fortunes by
-governmental privilege and by the control of money.
-
-Take the Rothschild family for an example. Did they have a land monopoly
-which made it possible for them to wield the vast powers of usury?
-Theirs is a typical case. Study it a moment. A small Jewish dealer and
-money-lender in Frankfort is chosen by a rascally ruler of one of the
-German States as a go-between in a villainous transaction whereby the
-little German ruler sells his subjects into military service to the
-King of England. These soldiers, who were bought, are known to history
-as the Hessians, and they fought against us in the Revolutionary War.
-This was the beginning of the Rothschild fortune, the transaction having
-been very profitable to the Rothschild who managed it. Later, during
-the Napoleonic Wars, the character of a Rothschild for trustworthiness
-became established among princes and kings who were confederated against
-Napoleon and many of the financial dealings of that day were made through
-him. Of course, these huge financial transactions were profitable to
-the Rothschild. Again, a certain German ruler, during those troublesome
-times, entrusted all of his cash to the safe-keeping of a Rothschild,
-the purpose being to put the money where Napoleon would not get it. For
-many years the Rothschild had the benefit of this capital, and he put
-it out to the very best advantage in loans and speculations, here and
-there. By the time Napoleon was overthrown at Waterloo the Rothschild
-family had become so rich and strong that it spread over the European
-world. One member of the family took England, another France, another
-Austria, another Belgium, the parent house remaining in Germany, and to
-this day the Rothschild family is the dominant financial influence of
-the European world. In other words, _by the power of money and the power
-of usury_, they were able to make a partition of Europe and they are more
-truly the rulers of nations than are the Hapsburgs, the Hohenzollerns,
-the Romanoffs, or any other one dynasty which nominally wields the
-sceptre.
-
-Now, can Mr. Doctrinaire ask for a better illustration of the truth of
-my statement that the power of money is not based upon the monopoly
-of land; and that the monopoly of land is the fruitage of the tree of
-usury? Originally, the Rothschilds owned no land. It was only after they
-had become so rich that they were compelled to look around for good
-investments that they began to buy real estate. Their vast fortune,
-which staggers the human mind in the effort to comprehend it, was not
-the growth of land monopoly, but _was the growth of usury_. What the
-Rothschilds have done in modern times, men of like character did in
-ancient times, and just as the modern world will decay and collapse if
-these evil accumulations be not prevented, so in ancient times people
-went to decay and extinction because no method of reform was found in
-time to work salvation.
-
-Mr. Doctrinaire asks me what is the cause of the Standard Oil monopoly. I
-thought that if there was any one thing we all agreed about it was that
-the Standard Oil monopoly had its origin in violations of law, in the
-illegal use of those public roads which are called transportation lines,
-the secret rebate, the discriminating service, the favoritism which the
-transportation company can exercise in favor of one shipper against all
-others, to the destruction of competition. You might end land monopoly,
-but as long as the railroad franchises exist, the Standard Oil monopoly
-will exist, if they can get the favored illegal treatment which they
-got in the building up of their monopoly and which they still have in
-sustaining it. The power of Privilege in securing money, and the power
-of money in destroying competition, was never more strikingly evident
-than in the colossal growth of Standard Oil. Mr. Doctrinaire might own
-half the oil wells in America, but unless he made terms with the Standard
-he would never get his oil on the market at a profit. The Big-Pistol
-is not the ownership of the oil-well. The Big-Pistol is the mis-use of
-franchises.
-
-With all the power that is in me, I am fighting the frightful conditions
-which beset us, but I know, as well as I know anything, that the
-principle of the private ownership of land has had nothing whatever to do
-with our trouble.
-
-Repeal the laws which grant the Privileges that lead to Monopoly;
-equalize the taxes; make the rich support the government in proportion to
-their wealth; restore public utilities to the public; put the power of
-self-government back into the hands of the people by Direct Legislation;
-restore our Constitutional system of finance; pay off the National debt
-and wipe out the National banking system; quit giving public money to
-pet banks for private benefit; remove all taxes from the necessaries of
-life; establish postal savings banks; return to us the God-given right to
-freedom of trade.
-
-With these reforms in operation, millionaires would cease to multiply and
-fewer Americans would be paupers. Trusts would not tyrannize over the
-laborer and the consumer, Corporations could not plunder a people whose
-political leaders they have bought. Some statesman might again declare as
-Legaré declared twenty years before the Civil War: “WE HAVE NO POOR.”
-
-English travelers might have no occasion to say, as Rider Haggard said
-last year, that our condition was becoming so intolerable that there must
-be reform or revolution. On the contrary, the English travelers might say
-once more, as Charles Dickens said in 1843, that an Angel with a flaming
-sword would attract less attention than a beggar in the streets.
-
-And with these reforms accomplished any man in America who wanted to work
-a farm of his own could do it.
-
-I cannot promise that he would get one of the corner lots of the Astor
-estate, but I have no doubt whatever that if he really wanted a farm,
-and were willing to take it a few miles outside of the city, town, or
-village, he could get just as much land as he cared to work.
-
-
-Random Comment
-
-Sir Walter Scott used to say that he had never met any man from whom he
-could not learn something. No matter how ignorant the humblest citizen
-may appear to be, the chances are that he knows a few things which you do
-not know; and if you will “draw him out” you will add to your knowledge.
-
-The Virginia negro who happened to pass along the road while the Chief
-Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States was puzzling his brains
-over the problem of mending his broken sulky-shaft, knew exactly the one
-thing which John Marshall did not know.
-
-The great lawyer was at his wit’s end, helpless and wretched. How could
-he mend that broken shaft and continue his journey? He did not know and
-he turned to the negro for instruction.
-
-With an air of superiority which was not offensive at that particular
-time, the negro drew his pocket-knife, stepped into the bushes, cut a
-sapling, whittled a brace and spliced the broken shaft.
-
-When the Chief Justice expressed his wonder, admiration and pleasure, the
-negro calmly accepted the tribute to his talent and walked off, remarking,
-
-“_Some_ folks has got sense and some ain’t got none.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-That little story is a hundred years old, but it’s a right good little
-story. A school-teacher, whom I loved very dearly, told it to me when
-I was a kid. He was the only man I ever knew who had it in him to be a
-great man, and who refused to strive for great things because, as he
-said, “_It isn’t worth the trouble_.”
-
-He was naturally as great an orator as Blaine or Ben Hill. He was far and
-away a loftier type than Bryan, for he had those three essentials which
-Bryan lacks—humor, pathos and self-forgetful intensity of feeling. But
-after one of his magnificent displays of oratory he would sink back into
-jolly indolence, and pursue the even tenor of his way, teaching school.
-“It is not worth while. Let the other fellows toil and struggle for fame
-and for office, I don’t care. They are not worth the price.”
-
-Few knew what was in this obscure teacher, but those few knew him to be a
-giant.
-
-Once, at our College Commencement, the speaker who had been invited
-to make the regular address was the crack orator of the state. He was
-considered a marvel of eloquence. Well, he came and he delivered his
-message; and it was all very chaste and elegant and superb. Indeed, a
-fine speech.
-
-He sat down amid loud applause. Everybody satisfied. Then the obscure
-genius to whom I have referred rose to talk. By some chance the faculty
-had given him a place on the program.
-
-I looked at my old school-teacher as he waddled quietly to the front. I
-saw that his face was pale and his eyes blazing with fire. I felt that
-the presence and the speech of the celebrated orator had aroused the
-indolent giant. I knew he would carry that crowd by storm—would rise,
-rise into the very azure of eloquence and hover above us like an eagle in
-the air.
-
-And he did.
-
-Men and women, boys and girls, laughed and cheered and cried, and hung
-breathless on his every word, as no crowd ever does unless a born orator
-gets hold of them. Actually I got to feeling sorry for the celebrity
-who had made the set speech. He sat there looking like a cheap piece of
-neglected toy-work of last Christmas.
-
-The faces of the leading people after my old teacher had sat down, were
-a study. The expression seemed to say, “Who would have thought it was in
-him!”
-
-I don’t think he ever made another speech.
-
-The brilliant eyes will blaze no more. The merry smile faded long ago.
-The great head, that was fit to bear a crown, lies low for all the years
-to come.
-
-He left no lasting memorial of his genius. Only, as through a glass
-darkly, you may see him, in a book called “Bethany,” written by one in
-whom he, the unambitious, kindled the spark of an ambition which will
-never die.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There being no smokers in the “smoker,” I went in there to stretch out.
-The Florida East Coastline train was working its way down the peninsula,
-and was doing it very leisurely.
-
-Into the “smoker” came a young fellow with whom I opened conversation. It
-turned out that he had been pretty much all over Europe. He had toured
-Germany several times. On the Sir Walter Scott principle, I sought
-knowledge from him, and he told me several interesting things.
-
-One evening he had been at Heidelberg when the soldiers mounted guard.
-This being a regular function many civilians had assembled to see it.
-
-An officer was putting the men through some of their exercises, when, at
-the order to “ground arms,” one of the privates let his gun down too slow.
-
-The officer flew into a rage, rushed up to the soldier, slapped his jaws,
-kicked him repeatedly on the shins, struck him with the flat of his
-sword, and _spat time and again in the man’s face_!
-
-Of course the officer was cursing the private for every vile thing he
-could lay his tongue to, all the while.
-
-Said my informant, “He not only spat in the man’s face once, but he did
-it four or five times.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-I asked, “Was there no murmur of disgust or indignation in the crowd of
-citizens who were looking on?”
-
-“None whatever,” he said. “The people took the occurrence as a matter of
-course. It happens so often.”
-
-Then the young man rose up in the smoker, and showed me how the private
-had stood in his place, rigid, staring straight ahead, not daring to
-change his position or expression while enduring the kicks and spits of
-the officer. Not a word of protest or complaint did he venture to utter.
-
-_That’s Militarism, gone crazy._
-
-Not long ago one of our high-priced city preachers declared publicly that
-we Americans needed an Emperor to head our army.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Do you recall a story which went the rounds of the newspapers a few
-years ago? In substance it hinted that William Hohenzollern, Emperor of
-Germany, had compelled one of his young officers to kill himself.
-
-My traveller related to me the particulars as he had learned them in
-Germany.
-
-The Emperor was holding a banquet, a revel, on board his yacht, the
-_Hohenzollern_: wine had been drunk freely; loose talk was going on. The
-Emperor made some insulting reference to the mother of a lieutenant who
-was seated near him.
-
-Upon the impulse of the moment, the brave boy did a most natural thing—he
-slapped the brutal defamer of his mother in the mouth.
-
-Consternation paralyzed the Emperor and all his guests.
-
-The lieutenant left the yacht; no one tried to stop him. Going ashore,
-he made ready to quit the world; and next morning he rode his bicycle
-deliberately off a precipice and fell headlong to his voluntary death.
-
-And the high-priced, city preacher declared that _we_ needed an Emperor!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Frederick the Great was really a great man.
-
-Riding along the streets of Berlin one day, he saw a crowd looking up at
-a placard on a wall, Reining his horse, the old King inquired, “What is
-it?”
-
-He was told that the placard contained a lot of violent abuse of himself.
-
-“Hang it lower, so that the people can read it better,” ordered the King,
-and he rode on.
-
-The pompous despot who now sits upon the throne of Frederick the Great
-puts girls and old women, as well as boys and men, in jail if they dare
-to say, or to write, anything disrespectful of _him_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Is democracy gaining ground anywhere? Are not those historic allies,
-the Church and the State, encroaching steadily upon the masses? Are not
-the High Priest and the War Lord constantly putting a greater distance
-between themselves and the Common People?
-
-Does not _the individual citizen_ have less power and recognition now
-than at any other time since the founding of our Government?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Poor General Wheeler! After all his efforts to please Northern sentiment,
-they would not permit him to be buried with the Confederate flag in his
-coffin!
-
- * * * * *
-
-_The Nation_ is a mighty good paper, but it ought not to class General N.
-B. Forrest as “a scout” and “guerrilla.”
-
-General Forrest was named by General Lee, during the last year of the
-war, as the best soldier that the Civil War had developed.
-
-Forrest was greater than his commanding general at Fort Donelson, at
-Murfreesborough, and at Chickamauga. He finally swore that he would not
-obey any more fool orders from blundering superiors, and he struck out
-for himself. During the short time that he held independent command his
-achievements, considering his resources, rivalled those of Stonewall
-Jackson in the Valley Campaign.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Nor should _The Nation_ be too hard upon the West Point officers who
-followed their native states out of the Union. Justice to those officers
-requires one to remember that they were taught at West Point that the
-States had the right to secede from the Union.
-
-If _The Nation_ will consult the text-book from which Generals Lee,
-Johnston, Beauregard and Wheeler were instructed in Constitutional Law,
-it will discover that these young officers simply put in practice that
-which their teachers had taught them to be their right.
-
-The book to which I refer is Rawle’s work upon Constitutional Law.
-
- * * * * *
-
-After General Wheeler had tried so hard to win the heart of the North,
-_don’t_ you think they might have allowed the Confederate flag to rest
-upon his folded hands?
-
-_That_ was the flag which he had followed in the storm of actual war.
-The Cuban business was nothing. It was child’s play, and pitiful child’s
-play at that. But the Civil War was real, was colossal, rent a continent
-asunder, and shook the world. It was the Confederate flag which had led
-Wheeler to his fame. His youth, his first and best, had been given to
-_that_; of all the banners on earth none could have been dearer, holier
-to him than _that_.
-
-To look upon it was to bring back the years and the deeds which had
-brought him glory. It associated itself with the heroes who had listened
-to his battle-cry, and who had sanctified their sacrifice to duty with
-their blood. It spoke to him of the hopes and the griefs and the despair
-of his home, the South; it recalled the enthusiasm and the heartbreak;
-the splendid devotion of noble women, and the resignation of conquered
-men.
-
-Surely, surely the Confederate flag must have been the dearest emblem of
-Duty and Sacrifice to General Joe Wheeler.
-
-_Don’t_ you think that Charity might have softened the heart of the North
-to the old warrior who was dead, and that they might have let him rest
-under the “Conquered Banner?”
-
-[Illustration: _The House: I give you warning, old man; it’s loaded!_
-
- _Bart, in Minneapolis Journal_]
-
-[Illustration: _If George Washington Came to the Capital Today_
-
- _Morris, in Spokane Spokesman-Review_]
-
-[Illustration: _The Stirring War Drama Entitled: “Chased By the Enemy;
-or, Curfew Shall Not Ring This Evening”_
-
- _Opper, in N. Y. American_]
-
-
-
-
-_Machine Rule and its Termination_
-
-BY GEORGE H. SHIBLEY
-
-_President of the People’s Sovereignty League and Editor of the
-Referendum News._
-
-
-Underneath the existing political and legislative evils in this country
-there is found a common cause—the rule of the few through machine
-politics. The powers of sovereignty are exercised by the few. Proof of
-this is the fact that the evils complained of are banished, or are in
-process of disappearing, wherever the people have established their
-sovereignty—have established the right to a direct vote on public
-questions. This system is the initiative and referendum. It is exercised
-in combination with representatives, and the system as a whole is termed
-Guarded Representative Government—the people’s sovereignty is guarded.
-
-This improved system of representative government is an evolutionary
-product, and being such it will gradually extend throughout the world. A
-practical question is: How best can its spread be promoted? To arrive at
-an answer, one must study the methods whereby the improved systems came
-into being.
-
-We find that the forerunners were third parties and non-partisan
-organizations. The first declaration by a political party in this country
-was the Socialist Labor Party in 1889. Next came a declaration by the
-Knights of Labor in 1891. The same year there appeared “The Referendum in
-America,” by Ellis Paxton Oberholtzer, Ph.D. The next year J. W. Sullivan
-published his book, “Direct Legislation.” During the year the National
-Direct Legislation League was organized. There was also published,
-during 1892, “Direct Legislation by the People,” by Nathan Cree of
-Chicago.
-
-On July 4th of the same year, 1892, the newly organized People’s Party
-commended “to the favorable consideration of the people and the reform
-press the legislative system known as the initiative and referendum.”
-And state conventions of the People’s Party and the allied parties also
-paid considerable attention to the initiative and referendum. During the
-Autumn the American Federation of Labor gave its emphatic endorsement
-to the initiative and referendum by commending “to affiliated bodies
-the careful consideration of this principle and the inauguration of an
-agitation for its incorporation into the laws of the respective states.”
-
-The same year the National Grange adopted a resolution recommending to
-the state and subordinate granges the Swiss legislation method known as
-the referendum and the initiative.
-
-The following year the People’s Party, wherever it was in power,
-endeavored to submit to the people a constitutional amendment for the
-initiative and referendum, but as a two-thirds vote was required there
-was a temporary failure.
-
-In 1896 the People’s Party at its national convention came out strongly
-for the initiative and referendum, as also did the National Party
-convention, composed of 299 delegates who seceded from the Prohibition
-convention. The Socialist Labor Party also reaffirmed its people’s
-sovereignty plank of 1892.
-
-The first legislation in this country for the initiative and referendum
-was by the People’s Party in Nebraska, 1897. The voters in municipalities
-were empowered to petition for the adoption of the initiative and
-referendum system for local affairs, and the system was to be adopted
-if approved by a majority of those who should vote upon the question.
-Hon. John W. Yeiser was chiefly instrumental in securing the law, and he
-endeavored to secure its adoption in Omaha, but without success.
-
-The same year, 1897, the People’s Party representatives in the South
-Dakota Legislature combined with the Silver Republicans and Democrats to
-submit a constitutional amendment for the initiative and referendum. Most
-of the Republicans in the Legislature fell in line and voted with the
-promoters of the reform. At the next election, 1898, the voters adopted
-the system. Afterward the Republican party, which then had a majority
-in each house, enacted the statute to put it in operation. Since then
-two sessions of the Legislature have been held and the effects of the
-referendum (the people’s veto) have been splendid. The following words
-are credited to the Republican Governor, Hon. Charles Herried, by a
-member of the Toronto Parliament:
-
-“Since this referendum law has been a part of our constitution we
-have had no chartermongers or railway speculators, no wildcat schemes
-submitted to our Legislature. Formerly our time was occupied by
-speculative schemes of one kind or another, but since the referendum has
-been a part of the constitution these people do not press their schemes
-on the Legislature, and hence there is no necessity for having recourse
-to the referendum.”
-
-The initiative in South Dakota was crippled by inserting a “joker”! The
-system provides that five per cent. of the voters may propose bills to
-the Legislature, “which measures the Legislature shall _enact_ and submit
-to a vote of the electors of the state.”
-
-The year (1898) that the voters of South Dakota balloted upon the
-question of adopting the improved system of representative government,
-the People’s Party, Silver Republicans and Democrats in Utah submitted
-to the voters of the state the question of adopting a constitutional
-amendment for the referendum and initiative. At the next election the
-voters adopted the system; but the Republican party gained control of the
-Legislature and refused to enact a statute for putting the constitutional
-amendment into operation. Two years later the same thing occurred.
-
-The same year that the Fusionist Legislature in Utah submitted the
-amendment a similar thing was done by a Republican legislature in
-Oregon. A proposal for an amendment in Oregon has to pass two successive
-legislatures; therefore the question was a live issue in the next
-campaign—1900. The People’s Party, the Democratic and the Republican
-state platforms each pledged that, should the party be placed in power in
-the Legislature, it would permit the voters to ballot upon the question.
-The Republican party secured a majority in the Legislature and submitted
-the question. In the next campaign, 1902, the question was again a live
-issue, for it was to be balloted upon by the voters; and again all the
-parties declared for the improved system and advised the voters of the
-state to adopt it, as also did the Granges and Organized Labor, likewise
-both the United States senators and the Republican governor, and nearly
-all the prominent men in political life in Oregon, together with most of
-the newspapers in the state. All advised the adoption of the system, and
-the vote of the people was 11 to 1 for the system.
-
-Governor Geer’s advice to the voter was: “If the referendum amendment is
-adopted by the people and made use of after adoption, it will be helpful
-all around as a restraining influence over careless legislatures. Even
-if not often brought into requisition, the fact that it is a part of the
-state Constitution, ready to be used as a check against ill-advised
-legislation at any time, will justify its adoption. It may not be needed
-now any more than it was 100 years ago, but there have often been times
-in the past when even ‘Our Fathers’ could have been wisely checked by
-this wholesome reservation of the rights of the people.”
-
-In Nevada, at the legislative session of 1901, the Fusionist party had
-a majority in the Legislature and voted to submit to the people the
-question of adopting the referendum. The next Legislature gave its
-consent and submitted a constitutional amendment for the initiative.
-At the following election the voters adopted the referendum, but the
-Legislature elected was Republican and it refused to consent to the
-submission of the constitutional amendment for the initiative.
-
-The same year in Illinois, 1901, a Republican Legislature and governor
-established the advisory initiative in municipalities and in state
-affairs. Through this system the voters in Chicago have voted three times
-for municipal ownership of street railways and the instructions are being
-obeyed.
-
-The Republican senators from Illinois, Cullom and Hopkins, are both on
-record as favoring the initiative and referendum.
-
-Since 1901 the progress of the initiative and referendum has been through
-the systematic questioning of candidates by non-partisan organizations.
-The start in this direction came from the successful experiences of
-Winnetka, Illinois. These experiences began in 1896 and continued from
-year to year with unvarying success.
-
-
-THE WINNETKA SYSTEM
-
-Winnetka is a suburb of Chicago, peopled largely by bright and active
-business men. Certain would-be monopolists proposed to the village
-council that it grant them a forty-year franchise for a gas plant. This
-was opposed by the citizens, for they wanted public ownership of city
-monopolies. They possessed a publicly-owned waterworks system and aimed
-to keep themselves from the clutches of private monopoly. Fortunately,
-at the time the gas franchise was asked for, there was being held each
-month a public meeting to consider public questions. It was called the
-“town meeting.” At the next town meeting, after the gas question came
-up, a resolution was adopted asking the village council to submit the
-question to the people. A deputation of leading citizens called upon the
-city council at its next meeting and Mr. Lloyd was accorded the privilege
-of speaking. After a warm time the council reluctantly agreed to submit
-the question to the voters and abide by their decision. The polls were
-opened and the proposed franchise received only 4 votes, with 180 against
-it.
-
-This settled the gas franchise and it did much more, for at the next
-caucus for nominating village trustees it was proposed and decided that
-only those men should be nominated who would stand up before their
-fellow-voters and promise, if nominated and elected, to submit all
-important questions to a vote of the people and abide by their decision.
-This was agreed to by the voters present, and each nominee for village
-trustee stood before his fellow-citizens and promised.
-
-Thus was the system installed, for there were no competing nominations.
-The casting of ballots on election day was a mere form.
-
-From that day until the present time the people of Winnetka have been the
-sovereign power as to ordinances. They are a Self-emancipated People.
-
-Reviewing the foregoing, it is seen that the pledges for installing the
-referendum system were secured by questioning candidates, while the
-system itself is through rules of procedure, which may be incorporated
-in the rules themselves or in an ordinance or statute. The system is
-the advisory referendum, the candidates being pledged to carry out the
-people’s advice. This they have done in Winnetka and elsewhere, as we
-shall show. But the system is intended for use only until the usual form
-can be installed. In fact, it is through an advisory initiative that a
-change in the Federal Constitution is to be secured, and in the near
-future.
-
-Immediately after the election in 1900 the writer, who was a delegate
-to the People’s Party National Convention of that year, withdrew from
-the Bureau of Economic Research and began devoting his entire time and
-energies to spreading the news concerning the Winnetka System, the
-primary aim being to help establish the people’s sovereignty in national
-affairs and to do so without waiting to change the written words of the
-Federal Constitution—a practically unalterable instrument until such
-time as the advisory initiative is installed. The following July the
-second social and political conference at Detroit approved the Winnetka
-System—the advisory initiative and advisory referendum—as also did the
-National Direct Legislation League.
-
-And Prof. Frank Parsons, president of the National Referendum League,
-said: “The Winnetka System is clearly great in its possibilities—a bridge
-ready for immediate use to the promised land.”
-
-Mr. Eltweed Pomeroy, president of the National Direct Legislation League,
-wrote: “I am also glad that you demonstrate that direct legislation
-is not only a great scheme which will be of inestimable value in its
-entirety, but that it is more than that, and can be applied on a small
-scale here and now, and that almost anyone can exercise influence enough
-to secure a first step.”
-
-Mr. Louis P. Post, editor of _The Public_, visited Winnetka during
-August, 1901, and in his paper of September 7 described the system,
-saying in conclusion:
-
- This Winnetka Plan of securing the advantages of direct
- legislation without waiting for party action, has special
- merit. It can, for one thing, be easily made the subject of
- effective non-partisan organization. For another, if the
- organization were to become influential, it would completely
- effect its purpose. Meanwhile, here and there locally the
- purposes would be effected even though balked and delayed
- in the larger government divisions. Moreover, the plan has
- been for years in actual and effective operation at Winnetka.
- Finally, it contemplates a spontaneous command from the people
- as to public servants, not a petition from them as to public
- masters.
-
-The Executive Council of the American Federation of Labor, at a meeting
-in Washington, D. C., September 20, 1901, considered briefly the Winnetka
-System, and the following is the published report:
-
- It was decided to issue an address to all affiliated
- organizations, requesting them to endeavor to secure the
- passage of local ordinances and laws for the initiative and
- referendum _on measures relating to local interests_, and thus
- to secure the beginning of this system of direct legislation,
- _with the view of subsequently enlarging the scope of that
- method of enacting laws in the interests of the people_.
-
-Thus the new system—the systematic questioning of candidates for the
-establishment of the people’s sovereignty—began and was endorsed
-throughout the land. During the four and a half years that have since
-elapsed the system has made steady and rapid progress.
-
-In December, 1901, President Gompers, of the American Federation of
-Labor, in his annual message recommended the system, and the convention
-ordered that it be explained in the _American Federationist_, “in
-order that Trade Unionists may be able to study it as carefully as it
-deserves.” Accordingly it was published in an eighty page extra number
-and 20,000 copies were circulated in addition to the regular mailing list.
-
-Gov. Altgeld wrote concerning this extra number: “It presents the subject
-of the initiative and referendum and representative government in the
-most lucid, striking, and comprehensive manner that I have ever seen.”
-He added: “Through the agency of the labor organizations it ought to get
-into every neighborhood, and in time it will create a sentiment that will
-be irresistible.”
-
-Gov. Altgeld’s prediction is correct. The very first year after the
-issuance of the extra number of the _Federationist_ the Winnetka System
-was established in Detroit, Mich., Toronto, Canada, and Geneva, Ill.;
-with the pledging of the Missouri Legislature for the submission of a
-constitutional amendment for the initiative and referendum; also the
-systematic questioning of candidates by organized labor in several other
-states, and the questioning of candidates as to the initiative and
-referendum by the granges in the state of Washington. The net result
-of questioning candidates was a majority vote for the initiative and
-referendum in six legislatures; also the pledging of nine of the sixteen
-congressmen of Missouri for a national system of advisory initiative
-and advisory referendum, and the pledging of the United States senators
-elected from Missouri and Illinois. During the course of the campaign
-the actions of four state conventions of the two great parties were
-reversed—the Republican state conventions in Missouri, California and
-Montana; and the Democratic state convention in Montana. The states where
-the majority vote in the legislature was secured were Missouri, Colorado,
-California, Montana, North Dakota and Massachusetts. In Illinois there
-was a two-thirds vote in the House, but the Senate refused to act. This
-Illinois vote was caused by an instruction from the voters through an
-advisory referendum taken under the 1901 act of the Legislature. The vote
-of the people was 5 to 1 for the establishment of the improved system.
-
-Before the meeting of the legislatures, after the autumn elections, the
-American Federation of Labor at its annual convention established a
-national system for the questioning of candidates, the interrogatories to
-apply to such measures as the organization should deem most important.
-
-The next year, 1903, legislatures were elected in but ten states and, as
-organized labor in these states had not yet been educated to the use of
-the questioning system, except in Massachusetts, little was accomplished
-for the initiative and referendum. In Massachusetts the labor people
-found themselves almost alone in demanding the people’s sovereignty, and
-during 1903 were quiescent. But in Kentucky Hon. J. A. Parker did valiant
-work. Through his paper, _The Home Tribune_, he called for workers for
-the referendum in Kentucky. At a joint state convention of the Allied
-People’s Party and the United Labor Party, a platform was enunciated in
-which existing political and legislative evils were outlined; and it
-was pointed out that the remedy is an improved system of government—the
-establishment of the people’s sovereignty through the initiative
-and referendum, to be exercised in combination with representative
-government. _The proposed change, it was declared, was the open door
-through which all the desired legislative reforms would come._ It was
-further declared that candidates of the Democratic and Republican parties
-should be questioned, and wherever a reliable candidate would pledge in
-writing for the improved system of government, no opposing candidate of
-the Allied Party should be nominated, and that every possible effort
-would be made to help elect the pledged candidate. The result in Mr.
-Parker’s own words at the close of the campaign was as follows:
-
- In all my work I found but little antagonism. The one obstacle
- was the bitter, unreasonable campaign carried on in this state,
- in which all principle was lost sight of, and the issue made on
- the hanging of Caleb Powers. The election was a riot of fraud
- and dishonor, and showed too clearly what little hope there can
- be in partisan action. The last election, not only in Kentucky,
- but all over the nation _has shown that to gain any substantial
- reform we must concentrate all effort on pledging candidates,
- AND IF THIS EFFORT IS SUPPORTED BY INTELLIGENT LOCAL EFFORT
- WE CAN WIN IN ANY STATE._ An instance of this is found in a
- senatorial district in this state, where Dr. J. S. Dossey
- had enrolled perhaps 300 volunteers for Majority Rule. The
- Republican signed our pledge, and, the Democrat ignoring the
- matter until after the time fixed as a limit, I wrote letters
- to our workers stating the situation. Within forty-eight hours
- came the Democrat’s pledge with a strong letter to support it,
- declaring that if elected he would give our bill his hearty
- support.
-
-The following year, 1904, the Presidential contest absorbed a large
-degree of attention, yet the people’s sovereignty cause was triumphant
-in four states—Montana, Nevada, Texas and Delaware—with considerable
-progress in many others; and a 33⅓ per cent. increase in pledged
-congressmen in Missouri, i.e., twelve of the sixteen are pledged to the
-people’s sovereignty in national affairs through the advisory initiative
-and advisory referendum, as also are five of the Chicago congressmen,
-and scattering ones throughout the country. The Pennsylvania granges,
-which are very strong, established a magazine of their own and questioned
-candidates for the initiative and referendum and other measures.
-
-The next year, 1905, like 1903, was a year in which few legislatures
-were elected, yet one state and probably two were rescued from machine
-rule—Ohio and possibly Massachusetts. In Ohio the required three-fifths
-of the Legislature are pledged to the submission of a constitutional
-amendment for the initiative and referendum; and in Massachusetts it
-is hoped that an advisory referendum system will be established. The
-Ohio campaign is especially noteworthy in that most of the Republican
-candidates refused to pledge, while the Democratic candidates pledged
-universally, the initiative and referendum being part of the state
-platform. Election day was a surprise to every one, for many of the
-people’s sovereignty candidates were elected where it was supposed they
-were hopelessly beaten. The Democratic gain in the Senate was 47.5 per
-cent.—an unprecedented landslide. The change was not caused by the
-Anti-Saloon League’s work, for the Republican candidates were pledged
-to its cause. The change was due to the independent voters, who had
-been apprised of the attitude of candidates through the publication of
-the answers to the initiative and referendum question. Early in October
-the State Federation of Labor at its annual convention instructed that
-all candidates for the Legislature should be questioned as to the
-initiative and referendum, and the replies published. The Woman’s
-Suffrage Association also questioned candidates as to the initiative
-and referendum. Referendum Leagues were active, and years ago the Union
-Reform Party had specialized on the initiative and referendum, thereby
-instructing the voters—a lesson which they evidently did not forget.
-
-This same year the State Federation of Labor increased most materially
-their activity for the people’s sovereignty. The Pennsylvania Federation
-of Labor set the pace. At its annual convention it provided not only for
-the questioning of political candidates, but took steps to provide for a
-people’s sovereignty committee within each union, and arranged in other
-ways for an educational and non-partisan campaign for the initiative and
-referendum. A fraternal delegate was received from the state grange,
-which also is working for the people’s sovereignty. Later in the year the
-New Jersey State Federation of Labor adopted the Pennsylvania program,
-and a few weeks afterward the New York State Federation did likewise. At
-the annual convention of the American Federation of Labor, representing
-one-eighth of the people of the United States, the executive council
-report recited the rapid spread of the people’s sovereignty cause through
-the questioning of candidates, and said:
-
- The systematic questioning of candidates, to which reference
- has been made, is gaining in importance each year. More and
- more our state branches, central bodies and local unions are
- realizing the system’s usefulness. It enables our people to
- prevent the evasion of issues by party machines, and the
- self-interests of candidates cause them to answer favorably in
- most cases. And the success of organized labor’s political work
- without engaging in party politics strengthens the union in the
- sentiment of its members and increases their number.
-
- Co-operation is also advanced with other interests, such
- as organized farmers. In Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Indian
- Territory and Texas the organized farmers, with organized wage
- earners, are questioning candidates as to the establishment
- of the people’s sovereignty in place of machine rule. This is
- accomplished without a formal alliance.
-
- We recommend the general use of the questioning-of-candidates
- system.
-
-The state Granges in sixteen commonwealths have declared for the
-initiative and referendum. These states are: Oregon, Washington,
-Colorado, Montana, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois,
-Missouri, Texas, Oklahoma, Kentucky, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Rhode
-Island and Maine.
-
-The Farmers’ Union, a rapidly growing organization (described in WATSON’S
-MAGAZINE for February) has adopted the initiative for use within the
-association. The National American Woman’s Suffrage Association declared
-last year for the initiative and referendum, and this year’s convention
-has urgently requested action by the state associations. Last year in
-Ohio the Woman’s Suffrage Association questioned candidates as to the
-initiative and referendum, and this year it is likely that the suffrage
-association in every state will apply the system. The Referendum Leagues
-are also questioning candidates.
-
-All these organizations have learned or are learning that the questioning
-of candidates immediately terminates the machine’s power to sidetrack
-the live issues, provided there is an organization to take the case to
-the voters. One individual in a state can easily co-ordinate the forces
-for the questioning of candidates, and thereby secure the immediate
-termination of the machine’s power to evade the live issues. One person
-in a state has repeatedly secured this result; in fact, every reform
-within a state is largely due to the engineering tact and skill of some
-one individual. Today, as never before, it is easy and practically
-costless to terminate machine rule by establishing the initiative and
-referendum.
-
-
-A NEW THIRD PARTY
-
-Heretofore the essential element in questioning candidates as to people’s
-sovereignty has been a State Referendum League, in order that the
-business and professional interests shall be represented. But in January
-a new departure occurred in Pennsylvania. The Pennsylvania Referendum
-League changed its form of organization to the REFERENDUM PARTY OF
-PENNSYLVANIA. The platform is as follows:
-
- The Referendum Party urges the following legislative action as
- the only certain peaceable means of forever eradicating the
- gigantic evils that have gradually crept into our system of
- government:
-
- 1. The calling of a constitutional convention to revise the
- state constitution.
-
- 2. Granting to the people the right to veto unjust laws or
- ordinances by direct vote; this right to be exercised only if a
- vote is demanded on any law or ordinance, by petition signed by
- two percentum of the voters of the state or locality affected.
-
- 3. Granting to the people the right to enact, by direct
- majority vote, needed laws which their Legislature fails or
- refuses to enact.
-
- This is known as the Referendum System. Wherever it has been
- in operation it has effectually stamped out bribery, graft,
- bossism and ring rule, and has made “government by the people
- and for the people” a practical reality instead of a mere
- theory.
-
- The Referendum Party invites the co-operation of all who favor
- this action.
-
-The members of the preliminary committee on organization are:
-
- Clarence V. Tiers, Chairman, Pittsburg, Pa.,
- Clement V. Horn, Wilkinsburg, Pa.,
- H. F. Lea, Bellevue, Pa.,
- H. W. Noren, Allegheny, Pa.,
- Walter Becker, Allegheny, Pa.,
- John C. Innes, Pittsburg, Pa.,
- George D. Porter, Philadelphia, Pa.,
- John E. Joos, Allegheny, Pa.,
- Nathaniel Green, Swissvale, Pa.,
- J. Ludwig Koethen, Jr., Pittsburg, Pa.,
- Hon. W. F. Hill, (Master State Grange) Chambersburg, Pa.,
- James Wm. Newlin, (Member of Constitutional Convention 1873)
- Philadelphia, Pa.
-
-Reformers will watch with great interest this new experiment in third
-party politics. By limiting the demand to a constitutional convention
-and the initiative and referendum, and proposing to endorse such of the
-reliable candidates as pledge for the people’s sovereignty, the program
-is largely that of a Referendum League, plus the possibility of making
-an independent nomination. But a league can circulate nomination papers;
-in fact, every league impliedly stands ready to do so, if necessary. One
-thing is clear; that the _Pennsylvania situation was such that the change
-to a Referendum Party put life and vigor into the referendum movement_.
-Not only were hundreds of enthusiastic offers of support sent in, it is
-said, and from every quarter of the state, but leaders in the minority
-party and in the Lincoln party were brought to a point where they found
-it desirable to take immediate notice of the organization.
-
-One reason for this is that the granges in the state, large in number and
-strong in membership, and organized labor, have not only declared for the
-initiative and referendum, but are systematically questioning candidates
-and publishing their replies. All that is needed to give great political
-power to these voters is an organization that stands ready to nominate
-referendum candidates. The mere existence of such an organization will
-accomplish most of its purposes. In this connection the experience of Jo
-A. Parker, in Kentucky, described above, should be borne in mind; also
-the fact that the People’s Party Conference of 1902 at Louisville almost
-adopted the program which Mr. Parker applied in Kentucky the following
-year. But in states where the minority party is under progressive
-leadership it is probable that a State Referendum League is the best
-possible instrument.
-
-Isn’t it clear that the thing for the People’s Party to do is to complete
-at once the establishment of the initiative and referendum in America by
-going at it through the Kentucky or Pennsylvania program? Or that the
-workers in a state should organize an Initiative and Referendum League?
-
-If we review the foregoing pages several things become clear:
-
-1. That machine rule can be terminated and the people’s sovereignty
-re-established without waiting to change the written constitution. All
-that is required is a majority vote in the city council, legislature
-or congress. By this means an advisory-vote system can be established
-and then the candidates for public office can be pledged to obey the
-will of their constituents when expressed by referendum vote. This is
-merely the re-establishment of a direct vote system for instructing
-representatives—a system as old as representative government itself. The
-President of the United States is selected through an advisory vote by
-the people and public questions are also being determined by advisory
-vote; for example, municipal ownership of street railways in Chicago.
-
-2. The basis of machine rule is an evasion of vital issues by both the
-leading parties. This power can be terminated at once by the systematic
-questioning of candidates as to vital issues, provided an organization
-or candidate stands ready to take the case to the people. Another way
-of stating the reason for questioning candidates is that the people are
-entitled to know how the candidates will vote if elected.
-
-3. A third party organization can question candidates and declare that
-unless there is within each district a clear-cut written pledge by a
-reputable candidate, it will place one in nomination.
-
-Or the program can be to place on the third-party ticket some of the old
-line party candidates, except in those states where fusion is prohibited
-by law.
-
-4. The People’s Party during its palmy days was a leading factor in
-popularizing the initiative and referendum, and in securing its adoption,
-and today, by centering its effort on the termination of machine rule
-through the establishment of the initiative and referendum, it can at
-once complete the rehabilitation of the American system of government.
-Not only can the remaining states be redeemed within the next two years,
-but it is thoroughly practicable to exert in national affairs this year
-an influence that shall result in a pledged majority in the national
-House and Senate—the pledges to be for the advisory initiative and
-advisory referendum. The entire body of organized labor is centering its
-efforts in this direction, the referendum leagues are demanding it, and
-all that is needed to secure immediate victory is a political party that
-stands ready to put up candidates. The mere existence of such a party
-will win the day. How best can the desired end be attained?
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: A Basket And A Fortune
-
-By Louise Forsslund]
-
-AUTHOR OF “THE STORY OF SARAH”, ETC.
-
-
- The Old Men’s Home, Indian Village, Long Island.
- June 10, 19—
-
- To the Matron of the Old Ladies’ Home, Shoreville, Long Island.
-
- Dear Miss: The writer of this letter has had a windfall and
- he wants one of your woman-folks to have a share in it. He
- has lived in an old folks’ home himself for ten years, hand
- running, and he has a feeling for them others. My cousin
- Obadiah Hawkins died up to Lakeland last week. He never would
- so much as lend me a penny whilst he was living, but now he’s
- dead, he’s left me ten thousand dollars in ready money and a
- house and a home. There’s a pump in the kitchen. He never was
- no hand for investments and the money was all in an old silver
- water pitcher. It’s all good and the matron here has counted
- it over. I always wanted a home of my own and never was able
- to afford one. I always wanted a wife of my own and never
- could get up gumption enough to ask any woman to share my bad
- luck. Now the luck has turned. I got the home. All I need is
- the wife. I be going to drive over this afternoon and see if
- you got anybody that’s willing. I put it that way ’cause I
- ain’t much account if I have come into a tidy little fortune.
- I wear a wig and have spells of lumbago. It’s the lumbago what
- brought me here. There ain’t a lazy bone in my body. As for the
- requirements of the lady. She must be under seventy years old;
- she mustn’t wear a wig or dye her hair. I want one respectable
- suit of hair between us. She mustn’t squint or take snuff,
- and if she is sot on keeping chickens—some women be—she must
- keep them in the coop. I’ll build the coop. And she must love
- flowers and garden sass.
-
- Expecting them to be on deck this afternoon at three o’clock, I
- am,
-
- Yours most respectfully,
-
- Samuel Jessup.
-
-A moment’s intense silence followed the matron’s public reading of this
-letter in the large hall which served as the community room of the Old
-Ladies’ Home. The matron, her young gray eyes twinkling and shining,
-looked from one old face to the other. Some were broadly grinning under
-their crowns of gray hair, some were hurt and scornful, some were only
-puzzled and amazed—these belonging to the old ladies who had held their
-shriveled, shaking hands as trumpets before their ears during the reading
-of the letter. And some faces were marred by a shrewd, keen, calculating
-look as if to exclaim: “I wonder if—!” The matron looked at them all, her
-smile slowly growing broader, then quickly she looked down at her desk
-and said with business-like briskness:
-
-“That is a very honest letter. I wish you could all give it your serious
-attention. There is no fraud in it, for I have telephoned to the Old
-Men’s Home, and Mr. Jessup is a noble, straightforward character. Now,
-are any of you willing to see him this afternoon? I suggest that all
-those who can not or who will not give Mr. Jessup a chance for their
-hands this afternoon, leave the hall.”
-
-There was a curious reluctance on the part of the old ladies to move.
-There was much wagging of heads, much nudging of elbows, whispers and
-winks and murmurs from every quarter, but no one stirred. Those who
-really had no personal interest or legitimate right to an interest in Mr.
-Jessup’s quest for a wife stayed to see what the others might do. The
-matron repeated her request. Then old Mrs. Smith, bent and humpbacked,
-took up her cane and hobbled slowly toward the stairway.
-
-“Ef he wanted me,” she declared with mock asperity, “he should oughter
-come twenty year ago. Ye notice,” she added, looking over her shoulder
-with her sharp, shrewd peaked face, “he didn’t tell how old _he_ was.”
-
-“He’s sixty-nine,” laughed the matron. “Most men of his age would have
-insisted on a wife of eighteen.”
-
-There was a scurrying sound among the group of old ladies and suddenly
-there darted across the hall a younger, slimmer, straighter figure than
-Mrs. Smith’s.
-
-“Miss Ellie!” protestingly called the matron, “where are you going?”
-
-Miss Ellie paused, her face flushed with shame to think she had not fled
-from the hall before. She paused and looked at the matron. However old
-she was, Miss Ellie did not look more than fifty years. Her hair was
-luxuriant, half silver, half gold, faded, yet giving a curious effect of
-a halo of moonlight. The flush mounted higher up the spinster’s cheeks
-until it crept over her forehead to the edge of her hair. For a moment
-she stood thus, looking at the youthful matron. Then, with a world of
-reproach in her tones, she said simply: “Miss Jessica!” Then she went up
-the stairs with quick and trembling limbs, but with an air of dignity
-that acted as a rebuke upon those lingering the hall.
-
-“Proud Miss Ellie!” murmured Jessica, herself feeling ashamed.
-
-“I do think,” began Mrs. Honan in a loud, strident key, “I do think
-myself that the man didn’t show very fine feeling. The idea of him
-a-spectin’ a woman ter jump at his head. Ef he wanted a wife, why didn’t
-he come a-lookin’ around modest an’ quiet-like in the good, old fashioned
-way?”
-
-With that she swept out of the hall. She was down on the register as
-having passed her seventy-third birthday, and anyway, she mused, she
-had always preferred a yard full of chickens to a yard full of flowers,
-because chickens are more lively. They keep you better company, she
-said. Then, with or without verbal excuse, one woman after another left
-the hall. There were two with the deplorable squint, several far on the
-shaded side of seventy, some who wore honest wigs, and some too honest
-to proclaim either that they did not dye their hair or that they had
-never sniffed at the contents of a snuffbox. Then there were the dear
-old ladies loyal to their dead husbands, the old ladies who did not care
-to give up the serene, uneventful security of the Old Ladies’ Home for
-a house shared only with a man afflicted with lumbago and very decided
-notions. However, ten remained, openly ashamed, yet not sufficiently
-ashamed to reject Samuel Jessup’s hand before they had seen him.
-
-“It don’t mean that none of us promise to take him, oh no!” said Mrs.
-Young, a woman living in the memories of her long reign as a belle. “It
-only means that we’d like to get a good look at him. We’ve had plenty of
-chances all our lives. We ain’t none of us here because no man wanted
-us—neither us widders nor us maidens. We’re here from ch’ice, Miss
-Jessica, from _ch’ice_! But still if there’s another ch’ice open to
-us with a real, kind honest man—his letter shows he’s that, bless his
-heart!—we’d each of us ten like to have one tenth of a show at him.”
-
-Then, greatly flustered at having spoken with such unmaidenly freedom
-on such a subject, Mrs. Young moved away from the desk across the hall
-and out of doors, where she could take a good long breath. After she had
-gone, one of the nine remaining candidates wondered aloud how Mrs. Young
-would look without her false front, for of course no one would deceive
-Samuel Jessup as to her quantity of hair.
-
-“But the rest of it?” whispered another. “You can’t wash all that dye off
-in one day, can you?”
-
-“Waal!” retorted a third, coming hotly to Mrs. Young’s rescue, “a man who
-wears a wig hasn’t no right ter be so particular.”
-
-Said the first one firmly: “She shouldn’t deceive him.”
-
-Answered a third: “Deceive him all she wants ter as long as it’s in
-somethin’ no man would have wit enough ter find out.”
-
-At three o’clock to the minute, Samuel Jessup appeared, emerging from a
-closed coach together with a plump middle-aged woman who carried with
-extraordinary care a large market basket covered with a red tablecloth.
-
-“Good gracious!” exclaimed Mrs. Young, peeking with half the household
-from the upper hall windows. “He’s been an’ picked up a wife on the road
-an’ come to offer his apologies.”
-
-She laughed merrily at the possible joke against them all. And yet what a
-pity that would be, too, for Samuel was a pleasant, self-reliant looking
-little man with his head hanging sideways as if he had never lifted it
-from a one-sided attack of the mumps. Somehow this attitude made him
-appear younger. But the wig! That was too much in evidence and they all
-decided that it must be clipped at once. Samuel did not scan the house
-with lover-like eagerness as he came up the steps. Instead, he watched
-the basket with intense interest—so intense that he stumbled on the way.
-
-“I bet he’s got a dog in it!” cried one of the candidates. “I will not
-stand no leetle measly pet dog around the house, a-sheddin’ hair all over
-the parlor sofy. I ain’t agoin’ downstairs!”
-
-But she went with the others and met Mr. Jessup. The woman with the
-basket was nowhere in sight, having been relegated to the dining-room. No
-attempt whatever was made to explain her to the old ladies. Samuel Jessup
-was immediately enthroned by the matron in her private office; and one
-by one in alphabetical order of their names, Jessica sent the candidates
-to him, thinking that this would be more delicate than to have them all
-face him at once. Delicacy in this affair did not seem so difficult after
-coming face to face with little Mr. Jessup. Very modestly, and with his
-head more on one side than ever, he told the matron that she must convey
-to the ladies his doubts as to any one of them accepting him. He thought
-it was very kind of them to receive him anyway, and—this with a quick
-keen look into Jessica’s wise and bonny face—he hoped that they would not
-laugh at him.
-
-The first five filed out of the room after only a few moments’
-conversation, each briefly explaining in her turn why Mr. Jessup “hadn’t
-took” with her. One did not like the way he held his head. One never
-could stand that wig. She knew that it got askew every time he took a
-nap. One thought him too much like her dead husband. One thought him too
-unlike her departed John to make a happy union possible. One said she
-never could bear a pump dribbling water in the kitchen; and he was too
-stubborn and “sot” in his ways to take it out. Then went in the sixth—she
-who had not rebuked the deceit of Mrs. Young’s dyed hair and she who
-hated pet dogs. After a longer period, she came out and with customary
-candor bluntly declared that she would have had Samuel Jessup in a
-minute, but she saw that she did not take with him.
-
-“The woman that gits him will be lucky,” she declared, “basket and all.”
-Nothing more would she tell. Then into the private room went the seventh
-old lady. She immediately demanded of Samuel an explanation of the woman
-and the basket; whereupon Samuel said that he refused to be questioned by
-any woman and he knew that they could not get along well together. She
-came out sniffing contemptuously, and vowed that in her opinion there
-was something very mysterious about this man. Number Eight went in even
-more eagerly, on tip-toe. She had read romances all her life. She loved
-mysteries and she was so sensitive about living in an Old Ladies’ Home
-partly on charity that she would have married any man that asked her.
-Almost any man—but not quite. She and Samuel Jessup talked together for a
-long time.
-
-“I am sure we would git along,” said Samuel at last, his heart stirred
-to sympathy for one who hated a Home of this sort with the same proud
-hatred that he had borne. “But,” he went on, “before I let you decide, I
-be agoin’ to take you into the dining-room and show you the basket. What
-belongs in the basket belongs with me an’s agoin’ with me. I ain’t much
-ter git, but come an’ see the basket!”
-
-Her romantic old heart beating high with excitement, Miss Ruby tip-toed
-ahead of him, across a tiny, dark back hall into the dining-room. On the
-very threshold she paused, her eyes popping out of her head as she looked
-within; then she uttered a faint scream and went scuttling into a corner
-among the shadows of the dim passage.
-
-“Good-bye, Mr. Jessup!” she called tragically. “Good-bye!” and there
-ended Samuel Jessup’s affair with Miss Ruby.
-
-A humorous light twinkled in the old man’s eye as he went back into
-Jessica’s office and waited for the ninth candidate. She was a woman
-famous in the Home for always managing to find some one to wait upon her,
-and she wanted a house of her own with several servants, an unobtrusive
-husband, and stained glass windows in the parlor.
-
-“I kinder fancied stained glass winders myself,” said Samuel. “But you
-can’t be keepin’ a hull passel o’ servants. One servant gal—that’s all I
-agree to, ma’am.”
-
-She thought that one servant might do if they put out the washing. Samuel
-looked dubious for a moment, seeing himself a henpecked husband, and then
-that twinkle came again into his wholesome eye.
-
-“Before we decide, m’am, I want ter show you what I got in that there
-basket. Me an’ the basket be inseparable.”
-
-She preceded him into the dining-room, her shoulders high and her nose
-uplifted. She stood for some moments staring at the contents of the
-basket, the basket’s owner, and the basket’s guardian staring at her.
-Slowly her face grew rigid. She shook her head once. She strove to speak,
-swallowed hard and then gasped;
-
-“How dast you presume, Samuel Jessup!”
-
-Samuel winked at the guardian of the basket and chuckled soft and low.
-But then he realized that he really wanted a wife, a companion in his
-old age, a mistress for the snug little home, and now there was but one
-candidate left. To be sure he might find some one outside the Home,
-but he had wanted in truth to share all that he had—the basket not
-excepted—with one who had tasted as he had the well buttered bread of
-charity in an old folks’ home. Soberly he went back to the private room,
-and Mrs. Young came drifting leisurely in to him. She congratulated
-herself on being the last. She wanted never to be twitted with having
-failed to give the others every possible chance, and she knew that had
-she entered the private room first the result would have been the same.
-She would be the wife selected by Mr. Jessup if she wanted him. A woman
-with real charm for old men, a woman who could have graced many a home in
-her lazy, yet pleasingly frivolous ways, she felt that Samuel could not
-resist her if she chose to throw her charm around him.
-
-“This is a very ridiculous position,” she began, with a quavering little
-trill of laughter. “I never went a-seekin’ a man before. They always
-sought me.”
-
-This was more than Samuel’s natural gallantry could withstand. He took
-her small lean fingers in his and drew her down beside him on the couch.
-Her fingers twined around his hand. She wore jewels—relics of bygone
-splendors—which seemed pitifully out of keeping with her present state.
-To Samuel they told a long, familiar story, and sent a feeling of pity
-out from him to her.
-
-“Mis’ Young,” he said gently. “I am jest as much obliged to all of you
-folks fer seein’ me as I kin be.”
-
-“To us _all_?” she asked and lifted her eyes.
-
-They had been very fine blue eyes once and now they were bright in spite
-of their puffy lids. And her thin hair, parted simply in the middle, was
-more becoming than the false front had been. He wondered that she had no
-gray hairs, but was too straightforward himself to suspect the deception.
-What a very pretty woman she still was, and, with that not displeasing
-girlish attempt at flirtation, how exceedingly feminine!
-
-“Obliged to us _all_?” she repeated, her eyes still uplifted, her hand
-still clinging to his. She remembered how eloquently hands can speak and
-so did Samuel, but of a sudden he felt that his horny old hand had become
-tongue-tied. He knew that she wanted him to say: “I be obliged to _you_
-in perticular, Mis’ Young.”
-
-And he did stumble through some such gallant speech, but all the while he
-was thinking: “So I have got to take this! This frivolous old lady with
-a spot of red paint on either cheek and a pair of penciled eye-brows.”
-Why had he not mentioned rouge in his letter? Mrs. Young still looked at
-him, still held his hand, remembering of old the value of long looks and
-of silence. Of a truth many and many a man had she captivated in this
-way in the days of long ago and once again in her mind’s eye she could
-see suitor after suitor at her feet. She had refused them all, after the
-first one had given her his name and then gone into the unknown world.
-Even after coming into the Old Ladies’ Home, she had refused offers of
-marriage, and yet, now of a sudden, she wished to share the good fortune
-and the ill fortune of Samuel Jessup. She laid her free hand on his
-shoulder and murmured a line from her favorite Browning—Browning who was
-a mere name and scarcely that to Samuel:
-
- “Grow old along with me,
- The best is yet to be.”
-
-Samuel was embarrassed. He pushed his wig back from his brow and, going
-opposite to the natural, sidewise slant of his head, it gave him a rakish
-expression, delightful to Mrs. Young’s eye. Then all of a kindle with the
-light of an eager hope went Samuel’s own brown orbs.
-
-“Yes, yes,” he said glibly, “but the best ain’t _ter be_. It’s here,
-right now, in the dinin’-room. Come along with me.”
-
-He was so mixed as to his own desires and emotions that he half hoped,
-half feared that she would stand the test, but when she saw the basket
-and its contents, first horror crossed her face, then the shadow of
-a deep disappointment fell among the wrinkles and the rouge and the
-penciled eye-brows. Sadly she faced Samuel Jessup as if certain of his
-answer before her questioning:
-
-“And you insist on a-keeping it?”
-
-“It’s mine. It belongs ter me. I had it jest half a day, but now all the
-women in the country couldn’t make me give it up. I don’t want ter be
-imperlite,” added Samuel in a milder tone, “but them’s the facts. Me an’
-the basket, or ‘Good-bye, Samuel.’”
-
-She interpreted him literally. Holding out her fragile, jeweled hand, she
-clasped his warmly, yet with honest sadness and compassion:
-
-“Good-bye, Samuel. If it hadn’t been for the basket—.” She paused, slowly
-withdrawing her hand, and then went on again: “You’re makin’ an awful
-mistake. Who’d a thought it of a man o’ your age! I shall never forget
-you. Good-bye, Samuel.”
-
-With one swift, half hungering, half frightened glance at the basket,
-she slipped out of the room. Samuel did not laugh and his eyes did not
-twinkle as he went up to the matron’s desk.
-
-“Miss Jessica, they’ve all practically refused me. What shall I do?” He
-had a vision of an endless quest of an eligible, willing old lady from an
-old folks’ home.
-
-Miss Jessica thought a long while, biting the end of her pencil, and at
-last she said slowly, half reluctantly:
-
-“There is one more—who—answers your requirements, but she was too proud
-to enter the lists.”
-
-Samuel’s face lit up. Proud women can be very tender and only a tender
-soul could accept the basket. Moreover, a woman with sufficient spirit to
-resent his action today was a woman after his own heart. He lifted his
-head from its sidewise slant and, throwing back his shoulders, looked
-Jessica square in the eyes:
-
-“What’s the woman’s name?”
-
-“Miss Ellie Smith.”
-
-“Waal, I be goin’ ter change it!” vowed Mr. Jessup. “Whar be she?”
-
-The matron hesitated, wondering whether she could play the part of the
-traitor to dignified, self-reliant Miss Ellie, but Jessica was very
-young. She looked down the long years that these two had traveled, and
-seeing how dusty and stony and hard the road had been, wondered why they
-should not come into a restful, fragrant garden at last. Ellie, she knew,
-even yet, with the help of the right man, could make the garden. And now
-as she looked keenly into Samuel Jessup’s eyes—eyes shaded by iron-gray
-brows, but deep, dark brown eyes, limpid, sparkling, full of tenderness
-and an appealing hunger for tenderness—she felt that Samuel could play an
-all-sufficient Adam to Ellie’s Eve, in the garden.
-
-“Miss Ellie’s all alone in the kitchen, hulling strawberries for supper,”
-she said very low. Then bending far over her desk, as if completely
-absorbed in her books, she went on: “It’s the south dining-room door. Go
-right in, take the basket with you—no, no, not that woman, too—and ask
-Miss Ellie if she won’t take charge of your basket for an hour or so.”
-
-Samuel grinned. He wagged his head back and forth until his wig shook
-in sympathetic anticipation. Years and years seemed to fall from him,
-until with his small, thick-set figure and his sparkling, youthful eyes
-he looked like a boy getting ready to steal apples. With short, firm,
-quicksteps he entered the dining-room. No one would have thought him a
-victim of lumbago from his gait now. Then of a sudden, Miss Jessica, no
-longer able to contain herself, went into her private room, where he had
-consulted with the ten, and danced around with glee.
-
-“Miss Ellie, you darling!” she whispered to herself. “I know you’ll do
-it!”
-
-Miss Ellie, in a prim, dainty blue gingham dress, with a great bib apron
-enveloping her slender figure, sat at the south kitchen window hulling
-berries, the basket of red fruit on the table beside her, a yellow
-earthen bowl in her lap. Her silver-gold hair caught sunbeam lights from
-the window until each single thread danced and twinkled. Little curls
-of silver gold nestled against the nape of her slender neck. Her face
-was that of an April lady’s—first the clouds chased across it, clouds of
-contempt, of anger and of regret; and then it took on a soft blaze of
-tenderness and of passionate longing.
-
-She did not want Mr. Samuel Jessup or any other man. She scorned the
-woman who might take him today for his home and that little sum of money;
-but why—why had she with all her power of loving and of attracting love,
-all the unspent passion of motherhood that had been her ruling passion
-since the doll-baby age—why had she come to see sixty-one without finding
-Mr. Right? Lovers in moderate numbers she had had in the days of long
-ago, and old people do not forget the loves of the springtime, but all
-the while—all through the spring and the summer and this swiftly passing
-autumn—or was it really winter-time?—there had never come to her one
-whom she would rejoice to call her mate! Him she did not regret so much
-nowadays, or she regretted him with a vague, indistinct feeling. He
-might have liked strong drink and smoked a strong pipe indoors. But the
-children! Ah, the children that had never come!
-
-She had outlived all her people. There were no nieces, no nephews, no one
-in all the world whom she could call her own, and there had never been
-and never could be a little grandchild to pull at her skirts.
-
-“Dran-ma! I love oo, dran-ma!” Only yesterday she had heard a little
-child lisp this into the ears of Mrs. Young.
-
-“Dran-ma, I love oo, dran-ma!” whispered Ellie, bending far over the
-berries with the hot gushing of tears coming into her eyes.
-
-Both the ache of motherhood and the ache of grandmotherhood were upon
-her. Never to have felt the touch of her own babe at her breast! And,
-now that old age had withered the breast, never to hear the prattle of
-grandchildren in her ears! And her ears were still so finely attuned,
-unlike the average grandmother! Miss Ellie looked up from her berries at
-the window. Her eyes were too dim to see, and wiping the tears away she
-looked out of the window again, down the garden. So, young girls stare
-wistfully as if they would look to the very end of the world and discover
-what, in the very end, may come to them.
-
-The dining-room door opened. Miss Ellie turned back to her task. She
-scorned to look up and ask her fellow inmate of the Home who had won
-Samuel Jessup. It was probably Mrs. Homan coming to help with the supper.
-Steps came across the kitchen. Ellie bent far over the yellow bowl and
-went on with her berry hulling. It needed a great many berries to supply
-that supper table. The sunbeam darted down from the top of Ellie’s head
-to seek out with its twinkling, gold-shod feet the silver-gold curls in
-Ellie’s neck. The steps paused close beside Ellie. Suddenly the spinster
-realized that they were not Mrs. Homan’s steps and she looked up. Scorn,
-indignation, amazement, and then something more subtle, something which
-one sees in faces everywhere all over the world, and something which
-makes the world more beautiful, crossed her face. There stood Samuel
-Jessup with the huge market basket in one hand. He held out the basket to
-Miss Ellie. He looked at her eagerly, almost with piteous appeal, as if
-to say:
-
-“They would have none of it, but—_you_! _You?_”
-
-The red table cover had been thrown off the basket. There lay the
-contents before Miss Ellie’s eyes. A big white pillow and resting upon
-it, a baby—a real, live, pink-and-white, wide-awake baby. More than this,
-a baby who at first sight of Miss Ellie holding poised in her hand a
-huge, red strawberry, struggled up into a sitting position, held out his
-two pudgy, dimpled little hands and cried with the softest, most ecstatic
-little cry imaginable: “Dranny!”
-
-The baby’s grandmother had died last week, but neither Miss Ellie nor the
-baby knew that, and Samuel Jessup kept a wise silence.
-
-Trembling, agitated, scarcely able to see or hear for the moment
-following the baby’s cry, Miss Ellie put down the red berry, placed
-the bowl on the table, and then turned to take the baby. She asked no
-questions. She simply took him. She knew that he was hers. Even now
-again—would her heart burst with joy and her ears lose their power of
-hearing!—even now again he was murmuring and mumbling: “Dranny! Dranny!”
-Now she knew that she would hear the prattle of one she called grandchild
-in her ears and guide with her shriveled old hands the unsteady movements
-of these little feet. Samuel Jessup counted not at all just then; but if
-he had attempted to take away that baby, she would have fought him like a
-mother-tigress.
-
-Samuel had meant to say much. He said nothing, but simply put his hand
-against his throat and looked at her. He saw her devour with eyes and
-lips the tender little form—saw her seek out the baby wrinkles in the fat
-little dimpled neck—saw her munch hungrily at the baby’s yellow curls—saw
-her feel every bone of the little body through the stiff starchy white
-dress as if she loved each one more than the other. And then at length he
-watched her unfasten the shoes, pull off the tiny white socks and then
-adore with the pent-up passion of the lonely years the adorable little
-rosy heel of his baby.
-
-Samuel cleared his throat with a loud noise and walked across the room.
-He noticed a red calico curtain at the cupboard door and wondered
-whether Miss Ellie had made it. In his mind’s eye, he saw another
-kitchen, smaller than this, cosier, but still with red calico curtains
-at the cupboard door and crisp white swiss ones—as crisp as the baby’s
-dress—at the windows. He knew that Miss Ellie would not want to get
-those curtains stained up with tobacco smoke—she looked so dainty—so
-he would volunteer to do his smoking on the back porch. If she left the
-window open, he could look through and talk to her and the little one.
-He came beside Miss Ellie’s chair and stood looking down at her lovely
-head and the baby’s cheek pressed against her own. The baby, quieted with
-happiness against that breast, was profoundly still.
-
-Through the open door came a wonderful fragrance—as the fragrance of
-youthful love—blown in from the syringa bush beside the kitchen door.
-They must plant a syringa beside the kitchen door-step in the new home,
-thought Samuel. Out of the stillness, he spoke, his voice very husky.
-
-“You be a woman arter my own heart—I knowed it when I see you a-settin’
-here a-hullin’ berries. It’s more than I ’spected. I never dreamed it
-could be: I was that old. But, Miss Ellie, you be—you be—” He lost his
-voice entirely for a space and fearfully, reverently, he lifted in his
-trembling fingers one of the silver-gold curls that lay on her neck,
-lifted it and immediately let it fall in place again. “You be,” he
-whispered, “a woman arter my own heart. I never found sech a one when I
-was young. I know it now, fer ef I had, I wouldn’t ’a’ been afeared of no
-bad luck fer neither her ner me. I’d a took her an’—” another pause and
-then with brave, masculine assurance, “she’d ’a’ took me.”
-
-Miss Ellie did not move, she did not speak. She felt that his voice was
-very far away, away off back in her youth where she had dreamed of the
-mate who was yet to come. Closer she pressed her cheek to the baby’s and
-so assured herself that baby and the man who had brought her the baby
-were real and belonged to today.
-
-Samuel was speaking again, his hand now on the back of her chair, so that
-it brushed against the ruffle that ran across the shoulders of her apron.
-
-“I allers wanted children, an’ when I got too old to have the hope o’
-ever a-marryin’, I used ter say ter myself: ‘Oh, ef they was only leetle
-grand-younguns now!’ Then the fortune come. Says I fust thing: ‘I’ll
-have a baby. I’ll be a granddaddy yit.’ Thar wa’n’t much mean about me.
-I be sixty-nine, but I wanted my own home, an’ my own wife, an’ my own
-baby. But I wanted the baby most of all. So the fust thing I done when
-the money come was ter go to that thar Margaret Jane Orphan Asylum an git
-this here baby. He hadn’t been there but a week. Jest lost his grandma
-an’ his grandpa—didn’t yer, yer pore leetle cuss, yer? He’s legally
-adopted. His name is Samuel Biggs Jessup, Jr. Ain’t he a wallopin’ fine
-feller!”
-
-Samuel exploded at the last. His bashfulness, his self-depreciation,
-his afraidness, were all gone. He bent over, his hands on his knees,
-and looked into the baby’s face. The baby’s face was very close to
-Ellie’s. The baby’s face was dimpled and smiling, while over Ellie’s
-face there was a flush of joyous young motherhood together with the
-proud, all-wondering delight of grandmotherhood, and blending with both,
-a sweet shame and shrinking such as no one but a virgin can wear. Oh,
-exquisite, young-old Miss Ellie! Your eyes swimming in unshed tears were
-so beautiful then with the inner light that Samuel blinked to see them.
-
-“Miss Ellie,” he whispered. Very still was the kitchen. The syringa
-outside the door shook out its perfume just for these two. The wind
-murmured through the fragrant flowers—it murmured:
-
-“Again and again and again! Even for the old, this same old story!”
-
-“Ellie,” whispered Samuel. “I want you even more than I want the baby.
-Will you marry me?”
-
-Again the silence fell, and after a long while, the voice of Ellie’s
-dream-swept, ideal-keeping youth came from within the curves of the
-baby’s cheek where her lips were hiding:
-
-“Samuel, you been a long time comin’.” Her voice faltered and then
-gathering a girlish tremor went on, “But, even ef you hadn’t brought the
-baby, I should say you was wuth all the waitin’.”
-
-
-
-
-_Control or Ownership?_
-
-BY CHARLES Q. DE FRANCE
-
-
-Few men who have studied the question, and who are free to make a frank
-statement of their views, see much hope for a “square deal” in railroad
-rates under private ownership. Most of those who really want a square
-deal, however, are giving the President their moral support, not because
-they expect him to solve the problem with his formula of “control,” but
-because they feel that the agitation he has caused and is fomenting will
-inure to the benefit of the public ownership and operation idea. His
-opponents charge as much—and they are correct. Many of their arguments
-against control are valid, too, if we grant that private ownership in
-this age of our civilization is best. Of course, we do not grant that.
-
-It seems certain at this writing (March 4) that the Hepburn-Dolliver bill
-will become a law—one of those dead letters, so many of which already
-encumber our Federal and State statute books. That it cannot and will not
-be enforced, except in a few spectacular instances to fool the multitude,
-is as certain as anything in human affairs. The roads will continue to
-take all that the traffic will bear, to give rebates, and to water stock
-in the good old way. If any doubt this, let them read the intensely
-interesting letters in various newspapers sent out each week from
-Washington by Lincoln Steffens. Mr. Steffens has, after most thorough
-investigation, reached the conclusion that our people are suffering not
-so much because of bribery and corruption as from having abdicated in
-favor of the railroads and other big corporations. It is not necessary
-now for a railroad corporation to bribe a congressman or senator—because
-most of these supposed people’s representatives are actually the railroad
-representatives, and many of them heavy stockholders.
-
-Mr. Steffens can lay no claim to a patent on this information by right of
-original discovery, for Populists said the same thing (only not so aptly,
-perhaps), twelve to fifteen years ago. But he is reaching an audience
-that the Populists did not and possibly never could reach. And he tells
-the story so well that we must accord him the highest meed of praise. I
-cannot refrain from quoting a paragraph concerning the spectacle he sees
-in Washington (New York _World_, March 4):
-
- “We, the people of the United States, are the petitioners.
- (For railroad rate legislation). We are coming here asking
- through the President that that bill (Hepburn-Dolliver) be
- passed so as to relieve us from certain abuses practised
- everywhere by our chartered common carriers, the railroads.
- And the representatives of those railroads and their allied
- corporations sit here enthroned; and they decide upon our case.
- They may decide in our favor but—the intolerable fact of it all
- is—they decide. They rule; they may be good rulers; but they
- rule.”
-
-That is the deliberate statement of a man who has gained an enviable
-reputation for thorough-going investigation. He is not a demagogue or a
-writer of penny-dreadfuls. He is on the ground and supports every one of
-his general statements with concrete examples.
-
-Mr. Steffens blames the people for the present state of affairs. I
-heartily agree with him. But I believe we should try to reason out where
-the first big mistake was made and arrive at a conclusion as to the best
-way out of the difficulty, unless, perchance, our people really like the
-rule of railroad oligarchy. I believe it is a useless task to chide the
-people for lack of civic righteousness, for indifference, for supineness,
-for failure to go to the primaries, etc., unless we point out clearly how
-complete sovereignty may be secured. It is useless to scold a man for
-not filling his lungs with oxygen, if you advise him to stay in a room
-overcharged with carbonic acid gas.
-
-The present state of affairs is due primarily to two great causes, or
-really to one cause operating through two different channels:
-
-(_a_) The private ownership of railroads.
-
-(_b_) The private control of the issue and circulation of money.
-
-The latter cause, in my judgment, is immeasurably greater than the
-former; but public opinion is now directed toward the former, so that
-a discussion of it is sure of a careful hearing. I do not insist that
-permitting the private ownership of railroads was an irremediable
-mistake; in fact, there is much good argument in favor of the contention
-that under private ownership the roads were developed faster and better
-than they, in all likelihood, would have been under public ownership. And
-we may admit, without at all prejudicing our case, that in the evolution
-of railroading, private ownership was best at the start. This is not
-capable of demonstration—but we need not quarrel over it.
-
-A railroad is a highway; and a highway is one of the attributes of
-sovereignty. Whoever owns and controls the road is to that extent a
-sovereign. And under our aggravated system of _laissez faire_, ownership
-and control always go together, except with the slightest modifications.
-Hence, with private ownership of railroads, it was inevitable that we
-should reach just such a state of affairs as Mr. Steffens pictures.
-Why shouldn’t “representatives of those railroads and their allied
-corporations” sit here enthroned?
-
-The owners of those roads are absolute sovereigns over the principal
-avenue for the distribution of commodities; and under our highly
-developed methods of production, with extreme division of labor, a great
-distribution of commodities is absolutely essential. With power to tax at
-will all users of highways, their owners can control, in a great measure,
-all productive industry.
-
-I am not a believer in total depravity. I can see no necessity or reason
-for calling railroad magnates hard names, or accusing them of unpatriotic
-scheming for power—except, possibly, for the purpose of arousing a
-lethargic people to a sense of their own wrongs. Being an actual
-sovereign, because owning the highways—the real, vital highways—and
-possessing the power to tax, I can understand how the railroads were,
-in a great measure, compelled to unite _de jure_ and _de facto_
-sovereignty. With non-railroad or anti-railroad men in the legislative,
-administrative and judicial bodies, “sand-bagging” and hold-ups were
-common. In self-defense (for no man ever lived who likes to be deprived
-of power), the railroads bribed and corrupted. They were by no means the
-sole culprits. The taker of a bribe is just as despicable as the giver.
-But gradually the system evolved to its present state—the union of all
-sovereign powers. The Government persisted in its refusal to go into
-the railroad business—so the railroads quite naturally went into the
-governing business.
-
-We cannot undo what has been done. We cannot turn back the wheels of time
-and begin all over again with public ownership of railroads; but we can,
-and I think we will, in not many years hence, take over the railroads
-and make them public property, operating them by Government officials.
-The union of sovereign powers is now complete: the owners of highways
-and “their allied corporations,” by their representatives, are now
-enthroned as the actual Government. This is as it should be, except that
-the ownership is too limited. _It should be made to include the whole
-people._
-
-[Illustration: _Will It Come to this at Niagara?_
-
- _Morris, in Spokane Spokesman Review_]
-
-[Illustration: “_What, Doctor, All of This?_”
-
- _Warren, in Boston Herald_]
-
-[Illustration: _Puzzle.—Which Way Is He Going?_
-
- _Handy, in Duluth News Tribune_]
-
-[Illustration: _R. R. Magnate: I cannot tell a lie. I am going to do it
-with my little hatchet._
-
- _Handy, in Duluth News Tribune_]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE SACRIFICE
-
-BY JACK B. NORMAN.]
-
-
-“Don’t think that I ain’t willin’ for you to have the home-place like pa
-wanted you to, Indie,” said the thin, tired voice that was fast wearing
-into silence, “’cause I am. It’s no more ’n right after all you’ve done
-for me ’n pa. The t’others has all got homes o’ their own an’ you ain’t
-got nobody to fall back on. But, Indie, promise me you won’t close the
-door agin poor Tom if he should come back. Give him shelter an’ welcome
-for my sake, won’t you?”
-
-Indie promised solemnly. Her thoughts went back to one still, tranquil
-night years before, when the doors of that same home had been closed
-against the wayward son by the father who vowed never to look upon his
-boy’s face again. The mother—a frail, submissive, toil-worn woman—had
-mourned in secret, but her prayers had been unanswered.
-
-“You’ve been dreadful good to us,” the dying voice murmured; “I hope the
-Lord will make it up to you somehow, Indie. Do you reckon the girls will
-git here ’fore I die?”
-
-“Yes, Aunt Viney, I really b’lieve they will. But you go to sleep if you
-can. I’ll wake you as soon as they git here.”
-
-By and by the sick woman fell into a gentle doze that deepened into the
-sleep that knows no earthly waking. The married daughters came too late,
-but if they were greatly grieved over their mother’s death they made
-little outward sign. They stayed at the home place for two days, during
-which the will was read. It deeded all that remained of the Pasely farm,
-that had been divided and subdivided to supply marriage portions for
-four, to Indie, in consideration of her faithful services for the old
-folks.
-
-“Maybe you can ketch Lem Powers with this bait,” was Louise’s spiteful
-comment, after the reading was over. “Everyone knows you always wanted
-him bad enough.”
-
-Mary, the eldest cousin, laughed dryly. “Indie can’t complain of the way
-our folks treated her,” she said with ill-concealed bitterness. “This
-farm is worth a thousand dollars above the mortgage money. It ain’t many
-poor relations that has property like this left to ’em.”
-
-“I guess Indie knows that she didn’t come by it plum honest,” the third
-cousin remarked. “She knowed how to work around the old folks so’s to git
-’em to leave her what they had. Well, we ain’t the kind to make trouble
-even if we _have_ been wronged.”
-
-When they had gone, Indie abandoned herself to a passion of helpless,
-piteous grief. She recalled one cruel hour long ago when her cousin
-Louise had accused her of caring, unasked, for friendly, pleasant Lem
-Powers, whose off-hand calls on the family stood out in Indie’s memory as
-the brightest events of her lonely, toilful life. Indie was twenty-three
-and plain, for the flower-like prettiness of her early childhood had long
-since succumbed to the triple blight of care and drudgery and loneliness.
-It had been known among her neighbors and acquaintances that Indie, at
-the age of eighteen, had never been “spoke for,” wherefore she had meekly
-accepted the stigma of spinsterhood that comes very early to the Southern
-country girl and had withdrawn from the mild frivolities of youth to
-become a household drudge in her uncle’s family in order that her cousins
-might have more leisure and freedom. After the death of her hard-working
-uncle, she had stayed with her ailing aunt while the girls married and
-left her.
-
-“I wisht I’d died instid of Aunt Viney,” Indie sobbed in utter loneliness.
-
-For two years Indie lived quietly and comfortably in the old home, paying
-her simple expenses by raising garden truck for the town hotel. Then a
-letter came from Tom’s widow imploring his people to send her enough
-money to defray Tom’s funeral expenses to avert his threatened burial
-in the potter’s field. It was a pathetic appeal, involving the brief
-story of Tom’s struggles, how he had worked his way with his little
-family from Texas to the old home state, where he had obtained employment
-in a factory. He had met his death through a boiler explosion the day
-before the letter was written. Tom had always hoped for a reconciliation
-in spite of his father’s unyielding hardness, the widow wrote. In
-conclusion, she begged his people not to allow his body to be consigned
-to a nameless grave.
-
-Indie went straight to Mr. Griggs, the real estate agent, who held the
-four-hundred-dollar mortgage on her farm, and asked him to lend her a
-hundred dollars. He refused gently but firmly.
-
-“Why, Indie, by the time you sell that farm it may not be worth five
-hundred dollars in all,” he said. “The interest on the mortgage is about
-due now and here you are wanting to borrow more!”
-
-“It’s for a particular purpose that can’t wait a day,” Indie told him
-anxiously, trembling in every nerve with the fear of disappointment.
-
-“I can’t help that. Business is business you know, and every man must
-look out for his own interests. There is only one way to get that money
-and that is to sell the place as it stands before the debts eat it up
-completely. I know a party that would buy, probably.”
-
-“Oh, I couldn’t sell the only home I’ve got,” Indie said piteously.
-
-“It’ll come to that in the end, anyhow,” Griggs answered indifferently.
-“My advice is to get rid of it now, while there is a few dollars in it
-for you. Anyway, you can’t raise that hundred you want any other way. If
-I was in your place I’d sell and go down to Birmingham and get work in
-the factory, where you’ll make something besides a mere living.”
-
-Indie’s heart almost stopped beating at the very thought of leaving the
-old familiar haunts for a strange city. Yet, Tom must have a decent
-burial at any cost to herself.
-
-“What could you get for the farm?” Indie asked huskily.
-
-“Eight or nine hundred I reckon.”
-
-“Could you let me have the hundred right now if I agree to sell the
-place?” she asked.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then I’ll sell—because I’ve got to have that money right off.”
-
-Indie hurried home and began to put things to rights. She packed up her
-personal belongings and moved all her humble furniture into one room,
-where it could be easily got at in case she should send for it a little
-later, if she were fortunate enough to secure steady work in the factory
-which Mr. Griggs had referred to. He had even given her a clipping from
-the Sunday paper containing an advertisement calling for twenty new
-hands, “experience not necessary.”
-
-Indie was sweeping the back yard when some one strode up the pebbled walk
-with brisk, business-like steps, which she mistook for Mr. Griggs’s walk,
-for he had promised to stop in on his homeward way. But it was not the
-agent. It was Indie’s old friend Lem Powers, whom she had so timidly
-avoided for years. His broad-brimmed hat was turned up squarely in front,
-framing his dark, strong, sunny face in a sort of a rough halo.
-
-“Evenin’, Indie,” said he, with a tug at his up-standing hat-brim. “Do
-you happen to have a wrench about the place? My buggy wheel’s locked an’
-I ain’t got no tools with me.”
-
-Indie shook down her sleeves hurriedly, keenly conscious of her
-unpleasing appearance. “Won’t you set down while I hunt up the wrench?”
-she asked, nodding toward the veranda bench. “I’ve done packed up
-everything, but I can find the wrench easy’s not.”
-
-“Packed up!” the young man echoed in blank astonishment, with a sweeping
-glance at the denuded premises. “Why, you don’t aim to move, do you?”
-
-“I expect to leave Shallow Ford to-morrer mornin’,” Indie answered
-solemnly.
-
-“You don’t say so? Goin’ to live with your cousins?”
-
-“No, oh no,” Indie answered quickly, with a dry smile. “None of them
-ain’t never asked me to live with ’em, and even if they had I wouldn’t
-go.”
-
-“I didn’t know you had other kin.”
-
-“I ain’t. I aim to go to Birmingham to work in the factory. I seen a
-advertisement callin’ for twenty new hands and I thought it would be a
-good chance to get started.”
-
-“Whatever put that idee into your head, I’d like to know? I don’t b’lieve
-you’ll like the work one bit, Indie,” the young man said with grim
-conviction. “It ain’t healthy, to begin with. Don’t you rec’lect how pale
-an’ peekedy them Baldwins looked when they come back here on a visit
-after havin’ worked in the thread factory down at Birmingham? They didn’t
-have the sperit of a jack rabbit between ’em, an’ their ways was plum
-changed too—sorter forrard like. You won’t like the sort of company they
-keep, Indie.”
-
-“I’ve got to go now,” said Indie, doggedly, “cause I’ve done put the
-place for sale. Mr Griggs thinks he can sell it without any trouble.”
-
-“He may. Indie, is it on account of the mortgage you’re leavin’?”
-
-Indie shook her head. She could not tell Lem her real motive.
-
-“’Cause if it is,” said Lem, earnestly, “I’d be only too glad to stand
-good for the debt if you’ll let me.”
-
-Indie’s pale face reddened painfully, and her head went back an inch or
-two, for she had her pride in spite of her helplessness. “I couldn’t ever
-raise enough truck to pay off the debt, anyhow,” she answered coldly.
-
-“You could rent the place an’ pay off that way. I do wish you would let
-your old friends do a little something for you, Indie,” he pleaded,
-growing red and embarrassed under her increasing coldness.
-
-“It’s too late to rent now, ’cause it’s way past corn-plantin’ time,”
-Indie objected, “an there ain’t nothin started but two acres o’ roastin’
-ears an’ some garden truck.”
-
-“I should think you’d hate to leave the old place,” Lem observed, letting
-his bright gaze wander over the green pasture strip and the narrow creek
-bottoms where the young corn waved idly in the evening breeze.
-
-Indie’s thin face clouded with the shadow of regret, but she made no
-reply, for she would not have admitted, on pain of death, that her heart
-ached with the pathos of renunciation.
-
-“Ain’t there nary thing I can do for you, Indie?” Lem asked, after
-an awkward pause, in what seemed to the listener a very off-hand,
-indifferent voice.
-
-“No thanky. There ain’t a thing to do but to take the cow over to board
-with the Bankses. Seems like I can’t bear the thoughts of sellin’ her
-to out-an’-out strangers, so I thought I’d board her till some of the
-neighbors gits ready to buy her. Miss Clayton’s goin’ to keep Billy for
-me till I get settled, so’s I can take him.”
-
-Billy, the big tortoise-shell cat that purred on the door step, lifted
-his head at the sound of his own name and blinked contentedly, whereupon
-Lem stooped and stroked his glossy fur. “I guess Billy’ll miss you if no
-one else does,” he remarked dryly.
-
-Then he rose and held out a big brown hand. “Well, good-bye, Indie, an’
-good luck to you,” said he. “If ever I can do anything for you, let me
-know, will you?”
-
-“Good-bye,” said Indie gravely.
-
-Indie went away the next morning—a morning full of balm and peace. Fresh,
-fragrant winds scattered the rose petals thickly over her shoulders as
-she hurried down the garden path to meet the stage. She did not trust
-herself to glance back, for some strange, dumb emotion tugged at her
-heart-strings and soundless voices called to her out of the sweet silence
-that enveloped earth and sky.
-
-She shivered as she entered the hot, sultry, dust-laden train with its
-burden of dull, spiritless travelers. “It must be the air,” she murmured
-to herself as she sank into a seat. “These cars is awful clost with the
-sun beatin’ down on ’em an no air stirrin’. Now, if a body was at home
-they could open the doors an’ winders an’ set in the shade.”
-
-“Home! Home! Home!” said the swiftly revolving wheels that bore her
-relentlessly away from the old, sweetly familiar scenes toward an
-unknown, lonely future. She watched the green fields and woods that
-whirled past the windows until they grew less and less frequent, with
-dingy little stations squatted between them. The landscape changed and
-the car grew hotter and the smoke thicker, for the train was approaching
-the factory district of Birmingham, the Alabama metropolis. Children,
-with unclean, pallid, faces, stared up at the car windows as the train
-pulled through their grimy quarters, and men in blackened, greasy clothes
-lounged along the tracks in the occasional shade of a sweltering brick
-wall.
-
-Indie found the squalid home of Tom’s widow after much patient wandering
-about the uneven, unswept streets. Many minutes passed before her ring
-was answered; then a white-faced woman opened the door a very little way.
-Yes, she was Mrs. Pasely. Did anyone want to see her?
-
-“I am Tom’s cousin, Indie,” the caller announced simply. “I’ve brung the
-money for Tom’s funeral.”
-
-The widow cried a little at first while she told Indie of Tom’s tragic
-death, but her mind was too absorbingly occupied over the funeral to
-permit of the luxury of self-pity. She dressed hurriedly and went out
-to communicate with the undertaker, leaving Indie with the children,
-three little, frail, colorless, old-young beings, who reminded Indie of
-cellar-grown plants. The widow was not long away; late that afternoon the
-two women and their three charges followed Tom’s remains to consecrated
-ground.
-
-“I never can tell you how thankful I am,” was all Mrs. Pasely said to
-Indie concerning her sacrifice, “for now I feel at rest about poor Tom
-bein’ laid away like he ought to be. If the baby was just well I’d try
-to start out an’ make a livin’ and do my best without Tom,” she added
-mournfully, “but it seems like I ain’t got no heart to do nothin’ while
-he’s so weak and puny. He ain’t been to say real well since we left
-Texas, where we lived right out in the country. I’ve tried everything I
-could think of but nothin’ don’t do him no good as I can see. The doctor
-says he won’t never git well till I take him back to the country, an
-maybe not then. Me’n Minnie’s got promise of work in the factory next
-week, but if little Tom ain’t no better I can’t leave him with jest Jim
-to look after him. If we only could git back to Texas agin we’d all git
-well an’ stout, an’ I wouldn’t care if we _was_ poor. All I care about is
-for little Tom to git well.”
-
-Oh, if she could only take them all back to the farm with her, thought
-Indie. A great wave of home longing surged through her heart as she
-thought of the peace and beauty of the deserted home. She knew just where
-the shadows of noontide lay darkest over the old rose-bordered yard—knew
-that the back veranda where she always ate her simple midday meals with
-Billy purring at her feet was just then in the thickest shadow of the
-china-berry trees, and that all was still and sweet and tranquil in
-that far-off haven of rest. Instead of factory walls there were green,
-blossomed hedges; instead of the strident clamor of motor cars and mill
-gongs there was a ceaseless chorus of song birds, and instead of the hot,
-smoke-tainted air of the city, there was the fine, earthy fragrance of
-the good sweet soil that lay fallow while so many weary toilers sweltered
-in their city prisons.
-
-Indie made Tom’s widow understand the whole situation, then she offered
-herself in any capacity that could serve little Tom, who had the look
-that she dimly remembered in young Tom when she first went to live with
-his parents. Indie would take work in the factory as she had planned to
-do and board with Tom’s widow to help along all she could, or she would
-take them all back to the farm and work very hard to make a mere living
-while little Tom had a chance for his life.
-
-“Why, I’d be willin’ to work day an’ night on a farm!” the widow answered
-earnestly. “I’m jest plum certain Tom will git well way off there in the
-country. Oh, do take us back with you! Me’n Minnie an’ Jim can make a
-real good crop between us. You’ll see!”
-
-That was what Indie wanted. She would sacrifice the last thing that
-remained to her—her pride—and ask Lem to help her by standing good for
-the hundred-dollar note, and far the rest she would work as she had never
-worked before.
-
-“We’ll go tomorrow,” Indie announced. “You git right to work packin’ up
-what you want to take.”
-
-The world was aflame with the splendid fires of sunset when the little
-party alighted before the farm gate on the following evening. “I’m real
-glad it’s light enough for you to see the flowers an’ things,” said
-Indie, as she led the way up the rose-bordered walk that seemed to greet
-her with sweet familiarity. “Good thing I left the key under the porch
-steps right where I could find it handy. There, now walk right in an’ set
-down, while I kindle a fire an’ git some supper.”
-
-She had bought a few eatables the last thing before leaving Birmingham,
-which she speedily converted into a tempting meal. Her guests rewarded
-her industry to a gratifying degree, even to little Tom, who seemed to
-have acquired a good appetite which delighted his frail, worried mother
-beyond bounds. “He ain’t et like that in I dunno when!” she exclaimed
-with tears of joy.
-
-It was close upon Indie’s usual bedtime when her ministration ended. She
-slipped out for a quiet rest on the front door-step to enjoy the peace
-and loveliness of the perfect spring night, but hardly had she seated
-herself when the garden gate creaked rustily and someone strode up the
-walk with heavy strides. At the sight of the dim figure on the step the
-intruder stopped precipitately.
-
-“Who’s there?” asked a familiar voice.
-
-Indie rose tremblingly. “It’s Indie Bright,” she answered. “Did you want
-to see me?”
-
-“Indie!” exclaimed a voice so thrillingly joyous that the listener felt
-herself quiver from head to foot with a strange, inexplicable ecstasy.
-
-“Ain’t it Lem Powers?” she asked. “Has anything happened?”
-
-“That’s what I’d like to know,” came the surprised answer. “I thought you
-was gone!”
-
-Indie told her story briefly, carefully deflecting all merit from
-herself. “I’m real glad it happened that way,” she finished, “for I did
-hate to sell the old place.”
-
-Lem drew a deep breath. “You’re jest five hours too late, Indie,” he said
-in a queer voice, “for the agent sold the farm this afternoon at four
-o’clock.”
-
-Indie felt the solid earth recede beneath her. “Sold it!” she echoed
-fearsomely. “Oh, Lem, whatever _shall_ I do!”
-
-“I dunno. There ain’t no use in tryin’ to buy it back, ’cause the man
-that bought it won’t part with it for anything, except——”
-
-He paused and went a step nearer. “Except you’ll give him what he’s
-always wanted—yourself. Indie, I never did want no other girl but you,
-an’ never will.”
-
-Indie shrank away, but a strong, warm hand found hers in the shadow,
-while the low earnest voice went on to tell her of a miracle that
-thrilled every fibre of her being with unspeakable happiness.
-
-“I aimed to ask you the day you told me about leavin’,” Lem confessed,
-“but by the way you talked I thought it wouldn’t be no use, so I bought
-the place hopin’ you’d want to come back some day.”
-
-“Lem,” said Indie, after a long, happy silence, “I never had no idee
-that—that you ever wanted me. I thought it was Cousin Louise you wanted.”
-
-“Louise—after I’d seen you!” Lem cried incredulously. “Why that would be
-like chosin’ a bit o’ glass instid of a real diamond. It was Louise as
-told me how you’d took a dredful dislike to me from the very first, an’
-of course I couldn’t help but believe it by the way you always acted when
-I was around. I tell you, Indie, that made a heap o’ difference to me.
-I’d a done anything in the hull world for you an’ would yit if you’d only
-let me.”
-
-Indie drew a deep breath that sounded strangely like a stifled sob. “Oh,
-Lem, that’s just the way I’ve always felt about you,” she confessed very
-softly and hesitatingly.
-
-After a long, long while, during which the years and their burden of care
-and loneliness and heart-ache slipped away from Indie’s heart like an
-wornout garment, she drew her hands away from Lem’s close clasp. “You’d
-better go now, Lem,” she said very gently, “’cause it’s gitting late an’
-I don’t want to wake the folks up after they’ve got to sleep.”
-
-“All right, Indie. I’ll be back tomorrow to see about putting in a late
-crop o’ corn for Tom’s folks to work out. We’ll jest let ’em keep the
-place free of rent for a while an’ see to it that they make enough to
-keep ’em. You can look after ’em all you want to, for it ain’t but a
-little piece from our place over here. Good night, Indie.”
-
-Indie lingered in the soft, starry dusk for a few moments after Lem had
-gone, to gloat over her great happiness; and presently something dark and
-small scuttled out of the lilac hedge and bounded into her lap with a mew
-of welcome. It was Billy, quivering with elation and delight.
-
-Indie caught her pet to her breast with a cry of rapture. “Oh, Billy,
-Billy, ain’t it lovely to be home again!”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-_Our Civilization_
-
-BY COUNT LYOF TOLSTOY
-
-
-Men say that civilization, our civilization, is a great good. But they
-who have this conviction belong to the minority who live not only in this
-civilization but by it; who live in ease, almost idleness, in comparison
-to the lot of workmen.
-
-All such men; kings, emperors, presidents, princes, ministers,
-functionaries, soldiers, proprietors, investors, merchants, engineers,
-doctors, scientists, professors, priests, writers, are so sure our
-civilization is a great good that they cannot bear the thought that it
-should disappear or that it should even be changed.
-
-Ask, however, of the great mass of agricultural people, slave people,
-Chinese, Hindus, Russians—ask nine-tenths of humanity whether this
-civilization, which seems a superlative good to those who are not
-agriculturists, is really a blessing or not? Strangely enough,
-nine-tenths of humanity will reply in the negative.
-
-What they need is soil, fertilizer, irrigation, sun, rain, forests,
-harvests, and simple farming implements that one can make without
-abandoning the agricultural life. As for civilization, either they know
-nothing of it, or it presents itself to them under the aspect of the
-debauchery of cities, with their prisons and their bagnios; or under the
-aspect of taxes and useless monuments, of museums, of palaces; or under
-the aspect of duties which prevent the free circulation of products; or
-under the aspect of cannon, of armor and of armies that ravage whole
-countries. And they say, if that is civilization it is of no use to them,
-and that, it is even hurtful to them. The men who enjoy the advantages
-of civilization maintain that it is good for all humanity; but in this
-case they cannot bear testimony because they are both judges and parties
-concerned.
-
-One cannot deny that we are now far along the road of technical progress;
-but what is far along on that road? A little minority lives on the back
-of the work people; and the work people, they who serve the men that
-enjoy civilization in the whole Christian world, continue to live as they
-lived five or six centuries ago, profiting only from time to time of the
-leavings of civilization.
-
-Even if they live better, the breach that separates their lot from that
-of the rich classes is rather wider than it was six centuries ago. I
-do not say, as many think, that, since civilization is not an absolute
-good we should throw out at one stroke the structure men have devised
-for the struggle against nature; but I do say that, to make sure this
-structure shall really serve men well, it is necessary that all and not
-only a small minority enjoy it. No one must be deprived of his due by
-others under the pretext that these benefits will return one day to his
-descendants.
-
-The good and reasonable life consists in choosing, of many ways that lie
-open, the way that is best.
-
-Therefore Christian humanity in the present situation should choose
-between two things: either to continue along the path of wickedness in
-which existing civilization gives the greatest number of benefits to the
-smallest number of people, keeping the others in poverty and slavery; or
-immediately, without postponing it to a future more or less remote, to
-renounce in part, or wholly, the advantages which this civilization has
-given to certain privileged ones, thereby preventing the liberation of
-the majority of men from poverty and serfdom.
-
-
-
-
-_A Coal Miner’s Story_
-
-BY CHARLES S. MOODY, M. D.
-
-
-The average worthy citizen reclining beside an open coal-grate, reading
-the press accounts of the latest coal strike, has little interest in the
-matter further than his interest in the probable effect of the labor
-disturbance upon the price of his winter’s fuel. When he reaches that
-part of the narrative that tells of the troops having been ordered to the
-scene of action, the powerful arm of the military invoked to put down
-the uprising among the working-men, he heaves a sigh of relief that now
-the strike will be of short duration and the price of coal will not be
-advanced. Seldom does he consider the matter from the standpoint of the
-man who mines the coal.
-
-Were that one big lump glowing warmly in the centre of the grate gifted
-with the power of speech, it would tell a tale that might well harrow up
-the feelings of the most callous. Alas! it is dumb, just as the man who
-dug it out of the bowels of the earth is dumb. It glows its heat away,
-crumbles into gray ash, and the worthy citizen retires to his rest with
-mind untroubled by any unpleasant thought of want or penury among those
-who go down into the unwholesome deeps of the mine and toil all day shut
-out from God’s gracious light that he and you and I may enjoy comfort and
-warmth.
-
-At one time of my life the relentless wheel of Fate in its ceaseless
-revolving whirled me to its nadir, and spilled me into the squalid chaos
-of a coal-mining town, and, not content with that, hurled me into the
-nethermost hell of all that seething vortex of toil and poverty.
-
-That the worthy citizen may see something of that side of the shield—the
-side sable—I will attempt to tell it, not with the graces of one skilled
-of pen, but in all its plain, naked, glaring hideousness.
-
-At this point allow me to crave pardon for the frequent use of the
-personal pronoun. I am speaking as a coal-miner, and can tell it better
-by using the first person.
-
-I was raised in the Far West. My life had been spent among the green
-mountains of the Pacific Coast, and I knew but little of the land beyond
-the Rockies. When ambition came, as it comes to youth everywhere, I
-dreamed of other lands where that ambition might find its full fruition.
-I left the mountain home, and set out to conquer the world of my dreams.
-My journey ended at the little town of Excello, in Northern Missouri. I
-was moneyless, and, as I soon ascertained, friendless. Disappointment
-glared at me from every door. Every vocation in life seemed filled, and
-all the avenues leading thereto were crowded with men eager to push the
-possessor of a job from his place and occupy it in his stead. I tried
-every possible chance for work, but without avail. Not even a country
-district school, with all its manifold possibilities of poverty, was open
-to the stranger.
-
-Not far from Excello, the Kansas and Texas Coal company have opened up
-extensive mines at Ardmore. At last, desperate and in absolute despair, I
-turned to the coal mines that wait with black, widespread maws to suck in
-such flotsam of humanity as I was then. I set out from Excello on foot in
-the bleak dawn of a March morning, for the only Mecca left open to me.
-A donkey-engine drawing a train of coal-cars soon overtook me, and the
-engineer stopped his train and took me on. It was but a trivial act of
-kindness to a stranger, but it stands out so distinct and vivid by reason
-of its rarity that I must speak of it here. Motives of the most sordid
-meanness so completely actuate the principles of those people that the
-simple act of one of them giving a tramp a ride glows from out the grime
-of greed like a gem.
-
-The little engine grumbled and rattled its way down the banks of a dirty
-yellow stream, dignified by being called a river, until it halted beside
-the head-house of one of the mines, and I was permitted to take my first
-view of Ardmore, one of the worlds that I had come so far to conquer. Ah,
-the irony of it all! What a contrast to the mental picture that the boy
-had painted upon the canvas of fancy not so many weeks before!
-
-First the tall head-house and hoist, with the coal-screens all under
-one roof standing black and grimy at the mine’s mouth. Then the long
-incline, up which crawled the laden cars from the mine, looking for all
-the world like filthy serpents from some subterranean world. Off to one
-side towered the culm-pile, emitting its choking sulphurous smoke and
-polluting the muddy water of the little stream that wound about its base.
-Off yonder, on either side of the same stream, perched a double row of
-squalid grimy shacks, like gigantic carrion birds waiting to pounce upon
-the filth that flowed down the current of the river. These were the homes
-of the miners. Home! What a travesty on the sweetest word in any tongue!
-In the distance clustered the offices of the Company and the Company
-store, that most powerful tentacle of the giant octopus by which the
-Company holds its operatives.
-
-I made my way down the narrow sidewalkless street, past the rows of
-miserable huts with their reeking front yards filled with children in
-no less degree reeking, past that bane of all mining towns, the low
-doggery, where for a few cents the miner buys the vilest of vile liquor,
-on to the town proper. The contrast between the two was startling. The
-officials must perforce reside where they collect their tithes, but
-they strive to make life bearable. Every house was neatly painted and
-every lawn set with trees and smoothly kept. I saw ill-clad women and
-low-browed men black with the grime of the mine entering a large building
-which I rightly surmised to be the Company store. The offices were on the
-other side, and those who entered there did so with an air of the utmost
-servility, as though they fully expected to be kicked into the street.
-
-It is wonderful what an influence one’s surroundings will have upon their
-character. Here I had been in Ardmore, only thirty minutes and I caught
-myself approaching that office in the same servile manner affected by all
-whom I saw enter there. I stood for some minutes hesitating before the
-portals where sat enthroned those who held my destiny in their hands.
-Cold and hunger are grim and determined drivers, however, and both were
-flaying me with their whips. Summoning my manhood I entered, approached
-the employment window and begged the right to earn my bread. The clerk
-gave me one keen look that swept me from head to foot and tersely
-assigned me to servitude in Mine 33, the one I had passed in the morning.
-He handed me an order on the store that entitled me to a miner’s outfit
-to be paid for out of the first money earned. He also assigned me a
-number by which I was henceforth to be designated in all my dealings with
-the Company. I became Number 337, and if I differed in any particular
-from the man bearing that same number in the Jefferson City penitentiary
-I was unable to detect that difference. True, I was permitted to walk the
-streets unmolested, but the product of my toil belonged to the Kansas
-and Texas Coal Company. I felt relieved. I had passed from the ranks
-of the unemployed. Henceforth I was to be a sovereign American citizen
-enjoying, as such, the Constitutional right to earn my bread.
-
-I passed into the store and purchased such things as appeared needful,
-using one of the miners as a model from which to deduce my needs. A
-coarse pair of heavy shoes, ducking overalls and shirt, a pit cap with
-place in front to carry the lamp, the lamp itself, a gallon of lard oil
-for the same, a dinner-pail called a “deck” and the necessary picks and
-shovel about completed the outfit.
-
-One of the clerks rather grudgingly answered my question regarding a
-boarding-place by informing me that there was a house on the hill that
-made a practice of feeding miners. Carrying my bundle, I called at the
-designated house and secured board and lodging. The house was slightly
-better than those I had passed before and, standing upon higher ground,
-was rather less filthy. I soon found that the miner is expected to do
-without all the luxuries and generally all the necessities of life. Water
-seemed the only article that could be obtained in plenty and for that I
-soon had reason to be truly grateful. The table fare was of the coarsest
-and cheapest variety possible. It possessed the sole merit of sustaining
-life, and that to me at the time overbalanced all other considerations.
-The beds were arranged in rows in an upper room. Two people were expected
-to occupy one bed. I had assigned to be my bed-fellow a young Cornishman,
-and I suspect the landlady selected him for that position owing to the
-fact that he was slightly less dirty than her other boarders.
-
-That evening my “buddy,” that is, the man who was to be my working
-companion, called to see me. He was a man of middle-age who had spent
-his life in the mines. He had the pronounced stoop that I noticed in all
-the miners and which I very soon acquired. His skin was of that sickly
-yellow hue characteristic of convicts and coal-miners, brought about by
-being shut out from the light of day. It seems that I drew a very lucky
-number in having this man assigned me for “buddy.” The other miners told
-me that he possessed a “machine.” That is, after years of toil in the
-mines he had been able to save enough to buy a drilling-machine that
-retails at the Company store for fourteen dollars. Wonderful fortune!
-Almost a lifetime spent in labor, and all that he had to show for it was
-a fourteen-dollar drilling-machine! We talked long into the evening and
-I found him not without ideas that were expressed in a crude way, but
-above all, and, what was of vastly more importance to me just then, he
-was a practical miner. I do not know what he might have thought about it,
-but he had the tact not to hint anything about objecting to a green hand
-as “buddy.” Indeed, I suspect that the Company would hardly tolerate any
-criticism of their actions in that regard.
-
-I appeared next morning clad in the habiliments of a coal-miner. My
-“deck” was filled and handed me and I followed the long line of stooping
-figures headed for the mines. We paused at the mouth of the pit and
-lighted our lamps and swung them from the front of our caps. Then,
-stooping still lower, passed down the long incline that leads into the
-coal vein. Soon the gloom surrounded us, and the flickering yellow-light
-from the burning lamp became our only guidance. Once upon the level of
-the coal body, the air became oppressive and warm. Used as I had always
-been to the free air of the mountains, I paused and gasped for breath.
-I was merely one atom of the inward moving black stream and was pushed
-onward. I soon grew accustomed to the lack of oxygen and before many
-days learned to exist upon a minimum supply of that article just as I
-learned to exist upon a limited supply of many other articles that in my
-ignorance I had considered essential.
-
-I neglected to state that I had been met at the pit mouth by my “buddy,”
-who escorted me through the mazes of the underground streets of the
-mine to the Third West, which was the field of our future efforts for
-some time to come. On the way in he conversed very cheerfully about the
-condition of one of his children who was ill with pneumonia and not
-expected to live the day through. I half suspect that he secretly hoped
-that the Death Angel would come, and not only relieve the little one of
-her sufferings, but relieve him of one hungry mouth to feed.
-
-It was over a mile from the surface to where our work lay. It consisted
-in “turning off a room”—that is, making an entrance into the bare face
-of the coal at right-angles to the direction of the tunnel. This was
-necessarily slow work and we accomplished but little the first day.
-All day long I sat upon my heels and picked a narrow trench from top
-to bottom into the resisting body of the coal. Long ere night came my
-cramped limbs refused to move another inch. I was simply racked from
-head to foot with pain. There never was a more welcome sound than the
-signal at the head of the entry to begin firing. Soon the boom of shots
-reverberated down the entry like the sound of cannonading, and the miners
-began straying out past us. We gathered up our tools and, placing them
-in a safe place, followed them. Ah, the blessed exhilaration of that air
-as I reached the surface! It was like being conveyed into another and
-better world. I glanced at my “buddy.” He had not changed one muscle of
-expression. With dogged, shambling footsteps he was setting off toward
-one of the miserable shacks.
-
-Curiously I watched the miners as they appeared. All nations seemed
-gathered there. Italians, Czechs, Russians, Finns, Hungarians, Slavs,
-Cornishmen, Americans, yes and negroes. While the colored man was not
-permitted to become a miner in that particular mine, he was employed in
-various other capacities. I saw children of tender years going from work,
-their dinner-pails upon their arms, the stoop already in their shoulders,
-the hectic flush already in their cheeks. “Merciful God,” I thought,
-“this greedy giant, not content with sucking the life-blood of men, must
-rob the school as well to sate its lust!” I learned afterward that there
-was a child-labor law on the statute books of good old Missouri, but
-that it was openly and flagrantly violated, and that the Commissioner of
-Labor was a party to the violation.
-
-I passed on homeward. Every step seemed weighted with lead. I dragged
-myself up the long hill and entered the house. I was shown the wash-room
-and my particular washing-tub filled with steaming hot water. The room
-was already filled with miners taking a bath. I stripped and found that
-though I had been in the mine but a day my body was black with coal-dust.
-The next half-hour I spent in trying to remove the grime, with but poor
-success. The other miners finished their ablutions and departed. I was
-shocked at the manner in which the most of them performed that important
-duty. A dash of water on the head and neck, a wet towel over the body,
-rubbing off the most evident particles, a brisk scrubbing of the head,
-neck and ears, and they were ready for supper. I was so long at my bath
-trying to accomplish the impossible that the landlady tapped on the
-door and informed me that supper only waited my appearance. I overheard
-one of the miners designate me as “that new dude” when I entered the
-dining-room. To be cleanly, then, was considered among these sons of
-toil as being a species of foppishness. (I soon learned to perform my
-ablutions more scientifically, and remove a maximum amount of coal-dust
-in a minimum length of time.) I was too tired to eat, too weary to sleep.
-All night long I tossed about in that comfortless bed and sighed for the
-coming of morning. It came at last and dawned upon another day of labor.
-
-Today we drilled our first hole and placed the first shot. I had the
-satisfaction of loading my first box of coal, affixing my leather tag to
-it and starting it on its journey toward the weighing office, thereby
-satisfying a small part of the Company’s claim against me for the
-clothes I wore. My “buddy” had lost his child the night before, and this
-afternoon the little one was to be buried in the graveyard on the hill
-back of the town. He asked me, as though requesting a favor, whether he
-might attend the funeral! Asked me, almost a stranger, whether he might
-attend the funeral of his own child! Heavens, what a system! My heart was
-so heavy that I could not work, but he seemed to take it all as a matter
-of course. In fact I detected a cheerful note in his voice as he informed
-me of the demise.
-
-During the afternoon I had nothing to do but carry the picks out to the
-blacksmith-shop to be sharpened, for which service we are to pay the
-smith each a dollar per month. After they were prepared I returned with
-them to the mine and employed the time in looking into the other rooms
-where the miners were at work. In almost every instance I found them
-idle. Inquiry revealed the fact that they were waiting for coal-boxes.
-They had plenty of coal to load, but no boxes to load it in. The Company
-makes it a practice to allow no man to get ahead. Once he falls into
-their grasp the idea is to keep him there. Even at thirty-five cents per
-long ton, the price paid, the miner could make fair wages if he were
-furnished boxes, but the Company does not intend that he shall make fair
-wages.
-
-Our room advanced rapidly now, and we always had coal ahead to load what
-boxes came to us, which were few enough. The most we ever got in any
-one day was six, that is three for each of us, and could we succeed in
-placing a ton in each one we would have made the munificent sum of $1.05.
-Out of that princely wage we were supposed to pay for board, lodging,
-hospital fees, blacksmith, and powder. By the way, there is the greatest
-steal perpetrated by the coal companies. They furnish the miner with his
-powder at a cost to him of $2.50 per keg. Of course they do not say in
-so many words that he shall not buy his powder from other dealers at 90
-cents per keg, but if he does do that they see to it that his tenure in
-the mine is very short, and they have divers ways of disposing of him
-without discharging him outright.
-
-There are two methods of mining soft coal. The method used in Mine 33
-was what is known technically as “shooting off the solid,” that is,
-drilling a deep hole in the solid coal body and blasting it down very
-much as rock is blasted in railroad building operations. This method,
-while it procures the greatest amount of coal with the least expenditure
-of labor, is at the same time very expensive to the miner who must buy
-his powder and in addition to his regular blacksmith tax must pay for the
-sharpening of all the drill bits.
-
-It is in these blasting operations that so many men in soft-coal mines
-lose their lives. The force of the blast loosening the coal at the same
-time jars the slate roof of the mine. When the workman returns and starts
-picking down the standing column of “shot” coal the treacherous top gives
-way, and, like a deadfall, buries the unfortunate man beneath tons of
-slate. Then there are three bells signaled to the top and down comes
-the padded car, if the man is not entirely dead, and he is carted away
-to the hut miscalled a hospital. The next day some of his friends are
-around with a paper and each miner is supposed to contribute a box of
-coal to the relief of the injured miner. Should the accident, however,
-result in the instant death of the man there is no such ceremony as
-calling the padded car. He is simply dumped into an empty coal box and
-hauled to the surface with the next trip going out. Once there, his very
-existence is forgotten in the mine and work goes on as before. The same
-formality regarding the gift of the box of coal is gone through with for
-the benefit of his widow and orphans. In all my mining experience I never
-knew of a miner refusing to subscribe to a fund of this kind, though they
-could ill afford to do so out of the scanty wage they were earning. You
-feel inclined to do it, for you know not what instant you will yourself
-require like assistance.
-
-One method employed by the Company in getting rid of an objectionable
-miner is so ingenuous in its simplicity that it deserves mention. They
-have what is known as a sulphur bell. If a miner loads a lump of sulphur
-into his box that is so large that he might be supposed to detect it the
-men at the screens pull a rope that rings a bell in the weighing-office
-and the unfortunate miner has a check placed against his number. He
-not only has that box of coal docked about half, but he gets a demerit
-as well. Three of these demerits results in his dismissal from the
-mine. Now, let us illustrate. In the first place, there is so much of
-the sulphurous mineral scattered through the coal body that it is an
-absolute impossibility to remove all of it down there in the half light
-of the underground world. There is hardly a box of coal that reaches the
-weighing scales that does not contain several pounds of the substance.
-That some miners do place lumps of it in their boxes to increase the
-weight is perfectly true. A miner becomes objectionable to the powers
-that be by reason of talking too much (for some of them _do_ think and
-express their thoughts to their fellows) and the powers that be decide
-to get rid of him. They could simply call him into the office and hand
-him his time, but that is not the policy. The word is passed to the man
-at the bottom of the screens to “bell” Number so and so out. The Argus
-eye of the man is upon every box of coal that comes sliding down the
-incline. He hears this man’s number called and detects a lump of sulphur
-sliding along with the descending coal. He reaches up, yanks the bell
-rope and that miner is one-third out of a job. It may take several days
-to complete the task, but Fate is no more certain than that it will be
-completed. Usually a miner who knows himself to be under the ban and sees
-a sulphur check opposite his number takes the hint and calls for his
-time. Wonderfully simple. Charmingly effective.
-
-Another and equally effective method is that of slow starvation. The
-banned miner finds that he is not getting an equal number of boxes
-with his fellows. He complains to the driver and obtains but scant
-satisfaction. Things go on until pay-day and he finds himself behind
-with the company. He is questioned very closely as to the reason for this
-and solemnly warned not to allow it to occur again. Naturally it does
-occur again and he is forced to look elsewhere for work.
-
-These instances are, however, comparatively rare. It is the policy of the
-octopus to hold securely every victim who falls into the slimy toils.
-Only when a man has the courage to assert his manhood does he become
-objectionable to the company. So complete is the system that there are
-few such.
-
-It does not require one skilled in the economics of the labor problem
-to point out the glaring evils of a coal-mining system. They are so
-evident that even he who runs may read. They are so patent that even the
-dull creatures who toil under them feel in a blank way that something
-is wrong. Just what, they cannot say. They realize that they are always
-hungry, always toiling and always in debt. There are three things that
-the strong arm of the judiciary should suppress—child labor, peonage, and
-weight frauds.
-
-I have purposely placed child labor first, for it deserves the first
-place. Children of very tender years are forced into the mines, where
-they serve in various capacities, some of them even being utilized by
-their parents in the actual mining operations. This is done that the
-parent may obtain an extra supply of coal boxes by reason of his having a
-“buddy,” though the coal is all loaded out under his number. Principally,
-however, the little fellows are employed as “trappers,” to open and
-close the immense valves that direct the air current down the various
-entries. All day long these infants stand in the noisome draft and swing
-back and forth those heavy doors. With the strong current of air pushing
-or pulling against these valves it is no light task for even a man to
-perform. Then the damp air, playing about the half clad figure, induces
-colds, pneumonia and consumption. It is a rare thing to see one of these
-little “trappers” who is not coughing with some form of respiratory
-trouble. The parents lie cheerfully regarding the child’s age, and the
-child itself lies just as cheerfully. Poor creatures, they are hardly to
-be blamed! The few pennies that are thus obtained help to keep the almost
-empty pot boiling at the squalid home.
-
-The system of peonage is worse far than African slavery ever could have
-been. From year’s end to year’s end the miner never sees money. He is
-paid in coupon books good at the store for the necessities of life and
-that is all he is expected to have, and precious few of them. In almost
-every instance the Company has sold to the miner one of the miserable
-houses, for which he is to pay a certain sum every month. The Company
-proudly boast that their miners own their own homes. The miner is given a
-contract to be held in escrow (by the Company) whereby upon the payment
-of the purchase price he is to have a deed to the property. It is a very
-significant fact that there were only eighteen deeds on record in Macon
-County covering these properties. In other words, only eighteen miners
-actually owned their homes. It was never the intention of the Company to
-allow the miner to secure title to his “home.” If any considerable number
-of them showed symptoms of making good on the payments, the Company had
-many ways of causing them to default and thus violate the ironclad terms
-of the contract.
-
-The contention regarding weights is one of long standing. The miner is
-supposed to mine a long ton of 2240 pounds. In reality he mines nearer
-3000 pounds. The scales are hidden from the view of the miner and the
-weigh boss cheerfully deducts from the weight of the miner’s box anything
-that he sees fit and he usually sees fit to deduct about one fourth. This
-systematic robbery is carried on all the time. Could the miner obtain
-what his labor actually produces, his condition would be less miserable.
-He does not obtain it, however, and he seems powerless to bring about
-change. Now we will return to my own personal experiences in the mine.
-Our room was a good one, save that the slate top was very treacherous
-and we took particular care to keep it well timbered. My “buddy” was a
-thorough miner and fully knew the virtue of propping the top perfectly.
-The room had been driven up some sixty yards when the accident happened,
-that brought home to me the dangers of mining.
-
-We fired a fourteen-foot hole in the evening, before leaving the mine.
-The next morning my “buddy” arrived before I did, and began loading the
-box that was standing in the room. Upon my arrival I found the box half
-filled, but my “buddy” nowhere in sight. A mass of slate had fallen and I
-knew instinctively that my “buddy” was beneath the mass. I called some of
-the nearby miners and, after propping the top, we fell to work removing
-the debris. First an arm showed; then the entire body was exposed to
-view. He had been instantly killed. I loaded the body into the half
-filled box and accompanied it to the top. It became my duty to inform
-the wife of the misfortune. She, poor woman, took the news stolidly,
-as though she had long expected it. Indeed, I think they grow to look
-forward to the time when the husband will be carried in, crushed out of
-all semblance to a human being. We buried him in the bleak graveyard on
-the hill and, as his “buddy,” it became my duty to carry around the paper
-that asked assistance for the widow. In her stolid way, I suppose, she
-was grateful for the charity, but she never showed it by any emotion of
-the face, taking the whole thing as a matter of course.
-
-It had been a very wet Spring and the falling rain had completely
-saturated the ground and, soaking through, had loosened the slate and
-soapstone top until falls were of almost daily occurrence. As yet we had
-not been visited with any that were disastrous in nature. A few tons of
-rock in some of the rooms, a miner killed or hurt, was about all. In
-June, however, occurred the fall that imprisoned several hundred of the
-miners in the West entries for two days. Down toward the beginning of
-the first West an old deserted room caved in, carrying with it the top
-above the entry proper. For several days the miners had noted that the
-room was “working,” that is, the top was pressing upon the props. This
-was evidenced by the collection of fine flakes of slate that covered
-the room and the entry when we entered the mine in the morning. With
-characteristic negligence the matter was passed up and nothing done but
-to remove the iron track from the room. One day I paused at the mouth
-of the room, attracted by a peculiar noise. At intervals there was a
-sound like the snapping of an overwrought violin string. I afterward
-learned that the sound was produced by the bending props throwing off
-fine splinters. That evening when we passed out the props were snapping
-as they broke under the enormous pressure. A faraway rumbling was heard,
-like wagons passing over a covered bridge. The room was certain to fall
-during the night, the old miners said.
-
-It did not, however, for it was still “working” the next morning.
-Sometime during the forenoon I heard a sound as of distant artillery
-fire. Boom, boom, boom,—the sound came up the entry, causing a current of
-air to flare the lights hither and yon. This continued for an hour; then
-the room caved. There was a crash of falling stone, a sound impossible
-to describe in any other words than terrible, a great gust of wind, and
-every lamp in the entry was extinguished. We rushed down the entry to
-find that all egress was shut off. The fall of the room had carried with
-it the entry as well, and we were prisoners behind thirty feet of solid
-rock. The pit boss instantly ordered every man to put out his light and
-lie down. Every cubic foot of air must now be conserved, for it would
-be hours at least before the pipe could be driven in to supply fresh.
-There we lay in the Stygian blackness in that foul atmosphere waiting the
-signal from the relief party. Hours passed, and no signal from the other
-side. Every minute the air became more foul until at last we were panting
-for breath, the sweat running from every pore. Then came the faint tap
-that told us the rescue party was driving the pipe. Never a sound came
-with such melody to my ears. It seemed an age before the steel-nosed pipe
-broke through and a welcome rush of oxygen was forced in by the air-pump.
-The pit boss signaled along the pipe that all was well. Then the work of
-rescue began. All day they picked out and carted away the fallen rock.
-All night the work went on without ceasing. Another day and another night
-followed before they broke through the barrier, and we streamed out of
-the mine, hungry, thirsty and weary from loss of sleep.
-
-I was beginning to realize that while in time I might become an
-accomplished coal-miner, my chances for living a long life to enjoy that
-trade were exceedingly limited. I decided to sever my connection with the
-Kansas and Texas Coal Company, fully realizing that the Company would not
-mourn much at my loss, and I had no intention of falling on its neck to
-weep at the parting.
-
-The incident that crystallized my half-formed ideas into immediate action
-took place in the room one day when I approached nearer the swift current
-of the Dark River than I cared to do. By accident the driver shoved a
-box into our room (by this time I had a new “buddy”) and we had no coal
-with which to load it. A box was so valuable that we could not afford to
-allow it to be taken out unloaded, so we cast about for sufficient coal
-for the purpose. Sometime since we had shot a small blast on the pillar
-and the pit boss, coming in, had ordered us to let it stand as we were
-too far to the south. This shot was still standing. The coal was loose
-and needed only to be mined off for us to have sufficient coal to load
-out the box. That duty devolved upon me, and I shoved the box back and
-began mining off the shot. In a short time I had it all cut round save
-a small portion that I could not reach with the pick. I returned to the
-“face” and procured a long chum drill and with it began to cut down the
-standing coal. I was seated tailor-like upon the floor, my legs doubled
-under me. When the coal mass gave way it rolled toward me and pressing
-the drill across my body pinioned me beneath it. I felt no danger, for my
-“buddy” could soon extricate me from the position. I called to him and
-he started in my direction. As he did so I glanced up and was horrified
-to see several yards of the slate top easing downward. Frantically I
-grasped the drill that was binding me down and gave it a wrench. It gave
-and another wrench broke it in twain. To flop over and crawl on my hands
-and knees out of the way of danger was only the work of an instant. As
-I did so the great slab fell, tearing off my shoe soles as though they
-were but paper. I owe my life to the fact that the top did not give way
-instantly, but broke gradually. So thoroughly frightened was I that I sat
-in a stupor for some time. When I had sufficiently recovered to be able
-to walk I made my way out of the mine, went to my boarding place, removed
-my pit garments and bade Ardmore a lasting and affectionate farewell.
-
-I have torn a few soiled and tattered leaves from my book of life and
-have here given them to you. That the story is not well told I fully
-realize. That it is true in every particular must stand its only merit.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-_The Pessimist; His View-Point_
-
-
-Sermons should be practiced before they are preached.
-
-A reformer’s idea of fun is to spoil other people’s fun.
-
-No man can fix a clock and at the same time sing a hymn.
-
-Sacrifices on the altar of foolishness never cease for lack of material.
-
-I wonder why they don’t charter Polygamy under the laws of New Jersey.
-
-There are a great many more fools in the world than they have any idea of.
-
-Sometimes they are editorials, and the rest of the time they are
-idiotorials.
-
-And, oh, if the great problems solved by the graduates would only stay
-solved!
-
-The reason why I am so well is that I have always been too poor to stay
-long at a health resort.
-
-There are two kinds of women who cannot be reasoned with: the one in love
-and the one not in love.
-
-The best way to preserve the beauty of a finely shaped nose is to keep it
-out of other people’s business.
-
- TOM P. MORGAN.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THOSE THAT ARE JOINED TOGETHER
-
-BY CHARLES FORT]
-
-
-You are standing on an Eighth Avenue corner, looking down a side street
-toward the ugly black streak made by the Ninth Avenue elevated railroad.
-You see peddlers, right hands curving at the sides of their mouths, left
-hands holding pails of potatoes; a woman with a basket of wash, which
-is tucked under a sheet; many fire escapes that look like a jumbling of
-giant gridirons, when seen from the corner. You notice the signs over
-doorways: a gilded boot; a carpenter’s sign projecting a little farther;
-glazier’s sign, of stained-glass squares trying to eclipse signs of
-shoemaker and carpenter; tailor’s sign almost obscuring all of them.
-In the tailor-shop windows are prints of the latest fashions, labeled,
-“Types of American Gents.” American gents, going to work, in overalls and
-sweaters, pause to enjoy the very latest in riding, golf, and hunting
-costumes, and perhaps go in to order a three-dollar pair of breeches.
-The tailor shop occupies the first floor of a three-story frame house—a
-grimy-looking house; its grimy clapboards are stained by streaks of rain
-dripping from the rusty fire-escape.
-
-The McGibneys lived in the second-floor rooms. McGibney was log-shaped;
-he seemed as big around at his ankles as at his chest, and, though
-he wore collars, it was because everyone else wore collars, and not
-because his neck was perceptible. Close-cropped hair, a rather sharp
-nose, bright, alert eyes, cheeks red and all other visible parts of him
-pinkish. Mrs. McGibney was a plump, delicately featured little woman,
-who could express most amazing firmness upon her small features. When
-she had household cares, she worried; when she had household duties, she
-bustled. And it would surely please you to look at Mrs. McGibney when
-she worried; left forefinger beginning over the fingers of the right
-hand; left forefinger lodging on right little finger, Mrs. McGibney
-pausing to look into space, counting up to assure herself that the
-butcher had not cheated; forefinger beginning again and dealing with the
-grocer, this time; another fixed look into space to be sure the grocer
-had not imagined a can of tomatoes or a pound of flour. It would please
-you, because you would know that not one penny, worked so hard for by
-McGibney, would be wasted. When Mrs. McGibney bustles—ah, now that is
-pretty! That means a very keen sense of responsibility, nothing shirked,
-nothing that will make McGibney’s comfort neglected. Bustling to the oven
-door, opening and shutting it; fingers dabbing at under lip and sizzling
-on under side of a flat iron; frying-pan moved back on the stove; quick,
-short steps to the table to roll out breadcrumbs; dash to a window to
-sharpen a knife on the sill—when Mrs. McGibney bustles!
-
-Evening! Both of them in the cheerful kitchen. Very cheerful kitchen!
-Three conch-shells, like big pink ears, up on the mantelpiece, and four
-palm leaves, painted green, stuck in a flower pot, just like a bit of
-Florida. The dish-pan, on the stove murmuring; a subdued rattle and
-good-natured growling of bubbles forming on the bottom of the pan, and
-dishes fluttering on them. The oil-cloth was bright and new-looking,
-except in the corner where heavy McGibney sat. There, chair legs had
-indented as if someone had beaten around at random with a hammer. And in
-his corner, reading the newspaper, sat McGibney, his wife sitting beside
-the table his elbow was on, frowning, puzzling, and counting her fingers.
-“Yes,” said Mrs. McGibney, “I can keep expenses down to five dollars a
-week, but you mustn’t charge on my book what you spend. I don’t think I
-ought to mark down the cent for your newspaper, do you? I’m not going to
-have my book any more than it’s got to be. I’ll cross off this two cents
-for a stamp. Now, you know you oughtn’t to charge me for that; it was for
-your own letter—don’t sit like that! How often have I told you you ruin
-the oil-cloth?”
-
-McGibney not only continued to tilt back and dig into the oil-cloth but
-rocked himself on the hind legs of the chair; one is sometimes tempted to
-torment severe little women when they are too serious.
-
-“Oh, I don’t care; you’re not harming me. Go ahead, if you feel like
-paying for new oil-cloth.” McGibney could not sit straight without some
-demonstration to cover his accession; he put out fingers like tongs and
-pinched just above her knee. If you are an old married man, you know just
-how far from dignified and severe that immediately made McGibney. Then
-McGibney sat straight, sat as if he would have sat straight anyway.
-
-A rap on the door. Mrs. McGibney put away her account book as if it were
-wrong to keep account-books; McGibney sat crooked as if it were wrong
-to sit straight. No matter what one is doing, one feels that someone
-else coming makes a difference. Mrs. McGibney started toward the door,
-went to the stove instead, and covered the dish-pan; started again but
-paused to twitch a curtain; finally got to the door and opened it, but
-had glanced back twice and had motioned to McGibney to put away a bag of
-crackers.
-
-“Oh, it’s you, Clara?” exclaimed Mrs. McGibney. “Why, come right in!”
-
-Into the room came a stocky person, with a broad, flat, amiable face.
-Everything about her seemed to suggest that she was made to work hard
-and suffer, usually not complain, but, quite without reasoning, flash
-into short-lived rebellion against hardships now and then. Like your
-impression of peasantry more than a century ago, down-trodden, without
-leaders, should be your impression of Clara. In her heavy arms was a huge
-bundle, done up in a sheet, four corners of the sheet hanging loose at
-top. She appeared to be carrying a monstrous turnip, all white, loose
-ends like white turnip-tops.
-
-“Why, good evening!” said Clara awkwardly, turning to the right, turning
-to the left, with her huge bundle, looking for a place to set it down,
-but still clinging to it, her chin buried in the top of it, the big
-bundle making her look like a pouter-pigeon.
-
-“Mrs. McGibney,” said Clara, turning to the right, to the left, still
-clinging, “I don’t like to ask you, knowing you ain’t got accommodations,
-but could you lend me the loan of your ironing-board for the night? I’ve
-flew the coop on him for good and all this time, and tomorrow will get a
-room for myself; but, if you can let me have your ironing-board, I can
-sleep on it here, on the floor tonight. This is my wash, which I brought
-with me, not to leave him so much as a stitch that’s mine. Would it be
-too much to ask for your ironing-board?”
-
-“Why, put down that heavy bundle, Clara!” cried Mrs. McGibney, having
-dabbed at the bundle, but missed it; “it’s sopping wet!”
-
-“Sopping wet!” repeated Mrs. McGibney, as if pleased. And she was
-pleased, for here was an occasion for her to bustle around the room.
-Very much did Mrs. McGibney like to bustle around a room. And Clara, by
-the door, sat at the table at the other end of which McGibney sat.
-
-“It’s wet because I just took it in off the line, not to leave him
-anything of mine,” said Clara. She moved uneasily in her chair. And she
-winked, as if in physical distress.
-
-“I can’t move my line, because the rain’s made it too tight,” said Mrs.
-McGibney, “but we can hang up the wash here to dry. Ironing-board?
-Ironing-board, how are you!” She pounced upon the huge turnip, seizing
-turnip-tops, plucking them apart. “No, but we can make you comfortable
-in the front room, Clara.” Sheet spread out and wash in a mound. “And
-you’ve carried this with you all the way through the streets? I’ll fix up
-lines.” Two parallel lines, rigged up one from each end of the table to
-the opposite wall, sheets thrown over them; kitchen looking like Monday
-morning in your back yard. Room divided into three compartments: Clara
-in one, by the door; middle one, including the table, reserved for Mrs.
-McGibney; McGibney isolated in the third. Mrs. McGibney hung wash on the
-backs of chairs, and, forgetting how picture frames collect dust, jumped
-up at comers of picture frames, with more wash. Then she returned to her
-chair, which was in the middle compartment.
-
-“Not bothering you too much,” began timid Clara. An expression of pain
-suddenly shot across her broad face. “Oh,” she breathed, “I guess that
-must be the tintypes! Anyway, don’t bother about me. Oh! yes, I’m sure
-it’s the tintypes. Tintypes has such sharp corners, even if there is pink
-paper frames to them. I had nowhere else to carry my belongings, which
-I’d not leave behind, as I have flew the coop on him.”
-
-Clara stuck one foot out and lifted her skirt somewhat. Untied a
-handkerchief from somewhere, though I have heard that the material is
-usually more elastic—never mind; in a most matter-of-fact way, Clara
-untied the handkerchief. As if it were the most natural thing in the
-world to do, and very serious about it, she delved and drew forth an
-alarm clock, a comb, shoe-strings, a looking-glass, a tea-strainer, a box
-of matches, the tintypes——
-
-“It was the tintypes!” cried Clara. “I knew, because they got such sharp
-corners and was sticking me, all the way over, most every step I took.”
-
-Mrs. McGibney and McGibney, who drew his sheet aside, stared at the
-astonishing collection on the table and then laughed heartily. Clara,
-looking calm and unintelligent, drew forth a can of baking powder.
-Nothing to laugh at could she see, but the others seemed amused, so she
-smiled sympathetically with them.
-
-“Yes,” said Clara, no longer timid, for it was her way to be awkward at
-first and then feel as much at home as anybody, “I’ve flew the coop on
-him forever. I’ve said I meant it before, but this time I do mean it.
-And he can be so nice when he wants to be. You know that yourself, Mrs.
-McGibney.”
-
-“He always seemed a perfect little gentleman whenever I saw him,”
-declared Mrs. McGibney.
-
-“It’s a shame you two can’t get along better!” was heard from behind
-McGibney’s sheet. “I’ve always found Tommy all right.”
-
-And Clara exclaimed: “He’s the nicest little man in the world! This time
-I have flew the coop on him forever.” She smiled at her sheet, so that no
-one within hearing should be depressed, just because she had troubles.
-
-“I don’t know!” said Clara, with her broad, slow smile, “it’s pretty hard
-for a woman to come home from her day’s work, and find the man stretched
-on the floor before her sleeping it off. Isn’t it?” she asked, as if by
-no means sure and wishing to hear what others thought.
-
-From behind two sheets:
-
-“It certainly is hard!”
-
-Rumbling up over McGibney’s sheet:
-
-“You hadn’t ought to put up with it! It is hard!”
-
-“Isn’t it!” cried Clara, as if crying. “There, I was right, after all!
-I thought, myself, it was hard, and here’s others thinks the same. And
-then, when you’re getting along nice, both working and laying by a
-little, and going to buy the brass lamp in Mason’s window, and get a
-whole half-ton of coal instead of by the bag, which is robbery, and then
-he goes out to change the savings into one big bill which you’d never be
-tempted to break, and comes back in the morning without one cent—” Clara
-paused. She would not like to be ridiculed for regarding trifles too
-seriously. “I don’t think he does right by me—does he?”
-
-Both sheets agitated. Over both sheets:
-
-“He certainly don’t do right by you!”
-
-“Does he!” cried Clara, almost excited, also triumphant, hearing her own
-suspicions verified.
-
-“He oughter be ashamed of hisself!” rumbled McGibney.
-
-Clara looked up, and there was a slow heavy frown, instead of the slow
-heavy smile.
-
-“There’s worse than him!” she said sharply.
-
-“I’ll never speak to him again!” declared Mrs. McGibney.
-
-“You might speak to worse, Mrs. McGibney. I’m sure he always spoke most
-kind of you——”
-
-“How could he speak otherwise of me?” demanded Mrs. McGibney in quick
-anger.
-
-“Now! now! now!” rumbled McGibney, thrusting his sheet aside and looking
-warningly at his wife.
-
-“Not making you a sharp answer, Mrs. McGibney,” pursued thick, slow,
-heavy Clara, “he never said nothing but kind words of you. There’s lots
-worse than him and he was always a good husband to me, excepting when he
-was bad, and I hope I’ll never lay my two eyes onto him again.”
-
-And Mrs. McGibney looked at the McGibney sheet as if to say, “You’d best
-always keep quiet!” and her resentment was over, for she was fond of
-Clara and had known her many years.
-
-“I’ll get a pint of beer,” said McGibney. “Can I leave youse two without
-there being a clinch? You like a little ale in it, don’t you, Clara?”
-
-“Don’t never mind me!” said Clara restlessly. “I just remember I left the
-gas burning and him sleeping his buns off. Do you think the gas would
-go out and then start up again and not burning? I’ve heard tell of such
-cases. Not meaning to go back to him, maybe I’d better go back and turn
-the gas out.”
-
-“Do go back, Clara!” urged Mrs. McGibney, feeling through the sheet for
-Clara’s hand and impulsively seizing Clara’s nose, trying again for the
-hand, closing fingers upon Clara’s ear, Clara leaning over, with head
-near her knees, “Give him another chance. A wife’s place is at home.
-Don’t mind what others tell you—your husband is dearer to you than all
-the rest of the world. Go back and make him promise to do better.”
-
-“I don’t wish him no harm,” said Clara, hesitatingly. “This time I’ve
-flew the coop on him forever, even if he is the nicest little man in the
-world when he has a mind to be—if I thought the gas would go out on him,
-I might go back and turn down the gas, anyway.”
-
-Oh, then, here was a fine chance for Mrs. McGibney to bustle. Down came
-everything on the lines, as if it were Monday night in the back yard.
-Down came everything from the backs of chairs and from picture frames.
-Back into a bundle with everything! Big white turnip again, loose,
-sprawling turnip-tops.
-
-“I might try him again for a week, anyway,” decided Clara. Out and
-away and back home with her big white, turnip and its pouter-pigeon
-effect, too bulky for her arms to go around, her chin lost in fluttering
-turnip-tops; back home with bundle, alarm clock, looking-glass, box of
-baking-powder and tintypes taken one almost impossibly happy day at Coney
-Island.
-
-An evening or two later. McGibney out for a walk. Mrs. McGibney up to
-her elbows in the washing that had driven him out, for if he had remained
-in he would have had to carry boilers of water to the stove from the sink
-in the hall. So McGibney had said, “Marietta, I ain’t getting fresh air
-enough. I don’t sleep good unless I take a little walk in the evening.”
-Mrs. McGibney had to fill the boiler one dishpanful at a time and that
-was satisfactory to McGibney.
-
-Rap on the door. Mrs. McGibney quickly concealed socks with holes in them
-and turned to the door. Vain little Mrs. McGibney! She paused to rummage
-through the wash until she found curtains. They were very fine lace
-curtains. The very fine curtains were placed where a caller would surely
-see them and note how very fine they were. Then Mrs. McGibney’s hand did
-around and around on the door knob, hand slippery with soap-suds, until
-the slipperiness wore off and she could open the door. She exclaimed:
-“Why, Tommy! come right in.” The “nicest little man in the world” was an
-uneasy, squirming, twisting, little man; bald-headed; Hebraic nose like
-a number six inclining at forty-five degrees; chin with a dimple looking
-like a bit gouged out of it; very neat; fussy. And a very polite little
-man, scraping, bowing, grinning.
-
-“Sit down, Tommy. You won’t have much room to stir. The old man is out,
-but will be back almost any minute. Sit down, but first I’ll trouble you
-to fill the boiler for me, if you don’t mind. How is Clara?”
-
-Tommy seemed to scrape and bow to the boiler, before lifting it, seemed
-to scrape with his right foot and bow to the wash-tub as he passed it and
-went scraping and bowing down to the sink, filled the boiler, came back
-with it, set it on the stove and stood grinning, prepared to scrape and
-bow, if given half a chance to, until invited again to sit down.
-
-“My!” said Mrs. McGibney, “the wash does gather on one so!”
-
-Tommy opened his eyes wide and wrinkled his forehead to express
-profoundest sympathy. Not only with eyes and forehead, but with elbows,
-feet, knees and hands, it was his way to show how very attentively he
-listened to anyone speaking to him; ready to laugh heartily at anything
-he might be expected to smile at; equally ready to commiserate with
-anybody.
-
-“Are you feeling pretty well?”—soap dabbed on a McGibney shirt. “How
-is—” laundry-brush up and down where the soap was, which was at elbows;
-McGibney _would_ lean on elbows. “Clara? Is she—” up and down with the
-shirt on the wash-board—“feeling pretty—” wringing out and dropping shirt
-on pile, on a newspaper, “well?” Pile too high and toppling over, top
-pieces falling on the floor outside the newspaper. Not a speck on them,
-but rubbing over for them, anyway.
-
-“Oh, yes, ma’am; Clara is very well. I have left her.”
-
-“You’ve what? You’ve left her?”
-
-“Oh, yes, ma’am!” said Tommy, head bobbing, shoulders, arms, knees, all
-of him bobbing. “I called to see would you keep these tintypes for me?
-I’m going to Maddy-gascar, where I hear there’s openings.”
-
-“Why, Tommy, what’s the matter?”
-
-“She don’t keep the house picked up—not saying a word against her,”
-answered Tommy. “These tintypes is mine, and she can have everything
-else; but these is mine, and it was my money paid for them down to Coney
-Island, me and her in them, and all I got in the world I care about, and
-will you keep them for me till I can send for them from Maddy-gascar?”
-
-“Why, of course I’ll do that, Tommy; but you know you’d never do such a
-thing as leave Clara. That would be very wrong of you.”
-
-“Oh, yes, indeed, ma’am, very wrong of me! Not saying one word against
-her, she lies in bed all day and won’t so much as do any sweeping.
-There’s never any cooking, and I’m tired to death of the delicatessens
-and rather go to Maddy-gascar and eat spiders, me going in the spider-web
-industry there. She don’t do no wash like you, Mrs. McGibney, but just
-rinses out in cold water. She’s so lazy she washes dishes by rubbing
-newspapers on them. That ain’t so bad as when she does wash them; she
-washes clothes in the dish-pan and then washes dishes after them—not that
-I’d say one word against her. So, will you mind the tintypes with her and
-me in them, ma’am? They’re all I have to care about, ma’am.”
-
-“Oh, now Tommy—” But how could one possibly argue with Tommy? With eyes
-and forehead and elbows and knees, he would most emphatically agree with
-everything said to him.
-
-“Your wife is a very good woman.”
-
-Of course she was! Best in the city! Best in the whole world! But would
-Mrs. McGibney care for the tintypes?
-
-“It’s very wrong of you, Tommy!”
-
-Wrong? Shocking! Heartless! Wicked, shocking, heartless Tommy! Of course
-he was, and he admitted every word of it; but would Mrs. McGibney take
-care of the tintypes until he could send from “Maddy-gascar” for them?
-
-Tommy left the tintypes on the mantelpiece, hoping he was disturbing
-nothing by so doing; imploring Mrs. McGibney not to bother with them
-if she thought they would take up too much room, begging her to throw
-them in the ashes or burn them, or jump on them if they should be the
-slightest annoyance to her; then he went away.
-
-Back in five minutes. Well, after all, “Maddy-gascar” was pretty far away
-and he had heard stories about the Esquimaux there, so he would take the
-tintypes back with him; Clara might wonder where they were. Five minutes
-later. Back again. Perhaps Mrs. McGibney had better not say anything to
-anyone about the tintype matter. Bowing, bobbing, scraping.
-
-Oh, not a word would Mrs. McGibney say! Rest assured of that! Indeed, she
-had quite enough to do in attending to her own affairs. Mrs. McGibney
-promised to say nothing, and like a busy little housewife with too much
-to do to waste time gossiping, breathed not a word of it till McGibney
-came in.
-
-“It’s all Tommy’s fault!” said McGibney.
-
-“I’m afraid Clara is a good deal to blame,” said Mrs. McGibney.
-
-“Oh, yes, always stand up for the man, of course!”
-
-“Oh, yes, take the woman’s part every time, won’t you?”
-
-The next time the McGibneys saw Clara, there was no persuading her to go
-home. She had no home.
-
-“Because,” said Clara, “when we found there wasn’t no use in our trying
-to get along together, we just broke up and gave away everything in the
-rooms and went down the stairs and down the stoop together. We didn’t so
-much as say good-bye nor nothing; he went up the street and I went down.”
-
-“That’s right!” declared McGibney, “when two people can’t get along
-together, it’s best for them to part, I say!”
-
-“You say!” cried indignant Mrs. McGibney. And scornful Mrs. McGibney!
-
-“Well, I’m entitled to speak, ain’t I?” grumbled McGibney.
-
-“No!” firmly. “Leastwise, not when you talk like that.” She looked her
-scorn and continued:
-
-“No, Clara, there’s nobody dearer to any woman than her own husband.”
-Looked at McGibney as if he were a pile of wash just toppled over into
-the ash-pan. “Your husband will be with you when others are far away.”
-Looked at him as if he were two piles of wash toppled over into three
-ash-pans. “There ain’t any luck in any such advice as he’s giving you.
-I know how I love my own dear husband, and you know you’re the same,
-and you’ll find what the world is when you’re alone in it.” Glared her
-indignation, scorn, contempt for McGibney, who mumbled, with an air of
-sagacity, astonishing to himself:
-
-“Ain’t wimmen the queer things, though!”
-
-“I’ve flew the coop on him forever!” said Clara, with her broad, amiable,
-unintelligent smile. “I got a little hall room for myself, and—me go back
-to him? Oh, my! is that a step on the stairs? I wouldn’t wish it, not for
-the world, for him to find me here! I never want to see the face of him
-again!” Clara looked around for a place to hide; ran to the door of the
-front room, and, with her hand on the knob, stood listening.
-
-“’Tain’t him! It’s someone going upstairs,” she said, smiling her relief.
-“I’ll never go back to him.”
-
-A week later. Clara again. And Clara was out of breath.
-
-“Oh, Mrs. McGibney, has the man come yet? I thought I saw him over on
-Ninth Avenue, and I run clear around the block for fear he’d be after
-me and track me here. I was just buying a bit of furniture and going to
-start rooms for myself, when I get a few bits together. And is it too
-much to ask you to store them for me till I get rooms, Mrs. McGibney?”
-
-“We’re only too glad—” began Mrs. McGibney.
-
-“Oh, on your life, don’t stir! It’s him! He mustn’t know where I am,
-or he might try to get me back! I don’t never want to see him again!”
-whispered Clara. “On your life, not giving no orders, don’t stir, or
-he’ll know you’re in and see me here.”
-
-There was a rap on the door.
-
-“Oh, my! Look out—would he hear us?”
-
-Out in the hall:
-
-“McGibney! Anyone know where McGibney lives?”
-
-“Oh!” breathed Clara, “that’s all right. It’s the furniture men.”
-
-And two men from a Ninth Avenue furniture store came in with a bureau.
-At least they set it in the hall, and turned to hasten down the stairs;
-paused to do little better than that, and rolled the bureau half way into
-the room; turned to run back to the store, but, in turning, thrust back
-with their heels, and pushed the bureau quite into the room, which was
-conscientious enough delivering of goods to suit anybody.
-
-“I bought that!” said Clara, proudly. The bureau was rolled into the
-front room, and she helped, her hands caressing more than pushing. There
-was no back to the bureau. The varnish was worn off. Some one had broken
-open the top drawer, splintering the wood on each side of the keyhole.
-
-“It’s mine!” said Clara rapturously. “It took three days of hard
-scrubbing on hands and knees, for me to buy that. It’ll be every bit
-as good as new, with a few boards nailed on the back, and a little oil
-rubbed over it.”
-
-The bureau was rolled to a corner of the front room, but Clara could not
-leave it, hovering over it, stooping and pulling out drawers, one by one,
-gazing delightedly at the disgraceful old wreck.
-
-“Yes!” said Clara. “The other day when I was scrubbing the restaurant
-floor, there was customers looking at me, and they says, ‘Look at that
-poor woman! Ain’t some got hard lots in life!’ They needn’t of pitied me!
-I was earning that! Just a few boards and a little oil is all it needs,
-and I’ll get as fine a home together as anybody’s got—what’s that?”
-
-Clara ran to the kitchen to listen.
-
-“I’m so afraid he’ll find me that I do be hearing sounds all the time!”
-she said. “Ain’t that bureau something elegant? I’ll have my own bit of a
-home and never see him again.” Then, as McGibney came out to the kitchen,
-shutting the front-room door behind him, she asked;
-
-“Ain’t that sounds of excitement in the street? Maybe there’s a fire!”
-Clara ran to the front room and pretended to look out the window. She had
-heard nothing; it was only a pretext to get back to the disgraceful old
-wreck. On her own hands and knees she had earned it.
-
-“Ain’t it nice!” said Clara, ecstatically. “I got my eye on a gilt-framed
-mirror I’ll buy next week. It’s nice, ain’t it?”
-
-Clara went away. Back in five minutes.
-
-“I guess maybe I left my rolled-up apron in the front room.” Whether she
-had or not, she stood looking at the bureau; turned to go; looked again;
-moved it to get a better light on it; stepped toward the door; paused
-and looked back.
-
-“I bought that!”
-
-And she went away, leaving McGibney standing in the front room. With an
-expression of deep melancholy he stood looking at the clumsy, broken
-bureau. He looked at his best furniture surrounding it—fragile, gilded
-chairs, on a big rug better than any other rug in the neighborhood—a
-sideboard with French plate glass in it; the very fine curtains. He was
-a log-shaped man, and not remarkably æsthetic, but his eye was sorely
-offended.
-
-“Oh, well,” said the melancholy, log-shaped man, “if us poor folks
-don’t help each other, who will?” And the eye of Mrs. McGibney was
-equally offended; but Mrs. McGibney was not melancholy, for here was an
-opportunity for her to bustle. Out with the sofa and around in front
-of the bureau! The standing lamp placed where it would help to conceal
-the bureau. To hide the bureau was quite a problem, but Mrs. McGibney
-rejoiced in it. She bustled.
-
-The next Saturday night Clara bought a wicker rocking-chair.
-Fearful-looking old rocking-chair! Interstices of it filled with white
-paint; all paint worn off wherever arms, legs, and backs had rested on it.
-
-“It’s nice, ain’t it?” said Clara, dreamily, fondly.
-
-McGibney sat straight, as if he had just dug through the oil-cloth and
-feared reprimanding. Then he fell back limply.
-
-“Yes, ve-ry,” he said, without enthusiasm.
-
-“It’ll fill out your front room nice, while I’m waiting for it, won’t it?”
-
-“Oh, ye-es; it’ll be ve-ry nice.”
-
-“And so comfortable!” said Clara. She sat in the chair and clumsily
-rocked it. “Try it, Mrs. McGibney! You ain’t got no idea how comfortable
-it is. You sit in it, Mr. McGibney. Just lie back and push with your feet
-and see what a comfort it is. My! I can just see myself in it, me with my
-shoes off and resting after the day. Such comfort in it! I don’t guess I
-ever made such a bargain before. But what do you think? That mirror I was
-so set on was bought! That’s mean, ain’t it? I was awful provoked when
-I heard it. Just the same, I got my eye on a stove that’s fine and well
-worth the four dollars they ask for it. It’s all nickel in front, and
-only one of the bricks broken, and can be fixed with five cents’ worth of
-fire-clay. It’ll look nice in your front room, won’t it?”
-
-“Ve-ry nice!” answered distressed McGibney.
-
-Clara got up to go. Had to sink back and take another rock in the chair,
-so comfortable after the day’s work, and one’s shoes off. It was indeed
-worth scrubbing for! Up to go. Well, just one more rock—away back and
-slowly down again, you know. And you, too, look again at it! My! but what
-a bargain! And Clara bought it! On her own hands and knees she had earned
-it. Before going away, Clara lingered at the door. Perhaps they would
-laugh at her if she should take another rock, but she might look at the
-chair for another moment.
-
-“Ain’t this pretty oil-cloth you got!” Looking only at the chair.
-
-“I must get a kitchen table like yours.” Looking only at her own
-rocking-chair. She left McGibney staring gloomily, but saying, sturdily:
-
-“Us poor folks must help each other!”
-
-Mrs. McGibney bustled.
-
-It was a different Clara when seen again. Her face was flushed; the
-unintelligent but soft eyes were like eyes that could not see outward
-things, as if they were engaged in the unusual occupation of looking
-within at her own mind. Convince Clara that she had a grievance, and
-thick, obstinate brooding replaced uncomplaining stolidity.
-
-By force of habit, Clara’s slow, amiable smile flickered, but her eyes
-were as if turned upon brooding within.
-
-“Someone’s did that a-purpose!” said Clara, slowly, deliberately,
-staring, seeming to see neither McGibney nor Mrs. McGibney. “Me that
-thought I didn’t have a enemy in the world! Where would I get a enemy,
-me always kind to everybody? I had my heart set on that stove that only
-needed a little fire-clay. Someone’s bought it, just to annoy me. When
-the mirror went, I didn’t think nothing of it, but the stove too, is to
-annoy me. They won’t make nothing by that, and bad luck will come upon
-them for it.”
-
-“Why, Clara, it only happened that way,” reasoned Mrs. McGibney. “Nobody
-would go and be as mean as that to you, specially as they’d have to spend
-money.”
-
-“It’s tricks done me!” declared sullen, dogged Clara. “Oh, there’s
-somebody at the door. Maybe it’s him after me. Say I’m not here, Mrs.
-McGibney! On your life, don’t let him find me! I got to work for my
-living, anyway, and I’ll work for myself and not divide with no man.
-Never—oh, I guess it’s the kitchen table!”
-
-“A kitchen table, Clara?” demanded McGibney. “Did you say a kitchen
-table?”
-
-“Yes!” said Clara, brightening. “It’s nice! You can put it in the centre
-of your front room and maybe have ornaments onto it. It’s a very nice
-kitchen table.”
-
-Door opened; a table thrust into the room; heels flying down the stairs.
-
-“Don’t you think it’s nice?” Clara asked eagerly.
-
-“Nice?” repeated honest McGibney. “Oh, is that the table?”
-
-Scratched legs to it; two plain boards forming the top of it; heads of
-nails sunk in the boards, and once filled with putty; putty fallen out.
-
-Clara shook it to show that the legs were firm. She would varnish
-it and cover it with a beautiful table cover she had seen in the
-five-and-ten-cent store, though there was one just as good in the
-three-and-nine-cent store.
-
-“Next week,” said brightened Clara, “it’s going to be portcheers.
-They’re chenille and grand for a doorway. No room ain’t complete without
-portcheers.” She again shook the table to show how firm the legs were and
-then went away.
-
-McGibney and Mrs. McGibney stood out on the front stoop of the
-rust-stained frame house, looking at the tailor, who was putting up a new
-sign: “Pants pressed, ten cents. Full-dress suits cleaned and pressed,
-one dollar.” McGibney thought of “full-dress” suits and looked down the
-street, at rags and dirt and ashes. It was Saturday night and they were
-going over to Ninth Avenue, to Paddy’s Market. Along came Clara, reaching
-the stoop, starting up the stoop, half up the stoop before she saw the
-McGibneys.
-
-“Oh, is it you?” said Clara, with only the beginning of the slow, amiable
-smile.
-
-“The portcheers is gone!” she said, without excitement. “My heart was
-set on them—the portcheers has gone. Would you say to me, now, that it
-only happens that way, Mrs. McGibney? Is there somebody playing mean, low
-tricks on me, or ain’t there? Does three times in succession just happen?
-The portcheers was bought last Monday. Was that only accident? Oh, but
-I came around to see would you lend me fifty cents? There’s a hat-rack
-I want. It’s meant for a front hall, but the mirror in it is nice and
-there’s a bit of marble to it, and it’ll look nice in my rooms, where,
-to my longest day, no man’ll ever hang his hat on it, unless you, Mr.
-McGibney, when you and Mrs. McGibney come and see me. I don’t like to ask
-you for fifty cents, Mrs. McGibney, and you just going to do your bit of
-marketing.”
-
-“There’s fifty dollars in the bank that you can have any time you say so,
-Clara!” exclaimed McGibney.
-
-“We’d rather have you owing it than have it in the bank, Clara,” said
-Mrs. McGibney, “because the bank might bust.”
-
-Clara looked embarrassed. “Don’t you want to come look at the hat-rack?”
-she asked. “It’ll set your front room off fine!” The McGibneys pinched
-each other’s arms, as if saying, “Oh, Lord, preserve us!” All three went
-down the street toward Ninth Avenue, Clara preferring one side of the
-street; then, thinking the other side was darker, choosing the darker
-side so that if they should meet “him” he might not recognize them.
-
-Torches on wagons, wagonloads of oranges, twenty for twenty-five cents;
-pairs of rabbits slung on headless barrels, plump rabbits hanging
-outside, furry rags, shot to pieces, inside the barrels; piles of soup
-greens and mounds of cabbages; cries of “Everything cheap! Only a few
-more left!” Paddy’s Market! Then the second-hand furniture store, with
-bed springs and pillows outside it; stoves with covers and legs in the
-ovens; rolls of matting; everything second-hand, even crockery and
-tea-kettles. Clara went into the store, Mrs. McGibney having paused to
-dig a thumb-nail into potatoes to see whether they were frozen, McGibney
-lingering with her, because he would have to carry the potatoes.
-
-Clara came back to the sidewalk. Again her eyes were unseeing. “The
-hat-rack,” said Clara, staring at nothing visible, “is sold. I ain’t been
-gone from here ten minutes. It’s sold. Everything I got my heart on is
-sold. I don’t know who’s doing it, but they’ll never have a day’s luck
-for it.”
-
-“But what could I do, lady?” The furniture man came cringing out to her.
-“You know you didn’t leave no deposit. Would you like to look at some
-mats for your front hall? You didn’t leave no deposit, so what could I
-do? I got a very heavy, rich and elegant mat here for your front hall;
-though the number of a house is onto it.”
-
-“Look here, Jack,” said McGibney. “Who’s buying up all the things this
-lady looks at? Is it any particular party?”
-
-“Come to think of it, it is,” answered the furniture man. “He’s the gent
-took the unfurnished rooms upstairs. ‘What’s he look like?’ Well, he bows
-most polite every time my wife waits on him and I see his head was some
-bald——”
-
-“Wait for me!” said Clara. “Up on the next floor, you say? Just only wait
-one minute for me, Mrs. McGibney, and I’ll only go to tell him what I
-think of this latest meanness he’s playing me. Then I’ll be through with
-him forever. This is the last trick he’ll play me!” And she went to the
-stairs leading to the rooms over the store.
-
-“It must be Tommy,” said McGibney.
-
-“And I always took him for such a perfect little gentleman,” was Mrs.
-McGibney’s comment.
-
-“Just wait a minute!” Clara had said; but, after several minutes,
-McGibney became uneasy.
-
-“I’ll go up and see,” he said. “It maybe ain’t Tommy, and Clara may start
-mixing it with some stranger that’s got as much right to the furniture as
-her.”
-
-But it was Tommy, for, as the McGibneys went up the stairs, Clara’s
-words, plainly audible, told them so.
-
-“Never!” they heard—“Was it my dying day, I’d never forgive you. It was
-too cruel and I’ll never forget it.”
-
-“Ain’t she the stubborn thing!” snapped Mrs. McGibney.
-
-“Did I live to be as old as Mickthusalem, I’d not forgive you for it!
-Oh, Tommy, how could you go up the street when I went down? To treat me
-so! Don’t never mind nothing else; play me tricks and scold me and don’t
-do right nor anywheres near right, but how could you do that? Oh, Tommy,
-how could you go up the street when I went down? Me expecting your feet
-after me every second, me looking back at the corner. You going up, and
-me going down! Rob me of them portcheers I see you got there, and play me
-tricks with that mirror, and do like you want to about all the hall-racks
-in the world, but you never come to find me when I was hiding away! Have
-the red portcheers and welcome to everything my heart was set on, but you
-never come to me when I was hiding, and how could I tell you where I was
-hiding away? Oh, I been so unhappy without you, Tommy; there’s nobody
-got any sympathy for a deserted wife, but just a jeer at her and say,
-‘No wonder he left, if you take one look at her big platter face’—but my
-eyes is nice and my hair is lovely, I was always told. Take away the red
-portcheers my heart was set on, Tommy, and I know you don’t love me,
-but we belong to each other, just the same, but don’t—oh, if you ain’t
-looking to break my heart—don’t never again go up a street when I’m going
-down!”
-
-The McGibneys saw them standing in the centre of the room, arms about
-each other, hands patting each other’s shoulder-blades.
-
-Tommy began to whimper. Arms mothered him. Steady tapping away on his
-shoulder-blades. Then Tommy blubbered outright:
-
-“Oh, Clara, I been missable! I been missable something fierce, living
-alone! I ain’t ate nor slept, but been working straight along and got
-a good job and doing pretty good, and so much as a day’s work you’ll
-never have to do. No! not if it’s your longest day!” A bow and a bob
-and a scrape, for he had discovered the McGibneys standing irresolute
-in the hall. He continued to blubber and he continued to tap away at
-shoulder-blades.
-
-“But why didn’t you come to find me, Tommy, when I was hiding away? I
-told the Finnigans and everybody, so you must of known where I was hiding
-away!”
-
-Clara would not have seen a hundred McGibneys. Clara was tapping most
-mightily with both hands upon shoulder-blades.
-
-“On account of the brass lamp!” blubbered Tommy. A bob and a bow and a
-scrape! “I done fierce bad spending our savings that was for the brass
-lamp, and I couldn’t go find you where you was hid till I had that here,
-in this new home, for you to see, and be complete, and then you’d know
-I was sorry and it would prove I was going to do right. But it wasn’t
-tricks, Clara! Honest, it wasn’t tricks! Me standing on the other side
-of the street, and looking in the store window at you, and no overcoat,
-because I needed every cent to show I was going to do right. And you look
-at the mirror. I say, ‘Clara likes that mirror. Then Clara must have
-that!’ Me standing with my toes all pinched up, as my shoes is bad, and
-you looking at them red portcheers. Then Clara must have red portcheers!
-Me jumping up and down, like I’m froze, but standing there every Saturday
-night to see what Clara likes and Clara’s going to have that!” Bobbing,
-bowing, and scraping toward the hall, from Tommy; from Clara, rather a
-look of resentment toward the hall.
-
-A final tap on shoulder blades and: “Why, come in and see where we’re
-going to start up again!”
-
-“Ain’t it strange!” said calm, stolid Clara. “He found me, after all!”
-
-And from all four of them, and all four meaning every word:
-
-“In all the world, there ain’t nobody like your own! If it ain’t but big
-enough to hold a trunk, there’s no place like your own!”
-
-“And,” said supremely happy Tommy and Clara, “now we’ll celebrate!”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration: _Will It Keep Them Off?_
-
- _Carter, in New York American_]
-
-
-
-
-_The Money Power_
-
-
-“All things come to him that waits.” Fifteen or sixteen years ago, when
-the Farmers’ Alliance was flourishing throughout the West and South, it
-was a matter of common occurrence to hear some old horny-handed farmer,
-on a Saturday at the county seat, disputing with his neighbor about
-existing conditions. Almost invariably the Alliance man blamed the “money
-power” for causing things to go criss-cross. Occasionally the country
-merchant or small banker would butt into the discussion. “The money
-power,” he would say, with infinite scorn, “Humph! Why, you poor fool,
-there ain’t any such thing as ‘the money power.’ Might as well talk of
-the agricultural power, or the mercantile power. There are rich bankers
-and rich farmers and rich merchants—but that don’t make them a ‘power’ in
-the sense you use that term.”
-
-For a number of years the “money power” has been given a much needed rest
-in the West and South. Most of the pioneers there have substituted the
-term “plutocracy.” But in the East reformers are just now beginning to
-sit up and take notice. One hears the term frequently. “Roosevelt,” said
-Jacob Riis, in a recent interview in the _New York Herald_, “is fighting
-the greatest tyrant of them all. Slavery affected only the South, but the
-Money Power means the enslavement of all human beings and all homes.”
-Many an old, long-whiskered farmer said the same thing just as well
-fifteen years ago—and the _Herald_ called him an anarchist.
-
-“The Senate,” says Ernest Crosby in the March _Cosmopolitan_, “is now the
-agent of the Money Power—the representative of Wall Street.” Absolutely
-true; and no one can doubt the sincerity of either Mr. Crosby or the
-_Cosmopolitan_; but when the farmers of the West and South said the same
-thing fifteen years ago, they were greeted with hoots and jeers from the
-East. I don’t say that Messrs. Riis and Crosby joined in the hooting and
-jeering; I am quite sure they did not; but they are accorded a respectful
-hearing in making statements for the making of which thousands of
-respectable men fifteen years ago were branded as anarchists, wild-eyed
-fanatics, lunatics, and so forth.
-
-The world _do move_.
-
- L. H. B.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-_The Russian Apostle of Populism_
-
-BY THOMAS C. HUTTON
-
-
-Fifty years ago a grayheaded prisoner, neglected, gaunt, unbefriended,
-died in the dungeons of Schlüsselburg, and today a thousand Russian
-cities are ringing with the name of Mikal Bakunin, the apostle of
-Populism, one of the many reformers who were stoned by a contemporary
-public and sainted by its descendants.
-
-Russia spurned the impassioned orator; Germany exiled him, after a few
-months of toleration, and now his projects are discussed by millions who
-seem determined to give them a fair trial.
-
-“A pack of knout-serving flunkeys,” Bakunin called the German officials
-who enforced the frontier-laws in the interest of the Czar, and soon
-after a messenger in uniform served him with a copy of the Prussian
-press-laws, and a hint at the expedience of making himself invisible.
-
-His virulent tongue hurt him a good deal, and his popularity was somewhat
-modified by his social radicalism; but the long neglect of his revenue
-plan is one of the strangest facts in the literature of political
-economy. One might as well reject Kepler’s solar hypothesis, because the
-great astronomer got a little cloudy on the question of witchcraft.
-
-And, after all, Bakunin only whispered his matrimonial theories, but
-shouted his tax-protests before multitudes who ought to have known better
-than to class them with his chimeras.
-
-Briefly stated, his main reform plan is this: That governments ought to
-earn their own revenues as they cast their own cannon and build their
-own battleships.
-
-“Look at your great Government stud-farm of Trakehnen,” said he, in a
-speech on the old Breslau market-square. “Model stables, model granaries,
-fine pastures, all more than self-supporting, monthly auctions of forage
-and surplus horses. Oats are barreled in airy magazines, and, for greater
-security, the granary warden breeds cats, and hires two boys to take care
-of them.
-
-“All lovely, so far. But now suppose those boys were to break in a
-private cottage and snatch away a poor youngster’s kitten, on the
-pretext that the Government might have need of it? At sight of a club,
-the little lad would have to let his pet go, but could you blame him
-for growling?—Why don’t you get oats of your own? And let my little
-kitten alone?—And that is exactly what I am growling about when I see
-tax-collectors confiscate a poor man’s last milch-cow or nanny-goat.”
-
-The orator then described the estate of Prince Gorkas, a semi-independent
-land-magnate near Tiflis, in the southern Caucasus. The Prince’s tenants
-pay a moderate rent; freeholders keep his good will by buying his cattle
-and coal. Free schools, fairly good, and no tax-collectors—a pattern of
-what an empire ought to be on a large scale. Foreseeing the eventual
-need of money for the purchase of a neighboring estate, the Prince had
-a mountain-side planted with plum trees, to sell the dried fruit. His
-engineers opened a mine of cannel-coal, and soon had a large market.
-Their master hoarded and was thought capable of driving a sharp bargain,
-but gossips would have risked the lunatic-asylum if they had spread a
-report that Prince Gorkas had broken into the little crossroad store and
-helped himself to a share of the old storekeeper’s savings.
-
-Fruit plantations are also managed by the Shah of Persia, and mines of
-vast values by the Russian Government. Prussia and Austria own extensive
-timber forests and realize a handsome profit after paying reasonable
-wages to thousands of wardens, rangers and woodcutters.
-
-Saxony operates national mines and large national glass-works.
-
-Do kings need ordnance? Let them hire foundries to cast it for them. Do
-they need gunpowder? Hire chemists to mix it for them.
-
-Do they need money? Why, let them hire business-men to earn it for them.
-Not the faintest ghost of a doubt but it can be done.
-
-A little more difficult than raising royal race-horses? Perhaps so. But
-does that give His Majesty the right to race down a peddler and take his
-money away from him? Now reflect, and do not let your verdict be biased
-by the idea that might makes right, or that a long-established absurdity
-becomes reasonable.
-
-Why collect revenues by Government highway robbery, by Government hold-up
-methods, by harpies in Government uniform, when the test of practical
-experience proves that revenues can be raised by Government industries?
-
-Would you bring the State in unfair competition with individuals?
-“Don’t for one moment,” says Bakunin, “believe that lie of lazybones.
-Secretaries of Finance find it easier to hire marauders than to hire
-skilled mechanics, that’s all.”
-
-Who is hurt by the great stockfarm at Trakehnen? It could be enlarged
-twenty times, and still give private enterprise a chance to raise
-prize-horses at a considerable profit. Who complains about Government
-forestry? It gives bread to hundreds of thousands; it protects the
-fountains of fertilizing streams; it prevents droughts, but does not
-prevent individuals from conducting timber-plantations at a profit
-exceeding that of grain farms.
-
-The Belgian Government owns coal-mines, but private mine-owners will
-continue to prosper till they exhaust the supply of the mineral. No
-glass-worker has ever objected to the Government glass-works of Saxony.
-They invite co-operation; the demand for artistic glass products exceeds
-the supply.
-
-If Government mines and factories, why not Government commerce, and,
-above all, Government real estate transactions—Government landlordism
-to an extent that will hurt no other landlord, and benefit millions of
-tenants?
-
-Found new communities on the plan of reserving a certain percentage of
-building lots for state purposes, and lease those reservations for five
-to ten years to the highest bidder. If the Government erects buildings,
-let them be models of their kind—fire-proof storehouses, sanitary
-tenements.
-
-Government plantations ought to be drained till gnat-plagues are no more;
-equipped with improved machinery, with airy cottages; a blessing to all
-concerned, and yet an undoubted source of revenue, since experience
-proves that wholesale farming operations are the most profitable.
-
-One tobacco plantation of the French Government yields a yearly net
-revenue of 2,000,000 francs, and the only objection is the nature of
-the crop; national agriculture could raise profitable harvests without
-catering to a stimulant habit. Government commission houses should import
-Jamaica bananas, rather than Jamaica rum.
-
-On the Bakunin plan, national revenue industries should, as a rule,
-select their ground where the strain of competition is the least likely
-to be felt. After that, objectors should be referred to a chronicle of
-such alternatives as trust despotism.
-
-“No governments,” he asks, “decline to dirty their hands delving for
-boodle? Oh, ye prayerful pirates! Lineal descendants of the bushwhacker
-princes who preferred clubs to spades! Below their dignity to cut wood,
-but did cut purses and throats. Too highborn to clean out a pig-sty, but
-did clean out peddlers and often whole caravans.
-
-“And now the descendants of those beautiful buccaneers, too proud to
-mine or farm, but not ashamed to fall upon a poor farmer’s homestead
-and confiscate his last horse! Not too dignified to hold up a crippled
-huckster and collar two-thirds of his hard earned pennies. Too sensitive
-to work the windlass of a silvermine, but rough-handed enough to wring
-silver from a consumptive shopkeeper. Our grandiose rulers, I should say,
-are in small business when they break in to snatch a widow’s kettle and
-cot-bed.
-
-“Yet that’s done every day in the year. Statistics claim that somewhere
-on earth a child is born every second. And at least every minute sees the
-birth of a child that will have to die of hunger, because its mother’s
-bread has been filched by tax-collectors.
-
-“Have Governments a right to supply their needs at the expense of widows
-and orphans, while thousands of able-bodied young men stand ready to earn
-revenue for them?”
-
-High tariff bullies, says the Russian reformer, are marine highway
-robbers. At first sight, the burden of spoliation seems shifted to the
-shoulders of foreigners, but, look closer, and you find natives obliged
-to buy imports at extortion rates.
-
-Passengers, waiting to be examined by custom-house officers, says
-Bakunin, always remind him of travelers, lined up to be searched by
-footpads.
-
-“How commerce revives,” he says, “wherever those shackles are partly
-removed! How would it flourish if they were altogether abolished?
-Traffic that now obliges skippers to starve their sailors could be made
-abundantly profitable.”
-
-A hundred years before the birth of Henry George, a revenue system,
-closely resembling the “Single Tax” plan, was recommended by the father
-of Gabriel Mirabeau, and by the Roget School of French Communists.
-
-“It _would_ relieve some classes of our wage-earners,” says Bakunin, “but
-would burden others, and why harass them, if we can undoubtedly find ways
-to get along without direct taxation?”
-
-Why make land the scapegoat of a sin that might be avoided?
-
-In 1849 the Russian Government got its clutches on the bold reformer,
-and silenced him by the usual argument of despots. The voice that had
-entranced mass-meetings in a hundred cities of southern and western
-Europe was stifled in the catacombs of Schlüsselburg.
-
-But Time, the All-Avenger, has made the martyr’s name a rallying cry of
-East-European reformers, and America should honor the memory of Mikal
-Bakunin as that of a hero and pioneer of reform—a man whose marvelous
-gift of intuition had recognized all the ideals of Populism, all its
-principles and promises, but who succumbed to the superhuman task of
-effecting its progress under the handicap of a monarchical government.
-
-
-_Naturally_
-
-KNICKER—There goes a man who would rather fight than eat.
-
-BOCKER—Soldier?
-
-KNICKER—No, dyspeptic.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: LUCIANNA’S KEEP
-
-BY ELLIOT WALKER.]
-
-
-“I’ve got twenty dollars for the rent an’ fifteen more for what’s likely
-to come up,” observed Enos Matchett cheerfully, as he put down his
-teacup. “There’s nothin’ to worry about this first of month, anyhow. Eh,
-Martha?”
-
-His wife fingered her napkin in a nervous way, usual to her when the
-appalling call of their landlord was due, not to mention others who
-fished from pockets soiled packages of rubber-banded slips to draw out
-tentatively and none too expectantly those alarming accounts marked at
-their tops with the discredited name of Enos Matchett.
-
-Poor Martha. The “Oh! Yes. I’ll speak to my husband about it,” and the
-hundred other subterfuges were growing gaunt with repetition. She had a
-regular repertory of excuses to apply as conditions demanded. For a first
-presentation a fixed and nonchalant smile and a “come ’round next month,”
-caused quick riddance of the unwelcome. “Next month,” it was, “I declare,
-I guess Mr. Matchett overlooked that little bill. Perhaps, you’d better
-leave it so he’ll keep it in mind.”
-
-From then on, rang the changes of high prices, hard times and
-honest intentions until at last came the sharp, bullying threat of
-the collection lawyer and the crawling process of paying by small
-installments.
-
-Sometimes she tore up the bills, sometimes they went into the fire,
-never, until her last bridge had collapsed, did she worry Enos.
-
-He worked, hopefully, from morning to night at odd jobs and occasional
-bits of carpentry. A fortunate month might fatten their attenuated
-exchequer to a bulge of sixty dollars, but the months were not all
-fortunate and there was seldom a penny came in that remained over a
-fortnight. To meet the rent was imperative. That had to be met. For the
-rest—wits, hopes, and a somewhat shattered faith in the Lord’s providence.
-
-However, when the Lord endowed average femininity with a high scorn of
-bills and an abnormal intelligence in the evasion of payment much was
-done for man.
-
-Enos, undoubtedly, would have become as flighty and irresponsible as was
-Lucianna, upstairs, had he been obliged to face the shafts which his
-worried better half so successfully foiled to the last ditch.
-
-Now, Martha gazed across the table at him, with the smile of one
-temporarily relieved from anxiety.
-
-“That’s good,” she answered. “It’s queer how we’ve kep’ along.”
-
-“Ain’t it?” responded Mr. Matchett. “I was consid’rable pestered ten
-days ago as to how we’d come out this month, but Miss Joslyn paid me,
-an’ I had a week steady on Doctor Bullen’s fence. No one in particular
-a-hurryin’ us jest now, I s’pose?”
-
-“Don’t think of any special tormentor,” returned Martha, biting her thin
-lips. Indeed, no obvious projection in the wall of torment occurred to
-her at the moment. Their creditors were “lined up,” in equal aggression.
-One was as bad as another.
-
-Enos tugged at his gray mustache—a sparse adornment, getting white at the
-ends.
-
-“Guess we’ll blow a dollar on something for Lucianna then,” he ventured
-generously.
-
-“Guess not!” exclaimed Martha, with decision. “The child’s got
-toys enough. Feedin’ her is more to the point. I never see such an
-appetite. She’s happy. Let her alone and put your money where ’twill be
-appreciated.”
-
-Lucianna, now a child supposed to have attained twenty-five years, and a
-very queer one at that, had employed most of her day in making faces at
-such of the passers who did not meet her approval, and smiling at those
-who did. These courtesies were accentuated by taps on the window panes.
-
-The poor harmless creature could be allowed little liberty as she ran
-away and sat on doorsteps, proclaiming herself a burglar of kittens.
-Given a kitten, or stealing one, Lucianna would go home delighted.
-
-The influx of kittens became too trying. Enos, a soft-hearted man, would
-do no murder. Martha, steeled to crime through desperation, had disposed
-of several, really unfit to exist, and found homes for more. Lucianna
-forgot them over night. Therefore, it had lately become necessary to
-confine her to her room, where she was allowed one kitten during the day.
-
-This satisfied Lucianna completely. Besides, she possessed six dolls,
-toys galore, and when these joys palled there was the window.
-
-Whatever possessed the Matchetts to make a home for the unfortunate girl
-was a mystery to their acquaintances, as she was no kin. Years before,
-when life was younger and brighter, with Enos at a paying job, and
-Martha ambitious for a servant yet unable to afford a regular domestic,
-Lucianna, then a pretty child of about thirteen, had appeared and asked
-for something to eat.
-
-She was well grown and seemed strong, although exhausted by walking and
-hunger.
-
-Martha took her in, and an idea seized the good woman, after certain
-questions had been put and answered.
-
-It was their plain duty to keep this little stranger until somebody
-claimed her, and in the event of no one turning up for the waif, why not
-train her for service?
-
-Lucianna was reticent about her past career. Enos thought she lied.
-Martha said she was too young to remember. It seemed a case of no mother,
-a father who had gone away leaving her with unkind people who did not
-love her.
-
-In corroboration of this last statement Lucianna exposed a plump arm
-decorated with small bruises of various ages and colors.
-
-“Pinches,” she explained, snuffling. This settled Enos, who went down
-cellar and split more kindlings than he had ever done at one bout.
-
-When he came up, perspiring and still glaring, Lucianna had been fed and
-put to bed. Martha was washing the soiled socks, and singing thoughtfully.
-
-“Seems nice to have a child in the house,” she remarked.
-
-“We’ll keep her along,” returned Mr. Matchett. “Good little thing.”
-
-“As gold,” affirmed his wife.
-
-This was the advent of Lucianna. Beyond the fact of her surname being
-Crowson, her clothes plain, her eyes blue, her light hair cut short, and
-that she bore marks of abuse, the worthy couple knew nothing.
-
-Neither did they go out of their way for information. Lucianna proved
-affectionate, willing and useful, with a passion for cats.
-
-In a year she had become almost as their own. Enos worshiped her. Martha
-did, too, but made Lucianna work, as befitted her position as helper.
-
-Another year and the girl developed peculiarities that worried them. She
-eyed them shyly. She grimaced at Enos most impertinently when he trod on
-her cat’s tail. Martha spanked her. Lucianna laughed.
-
-A few months more and she became erratic, irresponsible and useless, but
-always good natured. As Enos expressed it, “Lucianna had gone back to
-bein’ a kid.”
-
-Some money went for medical advice. There was but one opinion.
-“Weak-minded. The patient might grow worse, but hardly probable if kindly
-treated. With great care under expert treatment she might improve. Such
-cases were outside the regular practice. Would recommend a sanitarium,
-or an asylum. Of course, if they wished to have her remain at home, no
-objection could be raised; but a burden—a burden.”
-
-“We’ll keep her along,” announced Enos. “We’ve got hands and hearts yet,
-hain’t we?”
-
-“God forgive me for spankin’ her,” wept Martha. “The poor thing couldn’t
-help her actions, an’ she never held it against me. Jest laughed, she
-did, takin’ it all in good part.”
-
-“She sha’n’t go to no asylum,” cried Mr. Matchett, rising to the
-occasion. “Sanitariums an’ expert doctors ain’t for our pockets. She come
-to us for carin’, growed to be our little girl, an’ by Josh! Lucianna
-will be kep’ along.”
-
-She was; and always reported to be “about the same.”
-
-Ten years of it—ten long, trying, down-hill years, but neither Enos
-Matchett nor his wife had ever wavered in loyalty or love to their
-charge. Indeed, the worse things got, the more they thought of Lucianna.
-
-Her daily airing (on the wiry arm of Martha), her whims, her playthings,
-were all attended to, religiously.
-
-If, as frequently happened, she made a bright remark, her devoted keepers
-nodded sagely, saying, “She’s gettin’ better.”
-
-As for the expense, whatever their thoughts in secret, both kept a
-guarded silence. Only this evening had Martha for the first time
-deprecated the failing of Enos to “blow a dollar for Lucianna.”
-
-He stared at her, curiously, and grunted.
-
-“Pooh!” said he, recklessly. “Got fifteen ahead.”
-
-Martha’s tongue uncurbed at this unseemly boast. Her long nose twitched.
-
-“Ahead!” she snorted. “You stay in my place tomorrow, Enos Matchett. You
-mind the door for one mornin’ and see how much you’re _ahead_.”
-
-“All right,” returned Enos, his placid features animating resentfully.
-“I can spare the time till noon. No need of snappin’ at me as I see. No
-sense in deprivin’ Lucianna of a little pleasure, neither. There’s nobody
-pressin’ us hard—said so yourself. What’s a dollar, anyway?”
-
-Alas! to the contempt of Mr. Matchett for the single dollar was due much
-of their financial tribulation.
-
-“I’m going up to visit with the girl,” he added. “_She_ won’t be snappy.”
-
-This parting thrust rankled in Martha’s bosom, and the supper table was
-cleared with rather unnecessary clatter. The improvident, easy-going Enos
-always let her have her own way. He turned over his earnings to her more
-careful hands, spending very little on himself, and trusted implicitly to
-wifely wisdom in all household matters. A real quarrel between them had
-never occurred.
-
-Responsibility, shifted from his fat shoulders to her narrow ones, was
-both agreeable and natural to Enos. His make-up was that of the man
-who never “troubled trouble,” until cornered. Then he became actually
-belligerent and invited war. Up to this rare point Mr. Matchett bluffed
-good-humoredly.
-
-When assailed by creditors on the street he was invariably in a hurry to
-perform some important and paying job—a fictitious pleasantry.
-
-“Can’t bother about that now,” he would grin. “Drop ’round to the house
-an’ see Mis’ Matchett. She ’tends to the finances, an’ if she hasn’t
-spent all I give her lately, you’ll get something.”
-
-This ingenious disposition of duns was not meant to be unkind.
-
-“Martha’ll fix him,” Enos would chuckle, trotting along. “She don’t mind.”
-
-So the brunt fell on Martha, and it was patiently borne.
-
-But nerves grow irritable under constant pricking until they are ready
-to snap. Martha did mind. Of late she had felt like hiding whenever the
-door-bell rang. It took a long breath, a determined effort, a clutch at
-her quick beating heart for an appearance of unconcern, and her poor
-brain quivered with apprehension at its dearth of successful excuses.
-
-“Let him have a turn,” she muttered, wiping the dishes. “The rent
-collector won’t be ’round ’till afternoon, but there’s a-plenty of others
-likely to show up. His fifteen dollars will get melted fast enough. _I_
-could sprinkle it right, but he don’t know how. The first feller will get
-it all, an’ then——”
-
-Martha paused to laugh, dismally. There was another side. How about
-future calls from those turned down by Enos? He might lose his temper.
-All the worse for her.
-
-“I’m most hopin’ nobody’ll come,” she faltered. “I ain’t so sure of
-gettin’ the best of this.”
-
-However, the following morning saw her marching off smilingly, with
-Lucianna in high feather at the prospect of a long stroll.
-
-Enos regarded their departure with complacence, expecting an undisturbed
-session. At the most, some small bill might be presented. He knew
-just how he would pay it; carelessly, with a jaunty, indifferent air,
-as if the amount was a trifle. This was his unvarying attitude of
-settlement—when he settled.
-
-With newspapers and a pipe, it would be quite a holiday. He established
-himself comfortably, soon forgetting indebtedness in perusing the details
-of late murders.
-
-Shortly after nine o’clock came a ring of the bell—a feeble peal—Enos
-went to the door.
-
-The caller was a stranger to him,—a dapper, gentlemanly man whose
-pleasant face bore an embarrassed expression.
-
-“I—I wish to see Mrs. Matchett,” he began.
-
-“Out for a walk,” said Enos, a bit pompously. “Any message? I’m Mr.
-Matchett.”
-
-“Well,” the man pursed his lips and hesitated. “I—I wanted to speak with
-your wife about an account. Something of her own, you know—er—wearing
-apparel. If I could get the money today it would be a great convenience.”
-
-Enos laughed indulgently.
-
-“Clothes, eh? You needn’t be modest about that. I don’t rec’lect her
-havin’ any new ones for years, but it’s all right, I guess. I’m payin’
-the bills. Trot it out an’ I’ll settle right now an’ glad to.”
-
-The man looked relieved. “If it’s perfectly convenient?” he said.
-
-“Perfectly,” puffed Enos. “I’ve got the stuff ready for any little thing
-that may come up.”
-
-He unfolded the paper and glanced at the total under a short list of
-items. It was just thirty-five dollars.
-
-Matchett gazed at the figures, too appalled to change countenance beyond
-a drop of the jaw.
-
-Slowly, he pulled out his precious roll, and counted the money into the
-other’s hands.
-
-“Receipt that bill!” he grunted.
-
-“I’m ever so much obliged,” said the man glibly, his eyes on the paper as
-he signed the long name of a well known dry goods house, “and I wish you
-would explain to Mrs. Matchett.”
-
-“I will,” returned Enos shortly.
-
-“You see, we’ve sold out recently,” pursued his caller. “We are
-collecting all old accounts. This, as you perceive, is very old. We have
-never bothered Mrs. Matchett. I hated to come, really I did, but the
-present conditions made it imperative. Before your wife purchased the
-goods, she went to Mr. Morley—head of the old firm, you know, and told
-him so honestly that she couldn’t tell when she would be able to pay, and
-her reasons for buying, that it quite tickled the old gentleman. He came
-to me—I have charge of the dress goods department—Parker is my name.
-
-“Says he, ‘Parker, wait on this lady and I’ll speak to the bookkeeper
-as to the bill.’ He gave orders to keep it back, so it’s never been
-presented. Very unusual and unbusinesslike, of course, but Mr. Morley had
-peculiarities. Pity he died. Our new head is a very different sort. Very
-strict. So I felt it was my place to see Mrs. Matchett, as I sold her the
-goods and she would remember. Ladies are apt to forget their little bills
-if not reminded. I think your wife will remember.”
-
-“I think so,” said Enos. “Well, the thing’s paid and that’s all.” His
-voice was steady, but deeper than usual.
-
-“That’s all. Yes, sir. Sorry to trouble you, and very many thanks. I’m
-much relieved to find it was no inconvenience. So many people complain of
-hard times. Good day.”
-
-Mr. Parker skipped down the steps. Mr. Matchett locked the door.
-
-He went to the most remote room in the house and sat for two hours in
-a state of apathetic despair, broken only by short bursts of wrath.
-Oh, Martha should long recollect this day! Several times the bell rang
-insistently, but Enos paid no heed.
-
-At last he settled on a plan of action and went wearily down to unlock
-the door.
-
-The two women came in, shortly before noon. In the sunshine and freedom,
-Martha had cast care to the winds. Her eyes were bright. In her thin
-cheeks played a faint color. Lucianna had behaved beautifully. Now, she
-giggled at sight of Enos, and clamored for dinner.
-
-“We’ll have some soon,” said Martha, stirring about. “Had a quiet
-morning, husband?” mischievously.
-
-“I ain’t seen a bill against me,” replied Mr. Matchett, calmly. “I’ve
-set still till I’ll be glad to get into the air. Let’s eat, an’ I’ll be
-startin’.”
-
-The eye-brows of his wife lifted in wonder. After all, she was glad of
-the news. It would have been too bad to have Enos upset.
-
-He ate in silence while she chatted volubly of her outing, not remarking
-his lack of attention.
-
-“Through?” he asked, as Martha rolled her napkin and sat back.
-
-“All through,” she smiled.
-
-“Well, _I_ ain’t,” said the man, leaning forward, his eyes stern and
-reproachful. “Nor you, neither. We’ve a bit of dessert to chew on,
-Martha Matchett. I told you I hadn’t seen a bill against _me_. I’ve seen
-one against you, an’ I’ve paid it! Yes, marm. Paid it! Here!” he thrust
-the paper at her.
-
-“Dear God!” moaned the woman, after a lightning glimpse. “It’s come on
-to me at last. Oh! Enos, husband, don’t look so at me. It was for Cousin
-Minna’s weddin’—four years ago;—I wanted to go. I didn’t have no dress,
-nor fixin’s. You was away. I went to Mr. Morley’s store an’ had ’em
-charged. He said I could pay when I had the money. I’ve never had it. The
-dress I’ve never worn since. I—I hid it away till I could pay for it,
-Enos—oh, dear, oh, dear.”
-
-She sobbed, piteously, staring wildly at him through her tears.
-
-“An’—you—paid—it,” came her horrified gasps. “Every—cent—we had.”
-
-“You can attend to the rent, Martha,” the voice of Enos was unmoved as he
-arose. “I’m goin’ to rake lawns.”
-
-He went out without another word or look, leaving her weeping and rocking
-to and fro.
-
-From the outside he gazed at the house. It was a pretty cottage of a
-cheap kind. They had lived there for three years, and Martha’s vines
-had grown. Her flower bed, so carefully tended, how pretty it was! On
-the opposite side of the road lay a great vacant lot—a pasture on the
-city outskirts. Trees were there—and cows. In summer, children played
-among the grasses. In winter, they coasted. It was just the place for
-Lucianna—for Martha—for Enos, too.
-
-“Got to leave it,” groaned the man. “No use talkin’. It’s pay or get
-out. Plenty wants it—and old Craddock won’t wait again. Third time we’ll
-have moved. Confound Minna’s weddin’ an’ a deceivin’ woman. If I’d known
-it—oh! if I only had—but I said I’d pay an’ I did. Now, _let_ her do some
-payin’.”
-
-Lucianna tapped on the window and beamed at him. His answering smile was
-a ghastly farce. Tears were on the round cheeks of Enos as he hurried
-away. Last night he had been so confident and happy. He stumbled, walking
-on.
-
-No suspicious moisture showed on Martha’s cheeks, as she marched over her
-doorsill twenty minutes later. Her tears had dried. A hard determination
-glittered in the black eyes. Under her hastily arranged bonnet, Mrs.
-Matchett’s face, strained and set, was tense with resolve.
-
-Lucianna did not witness her departure, else there would have been
-wailing and much pounding on the window. Fortunately the girl had fallen
-asleep. Only on occasions of great moment was she left alone. This was
-one of them.
-
-Martha hastened along.
-
-The old sign of “Morley, Cowperthwait, Rensellaer and Company” still
-remained over the entrance of the great department store—but the kindly
-old founder was gone.
-
-Martha knew that—she had read of his death, and the passage of the
-business into new hands. But that old bill wouldn’t be a worry. She had
-a whole string of excuses and explanations for the lingering liquidation
-of her debt in the case of the resurrection of this buried but haunting
-ghost. Now, Enos had “gone and paid it,” to the ruin of them all.
-
-Through the throng she pushed and elbowed. How changed everything was.
-How busy and big. Martha had not entered that growing emporium since the
-date of her reckless purchase.
-
-For a second her heart failed at the enormity of her mission. Then she
-clenched her teeth and grabbed a passing bundle boy by the shoulder.
-
-“Say!” she exclaimed, hoarsely. “I want to see the head of the firm, the
-man who is attendin’ to Mr. Morley’s work. Where is he?”
-
-The startled lad pulled away, blinked and grinned.
-
-“Guess not,” he retorted. “He’ll take yer skelp off. He won’t talk to
-nobody this time o’ day.”
-
-“It’s important, I tell you,” cried the woman, fiercely. “It’s a money
-matter an’ I _will_ see him.”
-
-“Gwan ter trouble, then!” said the boy, pointing a mischievous finger at
-a closed door marked “No admittance.” “I’ll call de ambulance. He ain’t
-no Mr. Morley. I see you come out a flyin’ in jest two seconds.”
-
-But Martha was past him, her grasp on the knob, and the door closed
-behind her as he stared.
-
-“Here! Here!” ejaculated a stout, bald man, turning impatiently from his
-desk with a twist of his revolving chair. “You’ve made a mistake, madam.
-Go right out, please.”
-
-“I won’t,” said Martha. “I’m here on important business—an’ I’ll state it
-before I move one step. You’ve taken Mr. Morley’s place. You’re the head
-of things, an’ I’ve come straight to you.”
-
-A queer smile crossed the broad face. The man took out his watch. “I’ll
-give you just one minute,” he said, coolly. “What’s the trouble. Talk
-fast, now.”
-
-Martha talked fast.
-
-“I got thirty-five dollars worth of stuff here most four years ago,”
-she began, excitedly. “Mr. Morley said I could pay when convenient. Now
-you’ve sent to my house when I was out, an’ my husband paid it. I want
-that money back.”
-
-Her listener laughed outright.
-
-“Why! Why!” he coughed. “My dear woman, you have a very accommodating
-husband; that’s evident. Four years! What were you thinking of? Madam,
-the account should never have run so long. You owed it. It’s been paid.
-The transaction is closed. We cannot give you back the money. What a
-ridiculous request!”
-
-The woman drew in her breath, shudderingly.
-
-“People must settle their obligations, you know,” pursued the man patting
-his fat leg. “That is the rule of business. If _I_ owed you anything I
-should pay it. If you owe me, you have to pay also. Such a demand as
-yours is absurd. Can’t you see that?”
-
-“I can see me an’ Enos turned out of our little home.” Martha’s voice
-was stony. “The money for that bill of mine was every penny we had. The
-rent’s got to be met before night. My husband’s an honest man—too honest
-to have any credit. I can see him growin’ old an’ gray in some shanty. I
-can see a poor half-witted girl cryin’ for the room she loves. These are
-the things I can see. Yes, sir, that’s the worst of it. Lucianna won’t
-understand——”
-
-“Eh!” interrupted the merchant sharply. “Who?”
-
-“Lucianna, sir. Not our own daughter, but most the same, poor thing.
-We’ve been glad to have her, an’ make her a home, an’ never minded the
-cost. She was so little when she came to us for shelter, smart an’ bright
-as anybody with her blue eyes an’ yellow hair, winnin’ us like she was
-our born baby. ’Twasn’t her fault she got queer. We wouldn’t put the
-child where she’d be abused again, so we kep’ her. Now, to root her out
-from comfort into the Lord knows what—I can’t bear to think of it. Me an’
-Enos might get along somehow, but there’s Lucianna. I want that money
-back!”
-
-Martha’s tone became sharp as she remembered her errand. Tears had
-blinded her eyes during the rapid explanation, quite forgetful for the
-moment of all save the coming deprivations of her loved ones.
-
-Now, she winked them away to glare at the man in the chair. His ruddy
-face had gone to a dreadful whiteness. His hands were working. A strange
-sound came from the thick throat before he stammered feebly:
-
-“I—I—lost—a little girl. Her—this—one—do you know the last name?”
-
-“I’ve most forgot—she’s had ours for so long.” Martha began to tremble.
-“Let’s see? Yes. Say, it can’t be, your name is Crowson? That’s hers,
-Lucianna Crowson.”
-
-“My God!” the stout man sprang up. “It is! It is! Everything points to
-her being the same. It must be so.”
-
-He seized Martha’s hands with such vehemence that she recoiled with a
-startled, backward step.
-
-“Don’t act so crazy!” came her alarmed exclamation. “You let go an’ be
-careful. The blood’s clean to the top of your head. Set down an’ behave.”
-
-“Yes! Yes!” cried Crowson, releasing her, to pace the small room with a
-broken laugh and a fierce curse. “Wait! I’ll be myself in a minute. She’s
-my girl—I tell you. They wrote me she was dead—the people I left her
-with—after the child was cured. I’m her father, my dear woman. Don’t mind
-me, I’ll pull up directly. Wait!”
-
-Martha shrank against the wall, as he laughed wildly and growled
-imprecations.
-
-Presently he steadied, tightening his muscles and breathing deep.
-
-“I’m all right,” said he, huskily. “You must excuse this, Mrs.—Mrs.—”
-
-“Matchett,” answered his caller. “Certainly! ’Tain’t no wonder you felt
-shook up, if you’re really Lucianna’s father.”
-
-“There is no doubt about it;” the man sat heavily in his chair. “Listen!
-She was eleven years old when she fell off her pony and injured her head.
-I was a comparatively poor man then, but I got the best surgeons. For
-months my little one lay in a hospital. We had no settled home. My wife
-died long before. Business called me away. When I returned Lucianna was
-pronounced cured. At least it was deemed safe to place her with some
-family where she would have every care, and no excitement. Should the
-trouble recur, an operation would be necessary.
-
-“I found a home for her. Matters were arranged. Again I went West.
-Letters reached me regularly for many months. All seemed to be going
-well, in fact so satisfactorily that I, immersed in the starting of
-a business, ceased to worry. Yes, it must have been two years before
-I stopped my remittances, although those crafty letters had grown
-infrequent.
-
-“I wrote the Harpinsons that I would be East soon and intended to take
-the child back with me.
-
-“Then I received the shocking news of her death. Diphtheria, they said,
-and very sudden. A malignant case, and—well—the burial had been at night.
-Everything was done as if she belonged to them. As soon as quarantine was
-over they were going to move and would inform me of their location.”
-
-Martha stood with her mouth open.
-
-“Did they?” she hissed. “We must have had Lucianna for a good while
-before those critters said she was dead.”
-
-“Yes,” said Crowson, frowning. “They bled me as long as possible.
-I received one more letter, postmarked Boston—a few details of no
-importance, but I had no suspicions. Since then, my letters have come
-back stamped, ‘no such party at address.’”
-
-“But—” broke in Martha.
-
-He held up an appealing hand.
-
-“I know, I know,” he interrupted. “I should have gone on at once. Yet
-what could be done? The quarantine—the detention from business—the added
-grief. My child was gone. All was over. Nothing seemed left to me save
-strenuous work and the making of money. I own three stores like this, the
-result of losing Lucianna. Now I have found her, I’ll not work so hard.”
-
-“She won’t know you from Adam,” said Martha, jealously.
-
-“Perhaps—in—time,” replied Crowson, stroking his forehead. “Thank God!
-I’ve the means to find out.”
-
-“Have we got to give up Lucianna?” quavered the woman. “If—if it’s for
-her good, I s’pose I could stand it, but what will Enos say? She won’t
-want to go, neither.”
-
-The man turned his head suddenly, and coughed.
-
-“We will fix everything right,” he said, gently. “I’ll take no step
-without your consent. Let’s see! To get back to business—” he smiled,
-whimsically. “You mustn’t think a personal matter can influence our
-regulations. That bill of yours must be settled.”
-
-Martha jumped. In her excitement she had quite forgotten the landlord,
-the house and the gravity of the Matchett situation.
-
-Speechless, she drew herself up. Could this hard-headed man be so devoid
-of humanity, after what had happened, as to refuse her assistance?
-
-“Still,” he went on in his matter-of-fact tone, “I’ll give you a little
-more time on it. Till next week, say. Here is the money, but say nothing
-about it. Quite against rules, you know.”
-
-He pulled out a wallet and handed her four bank notes, three tens and a
-five.
-
-“Thanks!” said Martha, counting them mechanically. “I s’pose you want
-this;” she held out the receipted bill.
-
-“Oh yes—I must have that.” He put it carefully in a pigeon-hole.
-
-“I’m ever so much obliged,” murmured the woman, “an’ I’ll try to scrape
-up something by next week. I s’pose you’ll be ’round to see Lucianna—an’
-talk with Mr. Matchett.”
-
-“Very soon.” Crowson’s mouth trembled at the corners. “How long have you
-had Lucianna?”
-
-“Twelve years come Saturday. Enos was sayin’ so night before last. We
-call it her birthday, an’ most always give her something. Not this year,
-though. Can’t afford it.”
-
-The merchant figured on a pad. “Twelve. Six hundred and twenty-four,” he
-whispered. Then aloud. “The Harpinsons charged me ten dollars a week for
-Lucianna’s keep. It was none too much.”
-
-“They skinned you,” said Martha, adjusting her bonnet. She felt dazed
-and tired; quite bewildered at the prospect of losing Lucianna, uneasy
-regarding Enos, yet thankful for the temporary financial respite.
-
-“I’ve got to hurry home,” she announced. “There’s nothing more to say
-except that I’ll do my best to settle my bill and I’m obliged to you. I’m
-mighty glad for you, sir, but the thought of what we’re losing makes me
-fairly sick. It ain’t right to say so, but I most wish I hadn’t come.”
-She turned with a choke.
-
-“One moment,” said Crowson. “I want your address. What is your full name,
-Mrs. Matchett?”
-
-“Martha.”
-
-“Any middle name?”
-
-“Hum! Lupkins,” returned Martha reluctantly. “We live at 462 Goodland
-Avenue—used to be Squash Street. You’ll find us easy enough—good day.”
-
-“One thing more. It will take only a minute. You have arranged your old
-account. There’s another you seem to have overlooked.” He touched a
-button on his desk.
-
-“There ain’t another!” declared Martha, defiantly. “I don’t owe a cent
-here besides this.”
-
-The door opened quickly. A young man bustled in.
-
-“Hinkley,” ordered Mr. Crowson, and his eyes twinkled, “draw a check at
-once to the order of Martha L. Matchett for six thousand two hundred and
-forty dollars.”
-
-When Enos crawled into supper, he was a weary, conscience-smitten person.
-His anger had dissipated. What should come he knew not, but Martha’s
-feelings must be considered, first of all. He pictured her in the depths
-of despair—forlorn, distracted, possibly “packing.”
-
-An appetizing odor filled the house. Enos sniffed.
-
-“Beefsteak an’ onions an’ coffee,” he commented, gratefully. “Jest my
-likin’s. She wants to make up. Where did she get the meat?”
-
-Drawing his chair to the table, Mr. Matchett gazed at his spouse with a
-dismayed visage.
-
-Surely there was something wrong here. The display of luxuries, Martha’s
-unnaturally bright eyes, her compressed lips, the new black dress, her
-air of superiority.
-
-“What’s the matter?” said Martha. “Pitch in. I’ve got a nice supper an’
-dressed up to show you how smart I can be under afflictions.”
-
-Enos took a mouthful.
-
-“I—I guess Craddock didn’t come for the rent,” he essayed. “Never knew
-him to skip us before.”
-
-“He come,” replied Martha, loftily.
-
-“An’ you—” the man’s fork shook against his plate.
-
-“Paid him, of course,” said Martha, airily. “You told me to attend to it.”
-
-Her husband half rose from his seat. “You ain’t right, my dear,” he said,
-soothingly—“what’s affected you?”
-
-“Set down!” commanded the woman, laughing. “We’ve found a friend, an’ our
-girl’s found a father. It’s all straight, Enos. In case you want a bit of
-spendin’ money, I’ve endorsed this over to you.”
-
-Mr. Matchett did sit down. His countenance underwent many changes as he
-fingered the check. “Wh—what’s it for?” he stuttered.
-
-“Lucianna’s keep,” said Martha.
-
-On the pleasant days, when the roads are fine, an automobile stops before
-the Matchett’s door. Presently it rolls slowly away. Martha sits very
-erect by the side of a golden-haired companion, and an Angora kitten
-nestles between them. There is a good deal of laughing and talking, and
-sometimes passers stare, but no one in the big car minds. The stout man
-in front with the chauffeur turns, smiling at the women.
-
-“Pretty distressing for us all, the removal of that lesion,” he says,
-“but she’s reading little books, now.”
-
-And when Enos asks a question with his eyes, upon Martha’s return from
-these trips, he gets the same old words: “She’s gettin’ better.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-_Who Pays the Taxes?_
-
-BY WILLIAM H. TILTON
-
-
-The residents of a small New Jersey village were recently called together
-for the purpose of considering the advisability of incorporating the
-village into a borough; and the Philadelphia newspapers reported that
-an application for incorporation had been signed by a large number of
-“taxpayers and citizens.” What is meant by this dividing of the people
-into two distinct classes? This question becomes of more than passing
-importance in view of the fact that the case cited is not an isolated
-one. For instance, during the political campaign of 1905, in New York
-City, a prominent newspaper spoke editorially of the candidacy of William
-R. Hearst for Mayor on a municipal ownership platform as an “appeal to
-the _untaxed_ and an attack upon the _taxpayers_.”
-
-The Secretary of the National Reciprocity League, in an address at
-Chicago, is reported to have said that “Municipal ownership and operation
-of street railways had become a craze; that people who do _not pay_ taxes
-are the most enthusiastic supporters of the craze, as those who _pay_
-taxes are opposed to the idea.”
-
-The late Charles T. Yerkes, in reference to the election of Judge Dunne
-as Mayor of Chicago on a municipal ownership platform, said: “The city
-will run heavily in debt. Will the poor man suffer? No; because the poor
-man does not pay taxes. Men with property pay taxes; these will suffer.”
-Mr. Yerkes did not say just what kind of _property_ was meant; but as
-the returns of personal property in Chicago are said to be less today
-than they were twenty years ago (although the city is three times as
-large, with six times the wealth), it is evident that the owners of that
-kind of property—stock-owners of that kind of property—stocks, bonds,
-mortgages, paintings, jewelry, silver services, etc.—are not going to
-suffer to any great extent if they can help it. Then it must be the real
-estate owner, again, who is expected to do the suffering, because of the
-increase of taxes, should there be any such increase.
-
-Day after day we read in the newspapers communications in reference to
-public questions which are signed “Taxpayer,” or “Property Owner,” as
-if that fact should give more weight or influence to their opinions or
-suggestions. Others go still further. A Pittsburg preacher in a recent
-sermon denounced universal suffrage, saying, “Only property owners should
-vote and all others should be disfranchised.” Numerous other instances
-could be cited which tend to show a growing tendency to consider the real
-estate owner as the only person who pays taxes.
-
-Now the great majority of our people have probably not looked upon these
-signs of the times with any apprehension as yet; but “great oaks from
-little acorns grow,” and this increasing disregard for the rights of men,
-as men, this creating of class distinctions with a tax-bill as a line
-of demarcation, on the theory that one small class pays all the taxes
-and is, therefore, entitled to rights and privileges that are denied to
-others, is dangerous and contrary to all principles of Democracy.
-
-Owing to the inherent defects of human nature, no doubt there will always
-be those among us who will expect and demand more than they are entitled
-to, but the average American is satisfied with a square deal. When
-deprived of what he considers his just rights, however, he is, like most
-other people, inclined to become indifferent to the rights of others.
-Sooner or later he helps to swell the large army of the discontented; and
-history teaches that discontent is not only the mother of progress, but
-the mother of trouble. “On the contentment of the poor rests the safety
-of the rich.”
-
-It is not intended to discuss in this article the justice or injustice
-of any particular tax, but simply to consider the question of taxes—how
-they are paid and who pays them—in the hope that we may thereby the more
-intelligently render unto Cæsar the things that are Cæsar’s.
-
-Let us consider first the tax on real estate, one of the most important
-illustrations of the so-called “direct” taxation which Mill has defined
-as “that which is demanded from the very person who, it is intended or
-desired, should pay it.” Now it is, of course, true that this tax is
-levied against the property and the tax-bill is rendered in the name of
-the nominal owner, who is, naturally, expected to pay it; but whence
-comes the money with which he discharges this debt against his property?
-If the premises are rented or leased, are not the taxes, insurance, cost
-of repairs, interest on investment, etc., all added to the rental which
-is asked of and paid by the tenant? There are leases drawn today which
-contain a clause providing “that any increase in the taxes shall be
-added to the rental.” And yet, during the late struggle in Philadelphia
-over the attempted lease of the gas works to a private corporation for
-seventy-five years, a gentleman appeared before the committee of councils
-on behalf, as he said, of the taxpayers _and_ rent-payers.
-
-During the passage of the mortgage bill through the 1905 session of
-the New York Legislature, a member of the committee appointed by the
-real-estate owners to oppose the measure said: “The result, should the
-bill pass, will be for the real-estate owners to raise the rents. It is
-the public who will have to bear the burden, not the real-estate owners.”
-So we appear to have very relevant testimony to the effect that the man
-who receives the tax-bill, the man “on whom the tax is levied and who
-is expected to pay it” really acts as an agent, collecting the tax from
-his tenant and passing it on to the authorities. Is the tenant then a
-_taxpayer_ or a _citizen_? As more than eighty per cent. of the people
-of the United States occupy rented houses, the sooner this question is
-satisfactorily answered and each of us understands his own individual
-responsibility, the better for all concerned.
-
-Would not the rent-payer hesitate to cast his ballot for corrupt
-municipal government—with its accompanying reckless and dishonest
-expenditures of the public money—would he not hesitate to strike or riot,
-if he knew that the expenses (the teamsters’ strike in Chicago, in 1905,
-is said to have cost the city $100,000 a month for special policemen) and
-losses would eventually have to be paid by increased taxes _added to his
-rent_?
-
-The United States Steel Company is said to have done much to eliminate
-strikes at its different plants by selling a portion of the capital stock
-of the company to its employes. Every man who owns even one share now
-feels that he is a part of the organization, that its interests are his
-interests, its losses his losses; and he is not inclined to do anything
-that will injuriously affect himself. When property owners understand and
-admit it, and rent-payers realize that they are a part of the municipal
-corporation, of the state and of the republic, that the public interests
-are their interests, the public losses their losses, that we must all
-rise or fall together, a great deal will have been accomplished toward
-the creation of better feeling and a consequent improvement in existing
-conditions.
-
-Adam Smith says of taxation that “the subjects of every state ought to
-contribute toward the support of the Government as nearly as possible in
-proportion to their respective abilities; that is, in proportion to the
-revenue which they respectively enjoy under the protection of the states.”
-
-Montesquieu defined taxation as “that portion of a person’s property
-which one contributes to the state in return for protection in the
-enjoyment of the balance.”
-
-Both these eminent authorities look upon the payment of taxes as a duty
-which the citizen owes to the state in return for something which he
-receives from the state; but neither says in just what manner that duty
-must be performed, and there are undoubtedly numerous ways in which the
-obligation of the citizen may be discharged.
-
-A very important phase of the tax question to be considered here (owing
-to its being the source of almost the entire income of the United States
-Government) is what is known as “indirect” taxation, or the tax on
-commodities, processes, etc. This is more easily collected than a direct
-tax, because the consumer hardly realizes that he is being taxed when
-paying for articles which he may use his own discretion about purchasing;
-but it bears most heavily upon the poor, as only articles in general use
-will yield the necessary revenue.
-
-For instance, the tariff on imports, for the fiscal year ending 1905,
-produced more than $260,000,000. This enormous amount was, of course,
-paid at the custom house by the importer of the goods, but it was then
-added to the cost of the goods and finally paid by the consumer. This tax
-is great or small, depending entirely upon the necessities or desires of
-the people.
-
-The higher the social and economic development of a people, the greater
-will be the burden of this tariff tax; as what were once considered
-luxuries eventually become necessaries of life, and a larger proportion
-of income is consequently expended for food, wearing apparel, household
-goods, etc. Under such circumstances, a man who is in receipt of a
-fair-sized income (even though possessing little or no taxable property),
-if he buys freely for the wants of himself and his family, may
-contribute more toward the support of the Government than his wealthy
-landlord, who buys sparingly, swears off his personal taxes, and collects
-his real estate taxes from his tenants.
-
-The internal revenue tax on spirits, fermented liquors and tobacco
-produced in 1905 about $230,000,000, which, while also paid primarily by
-the manufacturer or distiller, is then added to the cost of production
-and included in the selling price, which is paid, of course, by the
-consumer. Not only the man who smokes or drinks, but everyone who uses
-spirits in the manufactures or arts, in patent medicines or drugstore
-prescriptions (many of which contain large quantities of liquor), is
-contributing a share of this tax. Oleomargarine produced during the same
-period over $600,000, and playing cards about $425,000.
-
-Another very important source of income, levied in times of emergency, as
-during the war with Spain, is the stamp tax, which produces millions of
-dollars. The man with a small bank account pays as much for a stamp when
-issuing a check for one dollar, as does the man who issues a check for
-$100,000 or more; and each pays the same when purchasing an article of
-manufacture which is sold under a stamp.
-
-Again, we should not overlook such items as license fees, financial,
-mercantile and franchise taxes, which, while levied by the city, state or
-national governments upon some particular person, firm or corporation,
-are really added to the cost of production or operation and ultimately
-paid by the general public. For instance, during the political campaign
-of 1904 in New Jersey, when equal taxation of railroad property was the
-burning issue, the Republican candidate for governor, in a speech at
-Trenton, stated: “No matter how high the tax on railroad property is
-made, the people who pay the freight rates and passenger fares will, in
-the end, pay it.” As a railroad director, he undoubtedly knew whereof he
-spoke. Like the salesman’s expense account—which included an overcoat,
-although it didn’t show—the freight and passenger rates also include the
-franchise taxes, which tend to increase the cost of everything we eat,
-everything we wear, every article of use or adornment in the home, every
-portion of the material required in building the house, which ultimately
-has its effect on the rent the tenant must pay. In the light of these
-facts it would seem that, instead of there being question as to “who pays
-the taxes,” the problem is to discover the man who does not pay taxes in
-some form.
-
-Again, there are thousands of Americans who do not own one dollar’s
-worth of real estate, and many of them very few household goods, but who
-have a birthright in this free land by reason of descent from the heroes
-who pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor for the
-liberties we now enjoy; who fought and bled and died for the principle
-of equal rights, no taxation without representation, and who established
-upon this continent a “government of the people, by the people, for the
-people.”
-
-And the men of ’61! Have they not as much right to a voice and vote in
-the affairs of the nation as those who remained at home and laid the
-foundations of a fortune during that critical period? Had the soldier
-remained at home, perhaps he too might now be a heavy taxpayer, or
-tax-dodger. But he answered the nation’s call in the hour of need, he
-sacrificed his opportunities and offered his life upon the altar of
-his country. And, if he escaped with his life, he returned home, after
-years of privation, suffering and hardship, probably ruined in health or
-crippled for life, compelled to make a new start. Has he not discharged
-his obligation to his country?
-
-Who are the men who would rob an American of his birthright, who insist
-that none but property owners should vote or hold office while all
-others—the payers of rents, of the tariff, of the internal revenue, of
-franchise and stamp taxes, etc.—should be disfranchised? Can they show a
-better title than the men, or their descendants, who do the work in time
-of peace and the fighting in time of war, but who may not have been able
-to secure any real property—honestly or otherwise?
-
-The Constitution of the United States provides that no man shall be
-deprived of his right to vote on account of race, color or previous
-condition of servitude. What right have we to attempt to deprive any man
-of that privilege because he does not own property and pay “direct” taxes?
-
-Mettius Curtius said that “Rome’s best wealth was her patriotism.”
-Yet that patriotism was deadened and destroyed by privilege and class
-distinction, and Rome fell. Patriotism is unquestionably the best wealth
-of any nation; but it cannot be aroused or fostered in a republic by
-dividing the people into classes, the rulers and the ruled, on the basis
-of ownership of property.
-
- Ill fares the land, to hastening ills a prey,
- Where wealth accumulates and men decay.
-
-The success, progress and safety of this republic rests upon the
-contentment of the _whole_ people, and that contentment depends upon
-justice and fair dealing. And every citizen, “unless he goes naked,
-eats grass, and lives in a hole in the ground,” is a taxpayer to a
-greater or less extent, according to the benefits he derives. He has
-the same interests in the national welfare; the same responsibilities;
-is entitled to equal rights and privileges before the law; and when we
-have fully realized the fact we will have established a higher standard
-of citizenship, we will each have more respect for ourselves and for one
-another, and a deeper, truer love and higher regard for our country and
-its institutions.
-
-[Illustration: _Their Joke on the President_
-
- _Davenport, in N. Y. Evening Mail_]
-
-[Illustration: _Our Uncommon Carriers_
-
- _Bart, in Minneapolis Journal_]
-
-[Illustration: _Sick ’em!_
-
- _Macauley, in N. Y. World_]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _Letters From The People_]
-
-
-Our readers are requested to be as brief as possible in their welcome
-letters to the MAGAZINE, as the great number of communications daily
-received makes it impossible to publish all of them or even to use more
-than extracts from many that are printed. Every effort, however, will
-be made to give the people all possible space for a direct voice in the
-MAGAZINE, and this Department is freely open to them.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _J. D. Steele, Charleston, W. Va._
-
-I have been a reader of your Magazine since its first issue, and while
-I partly agree with Mr. George H. Steele, Rockham, S. D., that none of
-us are perfect, I admire you for having the courage of your convictions,
-and it would be impossible to estimate the good your publication has all
-ready done.
-
-As a remedy for the evils existing, as set forth by Mr. Bert H. Belford,
-Widners, Ark., I would suggest that our poor, ignorant, down-trodden
-farmers in the South get posted. There certainly is no reason for any
-grown up man of the present generation not being able to read, and almost
-every daily and weekly newspaper would put the most ignorant backwoodsman
-in possession of the facts which Mr. Belford states the farmers are
-ignorant of.
-
-I believe I have never seen a letter from this state, but West Virginia
-hasn’t waked up yet. She is always behind in everything except graft.
-
-May you live long and continue the good work you have undertaken!
-
- * * * * *
-
- _A. J. Jones, Parlier, Cal._
-
-TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE is one of the greatest educators of the age, stands
-prominent in its class, is fearless, bold and decisive, is just what
-the people want. Every Populist should read it and give it the widest
-circulation possible.
-
-Watson’s editorials are great and to the point. The Letters from the
-People are very interesting. Would be pleased to hear from our workers
-throughout the United States every month through the columns of TOM
-WATSON’S MAGAZINE. In regard to the work in California, we are preparing
-our petition for a place on the ballot, and will have a People’s Party
-ticket in this State this coming election. Our slogan is: “The middle
-of the road now and forever!” We take no part in any other party in
-existence, or coming into existence. Let us profit by past experience.
-The people here, regardless of party, are ready to accept our
-principles. You may hear something drop in California in 1908. We have a
-press ready to join us at once. Let us get busy at once. Brothers, the
-fields are white for harvest.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _G. S. Floyd._
-
-The lucid manner in which you expose the evils of our banking system
-should convince any one not blinded by ignorance or prejudice of the
-evils lurking therein, even as at present conducted, but if they secure
-the additional special privileges that they seek, what may we expect?
-
-Brother Starkey of Nebraska who writes discouragingly in the December
-number should take heed, as the worm has turned in Pennsylvania and Ohio,
-and one may hope and believe that your efforts have helped to produce
-that result.
-
-I was in Kansas in the early seventies when the horde of bogus Greenback
-editors, shipped out from New York and New England with rolls of Wall
-Street money, bought up the Greenback press throughout the West,
-pretending loyalty to the principles until secure in possession, when the
-hireling traitors came out in their true colors and the Greenback press
-vanished like mist before the noonday sun.
-
-The President’s eulogy of the pension office is worth no more than his
-certificate of character to Paul Morton. To judge from observation and
-the star-chamber methods of that bureau one would conclude that it is
-run primarily as a factor in politics, and that the only criterion
-for the grade and tenure of a pension is the whim or discretion of
-an irresponsible official. Evidently the system is rotten and needs
-overhauling or revolutionizing. From the nature of the service it is
-doubtless true that irregularities are inherent therein, but certainly
-there is room for improvement.
-
-Conventionality, a parent of aristocracy, is responsible for the
-misfortune of Midshipman Meriweather; herein we see one of the evils of
-militarism; the discipline they recommend so highly is the discipline of
-an underling, and this is mainly why they desire it.
-
-Hurrah for Hearst!
-
-You give Henry George, Jr., a severe prod in the current number. The
-single tax is sprung by the plutocrats when they wish to confuse and
-demoralize the reform forces.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Nelson D. Stilwell, Yonkers, N. Y._
-
-The non-appearance of the February number of your magazine caused me
-genuine concern. I stand by you, every inch, in what you advocate and
-teach, and wish the circle of your readers might be extended many fold. I
-first had my attention called to the present evil condition of things by
-reading Lloyd’s “Wealth vs. Commonwealth,” and that but paved the way for
-further reading and investigation until my present condition of freedom
-from the bondage of ignorance has been attained.
-
-I have observed the trend of things for ten years last past and confess
-that instead of improvement and reform, I see a steady progress towards
-further enslavement. What will be the end of it all? I am beginning to
-doubt the maintenance of society and law and order if the entrenched
-forces attempt to maintain their control. God forbid that our country
-should be baptized again with blood. But upon the heads of these “fools
-and blind” men be it, who cannot see the handwriting on the wall.
-
-Your articles on finance and money interest me and absorb all my
-attention and edify me very much. Your Magazine has a purpose back of it,
-and no one will give a more ready acquiescence than the writer.
-
-To be a reformer is to align oneself with the noblemen of bygone days
-whose hearts throbbed for the people. No greater example could be found
-than Christ, whose kingdom is called “the times of Reformation.”
-
-Permit me to bid you God-speed.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Horace C. Keefe, Wallula, Kan._
-
-I have somewhere said “this is the decade of the three Toms”—Tom Watson,
-Tom Johnson, and Tom Lawson. They are each or all likely to leave lasting
-footprints on the century, and I’m anxious that my Tom’s shall not be the
-least. I say “my” because Tom Watson stands for all that the country—if
-not the world—must come to, to have peace and answer the daily Christian
-pleadings—that “Thy will be done on earth as it is in Heaven”; to be His
-will it must embody all that the doctrine of brotherly love contemplates;
-that is ideal, that is Populism. The other Toms stand for that part of
-the whole they contemplate or are willing to concede from a more or
-less selfish standpoint. Your Magazine is startlingly convincing in its
-arguments and facts—but, my dear fellow, it lacks that dignity that a
-Presidential candidate for a great principle should command. I know your
-excuse will be that your appeal to the masses must be in such style—DON’T
-DO IT.
-
-It is the aggressive intelligent few that shapes the destinies of
-countries, and that will be so with ours; if the reverse were true, why
-does not the labor class have 50 or more, the farmers 100 or more, the
-socialists a like number of members in Congress? Such a result would show
-intelligence and a hope that something would result. Cut out such queries
-as—Why the negro maids? Deductions and conclusions are debatable but not
-style. The writer is one of the martyrs for the cause and has been your
-ardent admirer and well wisher. There is no question as to the ultimate
-outcome—though you and I may not be permitted to enter in.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _W. E. Arrant, Alto, Tex._
-
-I read and will say that your Magazine is interesting and entertaining
-in many respects, and I admire your ability and style in showing up the
-evilness and corruption of this age, which no doubt is doing good in the
-way of educating the readers thereof on the main cause of the present
-economical and industrial conditions that now confronts the whole people
-and oppresses the poor that labor and toil that they may share a small
-portion of their labor: while the rich revel in riches and the poor live
-in poverty.
-
-I have been a student for several years, studying the economic
-conditions, the causes and effects of present conditions. The more I read
-and learn of the causes and effects, the more I wonder how and why the
-masses of the people have been so completely deceived so long.
-
-I have been a Populist for several years. Was discouraged and disgusted
-with the fusion act in 1896, and since that time I began to read and
-study the Socialist doctrine to find out what they had to offer as a
-remedy for the whole people. Through this search for knowledge I found
-that the Populist Party was only a reform measure dealing with the
-effects and only a national movement, while the Socialist Party is
-international, and goes to the root of the cause of the unjust system of
-exploitation, and means the emancipation and freedom of the whole human
-family—a plan and system by which one can not rob another by a plan of
-legalized system of robbery. It means a system to be established upon
-earth by which one can live for all and all for one. It means that we
-shall establish a righteous system by which one nation shall not have its
-hands at another’s throat for pelf. It means a system by which it will be
-possible for all Christians to live a pure Christian life and practice
-the Golden Rule in fact and truth.
-
-I realize the error of having more than one party representing the
-interest and prosperity of the whole laboring and working people;
-therefore, judging between the two, the Populist and the Socialist,
-have cast my lot with the Socialists, and expect to make the fight for
-justice and emancipation for wage slavery in the Socialist Party.
-
-I appreciate your position and hope that you will accomplish much good
-with your valuable Magazine in the way of educating the people. I fail to
-see how you can ever expect to help to finally free the laboring people
-from economic bondage of slavery, without joining the Socialist Party.
-You have asked the people to give their ideas as to what they think about
-the existing conditions. I have given my views as I see them. I can
-realize no permanent hopes for relief outside of the Socialist and the
-co-operative commonwealth.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Harry Partington, City._
-
-I took the publication since the first number and today I have in the
-house only the December copy, as I want to get everybody to read them
-that will and thereby have persuaded several to buy them, and you can
-depend on me to continue to do so, and will try and get others to do so.
-I look at it that I am in the city and can get it at the news-dealers
-with more certainty than as a yearly subscriber.
-
-What I think of TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE can never be told. I would like
-it semi-monthly, but I know I shall have to wait possibly some time
-before that comes. Dear sir, believe me, I am a very sincere believer
-and practicer of his doctrine and have been since the Democratic party
-undertook to carry the 16 to 1 doctrine under the auspices of W. J. B. of
-Nebraska. Sorry Billy failed then and 1904.
-
-Hurrah for W. R. Hearst, but the money power is too strong yet. But
-hammer at them and teach us to be steadfast.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _David Meiselas, Brooklyn, N. Y._
-
-I have at last determined to congratulate you upon the success you have
-made with your Magazine. It is, beyond any doubt, good work. In reality
-I can hardly think to write all the praise the editorials are worth. I
-enjoy them as I would some classic by Shakespeare, or some scientific
-work by Darwin. The more I read them, the more I like them. They are
-digestible; and talk about brain food—it is the best.
-
-Yes, Thomas E. Watson should be well considered as a champion for the
-cause of the people. Either he is a second Hearst or Hearst is a second
-Watson. They are so much alike in their fights for the people you can
-hardly tell which is which.
-
-Over here in New York we are having a grand time, viz:
-
-Murphy telling things about McClellan and vice versa. The big insurance
-grafters howling for more. Mr. Ivins telling things about the “reform
-grafter,” Mr. District Attorney, etc., etc.
-
-Abraham Lincoln said we should have a “government of the people, by the
-people and for the people.” I must say we are living up to it, in New
-York—nit. We are having “a government of McCarren, by McClellan and for
-Murphy.” Great government, is it not?
-
-If this is not the age of wonder, I don’t know what. But, Mr. Watson,
-keep up your steady work; don’t forget the Hon. Platt and Depew, the
-former our Chinese advocate and president of the largest express company;
-the latter the champion lobbyist of them all. Don’t forget our generous
-Senator Knox (with his generous rate bill). There are many more whom you
-should prey upon.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _G. White, Enloe, Tex._
-
-Yes “I will help”; it is one of the very, very few papers and magazines
-that I can heartily indorse from the old Liberty Bell to the last sheet
-of its reading matter; the gags and brakes that are applied to other
-editors, or a great majority, at least, disqualify them as editors.
-
-The things that we most need to know are suppressed and the reading
-public are kept in the background on the most vital questions of the day.
-There is a mighty storm gathering in this once glorious republic; its
-muttering thunders can be distinctly heard. The glaring, forked tongues
-of wrath can be plainly seen over the tops of the distant hills that
-hedge in our eighty million people.
-
-The old ship on which we have sailed thus far is out of repair; the pilot
-asleep, or cares nothing for the safety of his passengers; the captain
-has bought most of the crew; the breakers are just ahead.
-
-I know not how my fellow-countrymen may feel over the affair, but for
-your humble Texas farmer it’s a sad picture. The light that once burned
-so bright not only lit up North America from Alalch Mountain to the
-Rockies, but crossed both oceans and gave to the world an object lesson
-of what a free people could do.
-
-The same light guided Prescott at Bunker Hill. It was the never-setting
-star at Valley Forge that led Washington to the gate of glory at
-Yorktown. Is it true that the territory bequeathed to us (“and it was
-paid in blood”) is to be betrayed into the hands of the enemy for the
-small pittance of thirty pieces of silver? Is the money-bag of America
-to rule or ruin? Or will those who think and yet have a chance to act
-demand a settlement? TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE is one that is asking for a
-settlement. May the day soon come.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _N. M. Hollingsworth, Terry, Miss._
-
-I see that you contemplate enlarging and improving the Magazine. I can
-see the place for enlarging, but not improving in the subject matter,
-except by enlarging and perhaps improving the material, etc. It is as
-good as human agency can make it. I only wish it could be read by every
-man, woman, boy and girl in the land. It is such an educator as we need,
-and it is being read by a great number.
-
-I was at our county cotton-grower’s meeting last Saturday and was
-delighted to find so many reading your splendid Magazine. I secured a
-subscriber and have promise of several more which I will forward in a day
-or two. I have seen your letter to the _Atlanta Journal_ in which there
-is enough exposure of Clark Howell’s perfidy, etc., to consign him to the
-garbage heap.
-
-If you think it worth while in the Educational Department of the next
-number of your Magazine, tell us what effect bucket shops and trade
-exchanges have on the price of such produce as are dealt in.
-
-Wishing you and your Magazine all the good that can come to a mortal and
-a great publication, I remain your devoted friend and admirer.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _S. T. Z. Champion, Sterrett, Pa._
-
-I am a constant worker and reader of this great reform movement and have
-been for the past twelve years, and have voted the ticket straight till
-they got me to straddle W. J. B. one time and I got such a fall I fear I
-will never live to get over it. I am getting old. I am one of Robert E.
-Lee’s old web-foot boys and stacked my old Enfield rifle at Appomattox
-Court House on the 9th of April, 1865. It looks like a miracle to see the
-fingers pushing a pen that pulled the trigger 40 years ago, and yet when
-I think of the blood that was shed for this great nation’s freedom and to
-see it being stolen away from us by those money knaves it makes me feel
-like I am just 16 years old. I have nine boys, all Populists. Oh, how I
-want us to live to get at least one more vote for that grand and noble
-boy, Thomas E. Watson, for our next President. Don’t you all feel me
-rejoicing over New York’s election, but I fear they will not let Hearst
-have his seat as mayor of New York. I have just read Watson’s answer to
-Hoke Smith’s letter. It is a grand reply.
-
-You can count on me when the last roll is called. I’ll be there. Yours
-for reform.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _W. H Thomas, Fairhaven, Mo._
-
-After spending 25 years in the thickest of the fray I could hardly go
-back to the “wallowing in the mire.” No, my brother, I never say die, but
-am still pegging away. Yes, I am a Populist. I am a rampant Socialist
-and I think that most of my old comrades have followed my example and I
-can see no reason why all Populists should not do the same. You know,
-my brother, that the Socialists are growing as no other party ever grew
-and they are bound to become a dominant factor in politics in the near
-future. It is evolution. Reforms do not go backward. The Populists have
-done a grand work, but Socialism is inevitable and I would rejoice to
-see all old Populists get aboard the band wagon. You are doing a noble
-work and to show you that I appreciate it I am going to send you a dollar
-for the magazine and 50 cents for that fountain pen, although I can
-illy afford it, as I am 65 years old and dependent on my labor for the
-support of my family.
-
-Don’t Teddy, the Trust-buster, make you tired? I think he is the biggest
-fraud that ever sat in the Presidential chair.
-
-Wishing you long life and abundant success, I am with you till the battle
-is won.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _James A. Logsden, Moline, Ill._
-
-I have read with great interest the editorial, “Tolstoi and the Land,”
-in the October number of TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE, and while I cannot agree
-with you in the position you take upon the land question, I accredit you
-with sincerity and honesty of purpose. In common with many others of us,
-you are giving of your time, energy and substance, to bring remedial
-justice and economic truth to human society.
-
-Being fair-minded and in earnest pursuit of economic truth and equity,
-you will, I am sure, accept honest criticisms of your opinions.
-
-In the outset you propound three questions, which are as follows:
-
- “Is it true that the real grievance of the masses is that the
- land has been taken away from them?”
-
- “Will no reform bring them relief until the land has been given
- back to them?”
-
- “Will universal happiness be the result of putting an end to
- private ownership of land?”
-
-To negate these questions you call upon history to bear witness:
-
- “As a guide to our footsteps the past must always be to some
- extent our light, our guide.”
-
-With this I am heartily in accord. It has been rightly said:
-
- “History keeps the grass green upon the graves of former
- civilizations, and stands as a beacon light to future ones. It
- is the ever-living Janus, peering both into the past and into
- the future.”
-
-But history does not prove, as you assert, that civilization exists as a
-result of private ownership of land. These are your words:
-
-In passing upon this and statements appearing in subsequent paragraphs, I
-think I shall have fully answered your three previous questions. When it
-“became a matter of _self-interest_ for some _individual_ to improve the
-land” was it because of his ownership or of his _security of possession_?
-When you admit that “as long as each individual felt that his parcel of
-land might go out of his possession at the next regular division there
-was no incentive to improvement,” you have admitted the latter. “Not
-until the individual became assured that the _benefit of his labor_ would
-accrue to himself did the waste become a farm and the hovel a house.”
-What was his assurance—private ownership or security of possession? That
-it was not private ownership is proven by the tenant system in vogue
-in every civilized country in the world. Obviously it is not private
-ownership that impelled the landless tenant to go upon land owned by
-others, clear away the forest and “make the land a farm.” Then what is
-his assurance? Security of possession—the knowledge that he will be left
-unmolested to enjoy the “product of his labor.” This tenant enjoys his
-security of possession because of the _tribute_ he has been compelled to
-pay to the owner to leave him unmolested in his possession and enjoyment.
-Could he not be as secure in his possession if the land were owned and
-the exaction made by all the people?
-
-Therefore, “if the history of the world shows anything at all, it shows
-_this_,” that civilization has developed and progress has gone forward,
-not by reason of private ownership of land, but in spite of it.
-
- “If, what is manifestly impossible,” says Mr. George, “a fair
- distribution of land were made among the whole population,
- giving each his equal share, and laws enacted which would
- impose a barrier to the tendency to concentration by forbidding
- the holding by any one of more than a fixed amount, what would
- become of the increase of population?”
-
-Your assertion that there would be no improvement under such a condition
-as you mention is self-evident. But this, instead of being an argument
-against the Henry George philosophy, is, in fact, an argument in its
-favor.
-
-What Mr. George _does_ propose I shall endeavor to make clear in
-subsequent paragraphs when I touch upon your hypothesis regarding the
-primitive tribesmen.
-
-Before passing to this, however, I desire to direct your attention to
-your observation that “the right of each citizen to hold as his own began
-with the laborer who claimed the product of his labor.” The convincing
-power of this statement is lacking, because you have failed to prove
-to us that without private ownership of land man can not “claim the
-products of his labor.” As a matter of fact, you can not furnish such
-proof because it is manifestly untrue. Before the savage, wandering in
-the primeval forest, ever dreamed of laying claim to any parcel of the
-soil as his own, did he not so lay claim to the fish and game he took?
-Did he not so lay claim to the fruits and berries he gathered? Did not
-the tribesman who followed his flocks and herds over the plains so lay
-claim to them as the product of his labor? Without ever a thought of
-the private ownership of the soil, he had produced them as truly as
-the stockman of today produces the cattle he sends to market, and he
-valiantly disputed the right of any person to any share of them. Most
-truly he who labors is entitled to labor’s product, but to say that in
-order to claim such product it is necessary to privately own land is to
-fly into the face of obvious fact. How many of the wage earners of today
-are land owners? How much is added to the wages of those few who are,
-by reason of this fact? You yourself raised the point that it is not
-necessary to own land in order to fleece the public, laborer, land-owner
-and all out of their earnings. If this be true how do you harmonize it
-with your former claim that it was private ownership of land that first
-made it possible for the laborer to claim and retain the product of his
-labor.
-
-I come now to the case of the “score of tribesmen” of whom you speak.
-While the score were fishing, hunting, drinking or gambling, the one
-cleared the wild land, fenced out the rest and claimed it as _his land_.
-But, in fact, did this make it his land? By virtue of what did it become
-his land? You doubtless had this question in mind when you attempted to
-answer it in the following:
-
- “Having put his labor into the land, having changed it from a
- waste into a farm, it was the most natural thing in the world
- that he should claim it as his own. Why shouldn’t he? _He_ made
- it a farm.”
-
-What was his ultimate purpose in putting his labor into the farm? Was it
-not the products which his labor, applied to the land, would bring forth?
-You say “he made it a farm.” He found it a farm awaiting his efforts.
-You will agree that he was entitled only to the result of his own labor.
-In fact, this is the truth for which you are contending. What were the
-results of his labor, the farm or the products? Manifestly the latter.
-These he enjoyed. Upon what possible ground, then, could he go still
-further and claim also the soil as belonging to himself and his heirs
-forever?
-
-Moreover, you will concede that before this tribesman determined to
-abandon the spear and the rod and become a farmer, this piece of ground
-could have been taken by any of the other twenty men; in other words it
-was common. It must be further conceded that in casting about to find
-a suitable location for his farm, he chose the site which offered the
-best natural advantages relative to fuel, water, fertility of soil, and
-proximity to the tribal bartering place. At this point let us carry your
-illustration still further and assume that all or part of the other
-twenty tribesmen decided to become farmers also.
-
-In the same manner as their forerunner, they look about for the best
-location, and the one offering the best advantages. But it is taken, and
-the others must take second, third or fourth place, according to who gets
-located first. But these men have equal rights. Why should some of them
-enjoy the exclusive ownership and possession of those sites which give
-them natural advantages over the others? Manifestly, they should not. But
-how can they equalize these advantages? Just to the extent that farmer
-number one holds advantage over farmer number twenty-one—just to that
-extent should number one compensate the little community as a whole for
-the privilege which he enjoys. And so with all the others. A community
-is forming, with its _natural_ demand for revenue for _common purposes_.
-Here is the _natural revenue_. Here lies the fundamental principle which
-political economists call the Law of Rent. Here reposes the very essence
-of the law of compensation. Here also is found the basis principle of
-economic justice, which, traced to its last analysis, as civilization
-advances, is capable of developing the highest expression of human
-society. Here is the answer to your question,
-
- “Will universal happiness be the result of putting an end to
- private ownership of land?”
-
-It was not “just that the twenty idle tribesmen should take away from the
-one industrious tribesman that which his labor had created.” Neither was
-it just that he should rob the other twenty when they came to exercise
-their equal right to the use of the land, as he manifestly would if he
-were left to the exclusive use of the soil, or the best portion thereof,
-without compensating those he has excluded.
-
-Let him retain possession of the farm and his products under these
-conditions, and you have, not private ownership of land, but common
-ownership.
-
-Another point that you have obviously overlooked, and one that goes to
-the heart of the social problem, is the element of land monopoly. Your
-tribesman was not satisfied with selecting the best land, and fencing
-so much thereof as he could till by his own exertion, but he fenced in
-vast areas that he could not use, and also claimed that as “his own.”
-By so doing he not only enjoyed the fruits of his own labor, but forced
-the other twenty to share their products with him as a tribute for using
-that part of “his land” which he himself could not, or did not, care to
-use. You may say that they had equal opportunities with him to get first
-choice. Even if this were granted, it makes no difference in principle.
-The fact still remains that he has the power to wring unwilling tribute
-from them. Only one could have the best, and though his contemporaries
-may have been justly punished for their lack of foresight—which I do not
-admit—there is yet another side to the question. What is the status of
-future generations in relation to this proposition? Are they guilty of
-sleeping upon their rights when all the land has been taken before they
-were born, or are they born into conditions which they have had no voice
-in making?
-
-If your lonely tribesman, for whose welfare you manifest such
-solicitation, had been content with the amount of land he could utilize
-to good advantage, had he been willing to contribute his just share to
-the common expense, and had he been sufficiently just to recognize and
-respect the equal rights of his compeers, the common would yet have
-remained after all had been supplied. What was true of the primitive
-state is true today in our highly organized society. Shifting conditions
-make no changes in universal principles.
-
-“Society” (did not) “as a matter of self-preservation admit the principle
-of private ownership of land.” It admitted it because it did not know a
-better plan—because it did not know the Laws of Rent and of Compensation.
-
-You deny that “great estates were the ruin of Italy.” “Before a few could
-buy up all the land there must have been some great cause at work, some
-advantage which the few held at the expense of the many.” “What was that
-advantage?” you ask. No better answer can be given to this query than
-to refer you back to your own illustration of the farmer tribesman. Did
-he buy the land? You say he “fenced it in and claimed it as his own.”
-In like manner did all land pass into private control, each individual
-claiming far more than he could use. After all the land of Italy had been
-“claimed” and enclosed, or that of any given community thereof, the power
-that these land _claimers_ held over subsequent comers is obvious. The
-only asset of the individual without material wealth is his labor, which
-is only one—the active—factor in production. Under circumstances such as
-the foregoing, he is debarred from the passive factor—land—and can apply
-his labor to it only by paying tribute to those who have _claimed_ it.
-
-In the circle of the human family, those endowed with keen, unerring
-foresight are comparatively few. It cannot be gainsaid that those few,
-knowing that land is fixed in quantity—which cannot be expanded as
-population increases, and as demand for it increases—saw in the early
-periods, as they see today, what a powerful advantage they could wield
-over their fellows by “fencing in” all the available land—by fencing out,
-not only the cattle, as you put it, but also their fellow-men. Is it
-not plain that this was the source of the power of which you complain?
-Was it not this that furnished the advantage you name? Can you not see
-the stream of unearned tribute wrung from the hands of honest labor
-constantly flowing into the coffers of these land owners? And seeing it,
-can you then maintain that great estates were not the ruin of Italy?
-
-What made the “ruling class of Rome, that had concentrated into their
-own hands all the tremendous powers of the State?” What gave them the
-power to “fix the taxes” and enact the “infernal laws” which you rightly
-contend ought to have been repealed? “Ah!” you say,“they _controlled
-the money_.” By what power did they come to control the money? Was it
-by a power inherent within themselves, or was it not the power which
-they derived from the corner which they held upon the _natural revenue_
-which they diverted from the public treasury into their own coffers, thus
-making it necessary to provide for the common expense by unjust taxes
-upon the products of labor?
-
-“They controlled the money.” But what is money? Is it the means or the
-end? Is it not merely a labor-saving invention to facilitate trade? Is it
-not money only by common consent? Is it not merely a commodity converted
-for convenience into a medium of exchange? You make the point that by
-controlling the money, they controlled commodities. But if they had not
-controlled the land, which is the source of all commodities—even the
-money itself—how could they have controlled the money?
-
-Can you not see that men divorced from the toil and permitted to produce
-only on the terms of some other person are forced into the labor market,
-to vie with each other in a competition that grows keener and more
-vicious as a population increases?
-
-You say that “the power to fix taxes is the power to confiscate.” The
-very opposite is true. The power to confiscate is the power to tax.
-Give that power to one class and what more does it want? Let that class
-confiscate land values, which you agree are naturally common property,
-and you give it the power to rob its victim, not merely to the “limit
-of their capacity to pay,” but to literal starvation, if they choose
-to carry the principle of private ownership of land to its logical
-conclusion. For certainly to recognize the right to private property in
-land is to recognize the owner’s right to do with _his land_ what he
-pleases. To recognize this is to recognize the land-owner’s right to deny
-to the landless either the use of _his land_, or any of its products,
-on any terms whatsoever. Thus, in carrying the principle of private
-ownership of land to its logical conclusion, and recognizing it as a just
-principle, is to sanction literal murder. Can a system that has this for
-its ultimate, be other than a vicious system, even though it may never
-be carried to that extent? It is by means of this vicious system that
-human sufferings are augmented by a thousand fold and the sum of human
-happiness is correspondingly diminished.
-
-Do not the foregoing facts prove to you that your statement that “_usury_
-is the vulture that has gorged itself upon the vitals of nations since
-the dawn of time,” is economically untrue? Is it not clear that usury is
-only an effect of a deeper-seated cause inherent in land monopoly?
-
-As proof that the universal condition of inequality is _not_ inherent
-in land monopoly, you say that the Rothschilds and other “kings of high
-finance” do not “buy up vast domains that they may be served by a lot of
-tenants.” But when touching upon this phase of the question, you should
-always bear in mind that all land is not farm land. The power of the
-coal barons to exploit does not arise so much from the fact that they
-own large tracts of land, as from the fact that it bears large deposits
-of coal. Nor does their power to exploit affect merely the miners of
-coal. Coal is a public necessity, and the ownership by these barons of a
-comparatively small area of land places them in a position to place—by
-reason of unreasonable prices—a tax upon every user of coal.
-
-What is the basis of the railroad’s power for unrestrained exploitation?
-Unquestionably it arises from its exclusive franchises, inherent in its
-rights of way.
-
-Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan and others of his class do not derive their
-unearned revenues from their power to tax. But whence this taxing
-power which affects every user of their several products?—Monopoly
-of franchises, monopoly of mineral resources, such as mines,
-quarries, etc.? What is the source of the Standard Oil monopoly?—Its
-ownership of oil land or enough thereof to force independent owners
-to sell on the company’s terms, and its consequent power to force
-railroad discriminations in its favor? Where did the beef trust and
-other industrial corporations derive their monopoly power? Railroad
-rebates—“the big pistol”—railroads with their monopoly franchises. And
-the railroad monopoly and these other breeds will be extinct in an
-instant. End land monopoly and make railroad franchises common property
-and the railroad monopoly will be at an end. Had not the Amalgamated
-Copper Co. controlled the majority of the copper-bearing lands of the
-world, “The Story of Amalgamated” would never have been told.
-
-Referring again to the railroads, was it not largely the great land
-grants donated to them by our Government that were the beginning of
-their power? These grants operated in two ways to the advantage of the
-railroads. First, they greatly increased the wealth of the railroads,
-and, second, they diminished the power of the people by diminishing the
-area of land open to settlement.
-
-“Land is plentiful and it is cheap. The country is dotted with abandoned
-farms that can be had _almost_ for the asking.” You say “almost for the
-asking.” This implies that he who takes these farms must pay something
-to him who has “abandoned” them. Why _almost_? Why not take them, as in
-the case of the primitive tribesman, without asking? You state that they
-have been abandoned because the owner could not make a decent living upon
-them. Then why make the condition of the next owner more hopeless by
-levying tribute against him for the use of a worthless farm?
-
-Make land common property, safe-guard the interests of all by assuring to
-each land-holder perpetual use, providing he pay his equitable share into
-the common treasury—which in each case would be the increment of value.
-Then “_abolish all other forms of taxation_.” This will secure every one
-in the enjoyment of his labor’s product, will abolish monopoly and the
-individual or corporate taking power, vicious tariffs, and all. This is
-all you have demanded.
-
-Your demand is a just one, but—as I trust you may be brought to see—your
-remedy is superficial and cannot be made effective. You must dig in
-deeper soil, else your laudable efforts are vain. The abrogation of
-offensive legislative enactments and the enactment of other statutes
-dealing with effects will avail nothing. Nothing save the rooting out of
-the mother of evils can possibly accomplish the end for which you are so
-courageously and manfully striving.
-
-Your work is a noble one, and its power for good is measured only by the
-number of people whom you can reach. I admonish you to give the land
-question thorough and painstaking investigation. I trust you will bear
-with me for what may seem excessive frankness. But you are not looking
-for bouquets, but simple, unembossed truth. When I say to you that in my
-opinion you have not familiarized yourself with the philosophy you are
-attempting to refute, you will accept this criticism in the broad view of
-public interest.
-
-I have gone into greater detail in my comments upon your editorial than
-I expected to go in the outset, but it has seemed advisable, in order to
-get a clear view of all the points raised by you. However, I trust I have
-not gone beyond the limit of the space that may be available.
-
- * * * * *
-
- A VETERAN REFORMER HITS THE TARIFF HARD
-
- E. S. Gilbert is close to ninety years old but uncommonly
- well preserved, having been interested in every Presidential
- campaign since he was a boy of sixteen, and has acquired a
- vast fund of political knowledge, of which he still has a firm
- grasp. He has seen and remembers nearly every President from
- Andy Jackson down—nineteen of them—and talks interestingly.
- He says as he sees things now the political situation is
- just as it was in the early fifties. Then two minor parties
- were dying, and the leading party—the Democratic—was
- undergoing disintegration. Today, as he sees it, Democracy and
- Populism are dying, and the Republican party is undergoing
- disintegration. The Republican Party sprang up in the fifties,
- and he looks for a new, strong party to come out of the present
- chaos in a few years. Following is a thoughtful article, from
- Mr. Gilbert’s pen, which recently appeared in the _Lincoln
- Independent_:
-
-Editor Independent: Here are a few figures for men who think.
-
-In the year 1901 there was manufactured in the United States thirteen
-billions of dollars’ worth of goods. Authority, Secretary Shaw.
-
-The average rate of duties upon imported merchandise is 52 per cent.
-Authority, Walter Wellman.
-
-Now, fifty-two per cent of thirteen billions of dollars is
-$6,770,000,000, which the present tariff of duties authorizes the
-manufacturers to collect of the American people each year, if they can.
-It actually enables them to collect a large portion of it—but not all.
-The probabilities are they collect about two-thirds. They collect nothing
-for goods exported.
-
-There is honest competition on some classes of goods, such as flour and
-the cheaper cotton fabrics, and perhaps some others, that prevents them
-from collecting it of the people. So, in order to be fair, we will cut
-this sum in halves.
-
-We then have the sum of $3,385,000,000, which is considerably less
-than is probably collected. In order not only to be fair, but to be
-absolutely safe, we will cut off the $385,000,000, and we have the sum
-of three billions of dollars—three thousand millions—collected by the
-manufacturers and paid by the people as the result of the Dingley tariff
-bill.
-
-Bear in mind, that this is over and above what is collected in duties
-for the support of government. Bear in mind, this money is paid to the
-manufacturers, the capitalist and not to the laborers. Bear in mind that
-if this three billions of dollars were divided among the employees of the
-manufacturers, it would give to them something less than six millions of
-laborers a little over $500 apiece. Bear in mind, that this would pay the
-entire labor bill of all the manufacturers of the United States.
-
-Then ask yourselves: Is this state of things the result of the
-intelligence or genius of the people? Or is it the result of
-misinformation or stultification?
-
- E. S. GILBER.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _W. F. Short, Eurekaton, Tenn._
-
-I am well pleased with the Magazine and think it is superior to any
-other magazine that I ever read. It is just what I expected our brave
-and noble Tom to get up. Yes, the Magazine is all right. The language
-is beautiful, forcible and courteous. I was a subscriber from the first
-issue and have sent in my renewal for this year. I have more confidence
-in Tom Watson than in any man who has tried to right the wrongs of the
-people. I believe him to be so conscientious that he would not sacrifice
-principles for any office in the gift of the people, and I do wish we had
-one thousand men like our true and honest Tom to battle for justice and
-rights of the people. I stand for the principles advocated by Jefferson,
-Jackson and Lincoln.
-
-I can make but one suggestion for the Magazine, and that is to place it
-in a better wrapper, so it will not be lost in the mail.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _R. Brown, Buck Knob, Ark._
-
-I am no writer and no scholar, but I write a few lines to you in order to
-congratulate you on your Magazine. I think it the best magazine on earth
-and the _Missouri World_ the best paper and the most patient publishers
-on earth. I could not have the patience to publish a paper and send it
-out among so many prejudiced block-headed farmers and laborers and get
-so little return for my labor. I live in the mountains of Arkansas and I
-have been lashing with my tongue and knocking at these old Mossbacks with
-T. E. WATSON MAGAZINES and the _Missouri World_ for one or two years.
-Some of them won’t read a reform paper when it is given to them, but I
-give T. E. WATSON’S MAGAZINE and the _Missouri World_ to them all the
-same. On some of them the moss I see is loosening. I am going to try to
-organize a club in our township shortly. I am for government ownership of
-all the railroads, coal mines, oil fields and all manufactures that take
-a company to run and government money, and no one man to own more than
-one hundred and sixty acres of land and not that unless he lives on and
-cultivates the same. I will fight for all this and more as long as I live
-and have a dollar that my family can get along without.
-
-I am nearly sixty-four years old and have eight sons, all of whom will
-vote the Populist ticket and all be old enough in 1908 to vote, and will
-vote the Populist ticket.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Stephen Lewis, Martin’s Ferry, O._
-
-Your article in the January issue of your Magazine in regard to the
-high-handed methods of the U. S. _Steal_ trust in obtaining property
-from defenceless people has been read with much interest, and I approve
-of your bold and fearless manner in attacking unlawful corporations and
-lawless promoters.
-
-That part in your article on the _Steal_ trust where you raise the point
-as to whether the men who demolished the widow’s home were union men or
-not was noted in particular and I venture the opinion that they were not,
-because Pittsburg, with all its much vaunted prosperity is and has been
-recognized by union workmen as the cradle from which that disreputable
-class of workmen known as _scabs_ have come. Pittsburg harbors more scabs
-than any other city in the country, regardless of size. The man who made
-the _Steal_ trust possible operated his mills at Homestead with scabs
-at the sacrifice of human life and forced a lower scale of wages upon
-the men with the state militia. Yet this man is regarded by a great many
-so-called respectable people as a philanthropist because he is erecting
-monuments to himself in the form of libraries in different parts of the
-country.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _M. G. Carlton, Zolfo, Fla._
-
-I appreciate the Magazine and feel that it is one of the best. I am a
-Populist and took great pleasure in casting my vote for you at the last
-election, knowing at the time that the chances for success were bad. Yet
-I cast the vote with as great pride and satisfaction as if I had known
-you would be elected. I know how to sympathize with a defeated candidate
-as I myself ran on the Populist ticket for Representative against the
-noted Zuba King—the wealthiest man in De Soto County and one connected
-with one or more of the best banks of the country, and got beaten, of
-course, but I was not whipped but beaten by the money crowd and I believe
-as strongly in the principles of the Populist Party as I ever did. I am
-just the same today.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _W. Scott Samuel, Pawhuska, Okla._
-
-Thinking that TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE might like to hear from a locality
-where politics “rules the court, the camp, the grove,” I relate this
-little incident. A few weeks ago, when the town sites of the Osage
-reservation were to be opened for sale and an auctioneer appointed to
-sell the lots, the news was published that a certain man, Amos Ewing,
-had received the appointment of auctioneer. Now, the reputation of this
-man, Ewing, is a stench in the nostrils of every honest man in Oklahoma.
-From petty defalcations to embezzlement of trust funds, which he was
-forced to disgorge, comes the reputation of the versatile and oleaginous
-Amos. And so, when it was known that our great “square deal” bear hunter
-had through his secretary named Amos for this promotion of trust and
-emolument, it was not long before the mails were loaded with protests
-from different localities in Oklahoma where the seductive Amos had
-exercised his peculiar grafts. Did it do any good? Alas for the square
-deal! When the sale of lots commenced at Pawhuska this creature, Ewing
-was in the position that should have been filled by some one at least not
-a self-convicted grafter, and _he’s there yet_, and all the protests,
-charges, etc., filed against him are as though they never happened. How’s
-that for the “square deal”?
-
-In conclusion, permit me to compliment TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE for its
-fearless _exposé_ of moral rottenness in high places. Hoping the good
-work will go on, I desire to share in the glory of the time when its
-principles shall prevail.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Malcolm B. Webster, Atlantic City, N. J._
-
-I have been an interested and delighted reader of your Magazine for some
-time past, and feel that I am getting from it a political, social and
-economic education such as I should not have known where to look for else.
-
-While still but very young, I have long felt that I could say upon the
-above subjects:
-
- “Myself, when young, did eagerly frequent
- Doctor and saint, and heard great argument
- About it and about—but evermore came out
- By the same door wherein I went.”
-
-Now I begin to feel that there _is_ a _back_ door used by the “powers
-behind the throne,” and that your Magazine leads one to it to observe the
-edifying spectacle of the manipulation of the puppets by the powers.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _James Porges, Chicago, Ill._
-
-Keep up the good work. You have the support of thousands in your efforts
-to awaken the lethargic American public to the fact that they are being
-robbed with the aid of our corrupt laws and the special privilege
-Government.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _T. B. Rogers, Logansport, Ind._
-
-I don’t know how to praise that book enough. I think it is the strongest
-political document we have. Surely, if we could get the voters of the
-nation to read it, we would have reform, for if any reasonable person
-reads it he can’t help but endorse those principles. I have been loaning
-those magazines I received to my neighbors, and they all acknowledge that
-the book tells the truth. I think I can get up a club in the near future,
-for those that read them promise me they will subscribe for it.
-
-As for myself, I don’t need any literature on the subject, for I have
-been in the front ranks of the movement ever since 1872. I was a Peter
-Cooper man and have marched along in that line ever since. Never voted
-for anything else. When I cannot vote the Populist ticket, I don’t vote
-at all. There were a few of us that started the movement here in Cass
-County, Indiana, and we worked hard and spent a good deal of money. We
-had some of our best speakers here to help us. We had the Hon. Jesse
-Harper of Danville, Ill., N. H. Motsinger of Sholes, Ind., Judge S. W.
-Williams of Vincennes, Ind., and a number of other good speakers, and
-the result of our work was that we cast over 900 votes for the Populist
-county ticket. We felt very much encouraged, but when the next campaign
-came—well, you know what happened to our Party.
-
-We are right and all we can do is to keep on fighting. I am in favor of
-staying in the fight until the last ditch is taken.
-
-I will close by wishing you great success.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Thomas Knox, Bennett, Neb._
-
-I appreciate reading your Magazine. I also appreciate your manly and
-courageous way of putting the truth before your readers. My only hope is
-that I would like to have the pleasure of knowing that the writings of as
-strong a reasoner and clear thinker could enter every home of the common
-herd so that reason could displace prejudice or party insanity. We all
-regret the disconnection of that able defender of the common people, Mr.
-T. H. Tibbles, from the editorial columns of the _Nebraska Independent_.
-We hope for his health and his early return to Nebraska, to continue the
-battle for us common people. In conclusion I hope for Mr. Charles Q. De
-France’s health and happiness. May his labors be a power for good and
-light to the people. I also hope Thomas E. Watson’s health and life may
-be spared for many years in the good cause.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _H. L. Fagin, Kansas City, Mo._
-
-Is it not good to feel that the present wave of civic, economic and
-industrial righteousness seems practically certain to sweep every thing
-before it? There is a quiet, studious earnestness and determination
-everywhere existent, that portends certain and tremendous results. The
-best part of it is that the masses have largely been educated to the
-point where they no longer expect to accomplish everything in a day, but
-rather realize that to get even a large share of what they insistently
-demand they must begin in the primaries and conduct a continuous campaign.
-
-You are doing a great work and you have your reward and will have it.
-Every honest and ardent spirit everywhere communes with and strengthens
-every other such. No more honest, open, fearless man than you is on earth
-today. That might be better expressed, but the meaning is there—I will
-let it pass.
-
-The universal spirit of righteousness encompasses and permeates you—you
-are surely a part of the divinest essence. Being a man, you must like to
-know that other men appreciate and approve—and to the utmost. And that
-they do in an ever expanding circle. The days of sophistry, of deception,
-of class and special privileges, of municipal, state, and national
-corruption are rapidly passing. The people are becoming wise. They know
-their friends. They know who is true, despite the tremendous efforts
-of a press, largely subsidized to mislead and deceive. But there are
-newspapers and newspapers, just as there are magazines and magazines.
-
-I need not tell you to keep on straight ahead. You couldn’t stop if you
-wanted to. Tell the truth just as you are doing, and as much of it as
-you have space for, in allopathic doses. I cannot agree with all your
-conclusions, nor will any thoughtful student; but in most I do most
-heartily concur, and I do know that all your influence is for good.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _John McFord, Sheridan, N. Y._
-
-I like your Magazine very well, but I would like it much better if you
-and your Magazine would come out flat-footed for Socialism. If public
-ownership or collective ownership of the railroads, telegraphs, etc. is
-a good thing for the people, why not have public ownership, or rather
-collective ownership, of the lands, the machinery, etc.? Political
-democracy without industrial democracy is futile and amounts to nothing.
-I had the pleasure of voting for you in ’92, and it is a matter of
-profound regret to me that you cannot see your way clear to step forward
-into the Socialist Party, where all true middle-of-the-roader Populists
-logically belong. Populism is a compromise, a half way measure. Socialism
-is the whole cheese.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _John P. Thorndyke, Canaan, N. H._
-
-You publish more _real stuff_ than any magazine I have ever read in my
-life. I am sixty years of age, and we take seven other magazines, and
-without any exaggeration it is but justice to your efforts to say that
-there is by far more real, good, well-seasoned, relishable food for the
-digestion of the average brain, than is afforded in any other magazine
-I have seen. Having practiced medicine for a number of years, I have
-sometimes volunteered my diagnosis of the disease troubling some of our
-great (?) men and I flatter myself that an observance of that particular
-case has proven the correctness of my examination at a distance. For
-instance, I think the main trouble with our great Senate is constipation
-of the brain, which invariably forbids the entertainment of honest
-thought. Now I hope that some one with sufficient “sand” in his gizzard
-will see that every member of the present Congress and Cabinet receives a
-copy of your very valuable Magazine. It will be worth more to them than a
-post-graduate course in the schools of Rockefeller and Morgan.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _John B. Bott, Grant, Pa._
-
-To a constant and appreciative reader of TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE (purchased
-monthly at the Union News Co.’s stands) it does seem strange that so
-great and good a man as “Tom” should, under the stimulus of praise and
-success or the twittering of a pert maid, really become ashamed of his
-familiar cognomen and his old clothes.
-
-For two days I have been searching, here and there, high and low, for
-_Tom_ WATSON’S MAGAZINE: always explaining that “_Tom_” has gone into
-“innocuous desuetude” and “_Watson_” has stript himself of his old
-clothes and donned _full regulation uniform_, but all to no effect.
-
-Am hoping the new clothes won’t make _Mister_ Watson too vain, and that
-at least his relations, Populist friends and host of well wishers will
-not fail to recognize him in his docked designation and fine regimentals.
-
-I wish to add that it was the “Tom” that appealed to me, above all things
-else, when the news agent showed me No. 2 of Vol. I. and asked me if I
-had seen TOM WATSON’S. I replied that I had not, but that “Tom” had the
-true flavor and I’d take a dose.
-
-There are, I am sorry to say, Watsons big and Watsons little; Watsons
-wise and Watsons foolish; Watsons mediocre galore, but only one “_Tom_”
-Watson, and he seems to be, God forbid, going to the bad.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Robert L. Cooper, Savannah, Ga._
-
-I have been, previous to the last year, what may be termed a “Tom Watson
-hater.” Like a lot of other “pig-heads,” I have heard the other side all
-the time, declining to read or look upon with reason anything you wrote
-or said. I was prevailed upon to read your “Napoleon.” I followed it up
-with “France” and “Jefferson,” together with a number of your speeches,
-letters and magazines. I have arrived at the conclusion that of the very
-few sincere men of the day, WATSON STANDS IN THE FRONT RANK.
-
-You have my unbounded admiration and very best wishes for the
-splendid fight you are making for improvement of conditions in our
-country—especially our beloved state, Georgia. I may add that there are a
-great many other young men in this community who are of the same opinion.
-
-That your books are being read is attested by the frazzled-out copies in
-our public library, and the difficulty one has in securing the use of
-them even for the short time allowed for the use of a popular book.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Aaron McDonald, Galveston, Ind._
-
-I received a copy of the old guard news letter some time back, and was
-not in shape to respond at that time, and when I got in shape to, I took
-sick and was not able; but now as I am able and in shape I will send one
-dollar to help pay expenses of organizing. It seems that through this
-part of the country Populists are dead. There are lots that are sick on
-account of the rascality of the officers of the old parties, but speak
-to them about Populists and you can seldom get a grunt out of them.
-It may be a calm before the storm. Hope it is, for I think there are
-Independents enough in this neighborhood to cut things short when they do
-get at it. The hardest pull seems to be in giving up the old name. They
-seem to think that reform must come through their party. I have asked
-several how they expect to get reform when Wall Street owns the Cabinet
-and Senate. That is like putting the devil in the pulpit to preach the
-gospel.
-
-Hoping you will meet success.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _H. B. Paxton, Wheatland, Mo._
-
-I am 66 years old, and have been in the reform movement from Cooper to
-Watson, except once for Bryan. Everything is being quiet with us—politics
-as well as everything else. We had at one time 500 Populist voters in
-this Hickory Co., about one-fourth of the voting strength of the county.
-As we haven’t any organization in the county, I haven’t much idea what
-our strength is at this time, but there are quite a number of true blues
-yet.
-
-Your Magazine is all right. Will send my renewal soon and I assure you I
-will try to get others to subscribe.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _T. T. Mattox, Hope, Ark._
-
-I am still a Populist and read WATSON’S MAGAZINE. Think there are no
-words nor figures to enumerate or define the good effect it is having
-on the one big National party made up of the new parties, Democrat and
-Republican. There are but two National parties now—the Watson and the
-Swollen-tails. Good news gone to Canada and the nations of the globe.
-
-Dear Watson, you are doing more good than if in office.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _H. E. Pomeroy, Mason, Ill._
-
-I think you are fooling away time and money. Look at William J. Bryan in
-the last National convention. See Judge Parker now. This nation is too
-wealthy to be ruled by patriots. Wall Street is the government. You can’t
-do anything with Wall Street. The masses have no principle above whiskey
-and tobacco, and the churches are in the hands of priestcraft. If you
-have a copy of Æsop’s Fables read about the fox and the flies.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _J. A. Dahlgren, Bradshaw, Nebr._
-
-I cannot let this opportunity go by without telling you what I think
-of your Magazine. It is undoubtedly the very best reform magazine now
-published. Your editorials certainly have the right tone. Your article on
-the situation in Georgia gives us Northerners new light on the subject.
-While we do not have the negro problem to contend with here in Nebraska,
-we nevertheless have the railroad question to fight over from year to
-year. We must pay tribute to Harriman and Hill, and other Wall Street
-kings, besides countless two-by-four politicians who apparently have no
-other aim in life than to serve the railroads and betray the people. I
-am glad to see that grand old man Tibbles writing for WATSON’S MAGAZINE.
-Before I close I must ask you to give us another story something like
-“Pole Baker.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- _George Chapman, East Cleveland, O._
-
-I am prompted to write you from the fact that I believe you to be the
-right man in the right place, and I honestly think that the seed that you
-are now sowing will take root and bear fruit, as they are being sown in
-fertile soil.
-
-No party, or parties, can long withstand your bombardments, no matter how
-well fortified they may be, as your guns are loaded with facts.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _W. S. Stanley, Logansville, Ga._
-
-I feel it my duty to express that in my estimation, which I take from a
-national and reasonable standpoint, Tom Watson is one of the greatest
-Americans living and his Magazine the best I ever read.
-
-I earnestly hope that some day not far distant, Tom Watson will be our
-Commander-in-Chief of our National Government.
-
-How any honest and patriotic man can oppose the principles advocated by
-Tom Watson, I cannot see.
-
-Tom Watson is a great man. Why? Because he is honest, brave, fearless and
-aggressive. Because he is standing for the rights of the great mass of
-people at large, leading them onward and upward from a Government of the
-privileged few to a Government of the unprivileged many.
-
-For the last fifty years our Government has been leading more and more
-toward anarchy.
-
-Tom Watson, may you live long to voice the principles of Jeffersonian
-Democracy!
-
- * * * * *
-
- _J. J. Hall, Hutchinson, Ark._
-
-Tom, why don’t you knock that “intrinsic value” rot into a cocked hat?
-I think that policy is one of the greatest barriers to progress of the
-masses in studying finance. The sooner they learn that value does not
-exist in substance but in the mind, the better. This is the first and
-most important fact to be learned by the student of monetary science, and
-when once understood all the relative facts are easy. Take a shot at it,
-Tom. You can make it both instructive and readable.
-
-Yours for success.
-
-_Of course I like the Magazine._
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Alfred French, Washington, D. C._
-
-I look forward to the arrival of your Magazine every month with a great
-deal of interest. Other magazines I give away, but yours I do not care to
-part with.
-
-I shall speak for it, have spoken for it, and very likely shall continue
-to stand by it so long as you condemn the discrimination made by
-officials in favor of the bankers. I have said for years that the men who
-own the railroads and the bankers rule the country.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _L. R. Green, Spottsville, Ky._
-
-I am proud of being one of the “old guard,” having marched without
-halting in the “middle of the road,” without ever lowering our colors or
-ever thinking of surrender.
-
-Am proud of our matchless leader, Tom Watson, and his Magazine, his
-two-edged sword. Friends of popular government, let’s give the Magazine a
-million subscribers and make its editor President in 1908!
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Arthur F. Mann, Brooklyn, N. Y._
-
-The Magazine is O. K. The February number is strictly 100%. It would be
-cheap at 25 cents. Thank you for the sample copy received today. I’d
-already purchased mine of my news-dealer. However, I’ll see the sample
-copy is put into good hands and hope it will “work.” Mr. Watson, you are
-doing “_us plain Americans_” a world of good. Keep it up. May your life
-be spared to us for many years to come!
-
- * * * * *
-
- _F. F. Gordy, Richland, Ga._
-
-Aside from the fact that both Howell’s and Smith’s friends claimed the
-victory at the joint debate, was the further fact that Tom Watson got the
-greatest ovation of any. The first half of Howell’s speech brought out
-your name, which caused the audience to rise en masse and the applause
-shook the building. While I am for Smith, still I am looking beyond him
-to something better.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _C. Will Shaffer, Olympia, Wash._
-
-The Magazine is all right and is on the right track.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _M. W. Henry, Waelder, Tex._
-
-I am a reader of your most excellent and truly demo-republican Magazine.
-Our adversaries assumed the garb of angels to serve the devil in. There
-is not a single fundamental principle contended for by our patriotic
-democratic-republican forefathers contained in either the democratic or
-republican party platforms, but both parties are thoroughly Hamiltonized
-and irretrievably committed to the aristocratic British Banking and
-Bonding System which financiers know to be absolutely incompatible with
-the perpetuity of democratic institutions. All of the enemies of our
-free institutions are in one or the other of these parties and their
-bosses are engaged in making dupes of the common voters. The interests
-of the capitalists are the same whether North or South, and as they have
-complete control of both the old parties the people have no reasonable
-hope of relief from oppression from either. Direct legislation is
-essentially democratic and is what the enemies of our free institutions
-most fear. Its triumph will be the triumph of human liberty over
-plutocratic despotism. It will restore the Government into the hands of
-our people, from whom it has been wrested by the boodlers and grafters,
-prompted by conscienceless greed and avarice. A victory along this
-line will be a greater victory for humanity than that of Yorktown or
-Appomattox.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Thomas S. East, Anderson, Ind._
-
-One of the very best magazines that I have ever read. I want to say to
-you that the good seed you are sowing will live long after you and I
-and others of the “Old Guard” have passed to the other side. And just
-as soon as my business matters will permit, I want to send you a large
-subscription list and in this way help on the good work. For I truly
-believe all who have the cause at heart will at this time lend their
-influence to the work, so that Plutocracy and all the attending evils
-that flow out from the corrupting influences that spread and grow like
-vile and obnoxious weeds in a corn field, may be rooted out.
-
-Ever yours for the cause of humanity, I am in the fight to the finish.
-
-I have every number of the Magazine up to date.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Fred Diehl, New York._
-
-I am very sorry to hear that you are not well and permit me to send you
-all the good health wishes I can give. We need you in our struggle for
-progress. You should be preserved for our work in the coming crisis that
-I believe will soon take place in the world, especially in this country.
-
-This article on the Chinese question I send you contains my innermost
-convictions on that problem and I believe should be listened to before
-we create another problem almost impossible to solve. I do not want to
-impose upon your good nature, but if you find it possible to publish in
-your Magazine, would you kindly do so?
-
-If not, then kindly send it back to me.
-
-My mind is for what is right. I would like to work for the betterment and
-right adjustment of all conditions in need of improvement.
-
-There are, to my mind, many reasons why Chinamen should be restricted
-from coming to the United States. The Chinese are not eligible to
-citizenship. It is not good policy to encourage immigrants to come
-here in great numbers that cannot become citizens. Every man (and let
-us hope every woman, in the near future) should bear his portion of
-responsibility to the government. Chinamen do not seem to grasp the
-idea of freedom as do the people of Anglo-Saxon and Latin origin, nor
-do they appreciate our rights and privileges for which we struggled
-for centuries. Chinamen would, perhaps could, not use these rights
-intelligently nor enthusiastically.
-
-They bring to us peculiar oriental vices from which we are yet free, but
-they would contaminate us and undermine our lives.
-
-Economically and socially they are impossible; economically, because
-they would undersell the American workman and destroy our standard of
-living; socially, because they lack the necessary elements to make a
-congenial race. It is not true, to my mind, that a race is superior
-because it can undersell another any more than a herd of rats is superior
-over man or tiger and lions over man because they can overcome man by
-numbers and ferocity. The Chinese themselves protected and preserved
-their civilization from invaders by building that huge wall around it
-thousands of years ago. It was Chin, it is said, the great reformer,
-as he was called, that did it and the great land today bears his name.
-The Huns invaded Germany and robbed the unprotected peasants. The fact
-that the Germans could protect themselves from endless invasions through
-fortifications and armed resistance showed the superiority of the Germans
-over the Huns.
-
-I believe I am a friend of humanity and that is the reason I believe in
-the restriction of the Chinamen (our brothers) from coming here. One of
-the reasons (and I think it is the greatest of all) should be sufficient,
-that is that they are in great danger of being massacred through the
-economic struggles and competition and the inevitable crash is sure to
-come. We had already symptoms of such massacres in the West. The killing
-of the Jews in Russia will look mild in comparison. Chinamen coming here
-in great numbers would result in greater disasters than we can imagine.
-We would create another race problem. Have we not enough with our negro
-problem? There is an excuse for people coming here whose homelands are
-overpopulated and who can easily and naturally assimilate. China has vast
-unoccupied lands with unopened resources and its population, great as it
-is, is not actually compelled to seek foreign territory. The Chinamen
-should pioneer their own great land. Let them stay at home and open their
-unworked national wealth. We cannot blame the ignorant peasants for
-coming here. They do not know the possibilities of their own country and
-if they did it would do them no good. It is the so-called intelligent,
-progressive Chinese that are to blame. The people of China are hampered
-and restricted by their own ancient customs fatal to themselves. Chinamen
-are coming to the United States to reap the benefit of civilization of
-another race with which they have little in common. It does not seem that
-the Chinese come here to become actual settlers, and such immigrants are
-not beneficial to the land in its present state of development.
-
-May the time be not far distant when all can go where they wish without
-any barrier or restriction. When that time comes we must free first
-ourselves and within our own countries. We must not endanger another land
-with our own shortcomings.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Joel B. Fort, Adams, Tenn._
-
-In your valuable Magazine you hit the “Rascals,” who have combined in
-violation of law and good morals to rob the producer and consumer, to
-suit me exactly.
-
-If it should come in the way of your comments, the good people of the
-Dark Tobacco District of Tennessee and Kentucky would rejoice with
-“exceeding great joy” if you in your inimitable style would hit the
-infernal Tobacco trust a _jolter_. This, the most heartless of all, took
-possession of this District, composed of about twenty-two counties, and
-laid it off in territories and appointed an agent to buy the tobacco (the
-only money crop) at his own price. No one was allowed in his territory,
-and consequently there was no opposition or competition. They took the
-tobacco at two dollars less than the cost of production. The condition
-became pitiable and laborers who were unable to support their families
-left the country and went to the cities, railroads and mines. The people
-became angered, and on the 24th of September, 1904, organized “The Dark
-Tobacco Protective Association.” This association controlled 75% of the
-tobacco, and in six months raised the price to double the former price.
-Now tobacco is selling for more than twice its price under the Trust
-rule. We appealed to the law, but had we waited for the law to protect
-us we would have starved. We went after the thieves red-hot and for more
-than a year hell would have been a good cooling place for them. Any help
-you can render us in your excellent Magazine, which is largely read in
-this section, would be greatly appreciated.
-
-Before I close let me pay you the tribute you richly deserve by saying
-that any heart breathing the gentle and ennobling sentiment found in
-your pieces “In the Mountains” and “A Day in the Autumn Woods” lives
-close to his God and fellow-man, and a man who could write the “Widow
-Lot” can never die, and is a national benefit. Great men have always had
-the misfortune to die before their works were appreciated and admired:
-I sincerely hope you may be spared to fight the battle of the people
-against Snobbery, Shams, Hypocrites, Grafters, and the Robber Barons of
-the Trusts.
-
-I send you a copy of a speech against the Tobacco Trust; if you have time
-to read it you will see why it is that I so eagerly await the issuance of
-every number of your Magazine.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _James Griffith Stephens, Valdes, Alaska._
-
-I am reading every number of your Magazine with great interest. I notice
-that you never touch on subjects pertaining to Alaska; have you forgot
-that we are on earth? Listen to this tale of woe.
-
-Alaska cost the United States seven million five hundred thousand
-dollars in the year 1867. Since then Alaska has paid into the treasury
-the sum of one hundred and fifty million. Note the interest on the
-purchase. Still we have no means of representation. There are today in
-the District of Alaska 60,000 population who stand in the same place that
-our forefathers stood when the tea-party took place. It is a shame that
-in this land of the free we are denied ANY means of representation. There
-is a mistaken idea that Alaska has a territorial form of government. It
-has no voice from the people whatever. We are peoned. And why? BECAUSE
-ALASKA AFFORDS ONE OF THE CHOICEST TREES IN THE ORCHARD OF GRAFT. And
-its political plums are distributed among the carpetbag grafters who
-enforce their presence upon the pioneers who are fostering and fathering
-the country. There is not an elective office in the District. Our mining
-laws are obnoxious and afford the greatest chance for official graft. Did
-you ever stop to consider what a great country Alaska is, and how it is
-controlled? If I may, without taking too much of your valuable time, I
-will call your attention to the following facts.
-
-Alaska is one-third as large as the United States.
-
-It is not an iceberg, but affords future homes for millions.
-
-Alaska is in the same latitude as England, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and
-Russia.
-
-Alaska has the greatest fisheries on earth. These fisheries are
-controlled by the beef trust. GRAFT!
-
-Alaska has great beds of finest anthracite coal, now being gobbled up by
-the Pennsylvania coal barons. GRAFT!
-
-Alaska is covered by fine forests now being taken up by means of
-soldiers’ fractional script. GRAFT!
-
-Alaska has the largest stamp mill on earth. The mine has produced over
-$22,000,000 in gold, more than three times the cost of the District. This
-mine is not timbered and there is an average of one man killed a day by
-caving. GRAFT!
-
-Alaska has the only fur-seal islands in the world. These islands are
-leased to a big corporation. GRAFT!
-
-Alaska has a navigable river twenty-eight hundred miles in length, a
-reservation at the mouth controls the harbor and permits are issued for
-warehouses to two big corporations only, so Alaskans again have to stand
-for GRAFT!
-
-I could go on giving cases of graft for a month, but time is limited. An
-article by a well informed writer in Appleton’s _Booklovers’ Magazine_,
-entitled “The Looting of Alaska,” is well worth reading.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _S. C. Le Baron, Smiley, Tex._
-
-Three numbers of your Magazine received, for which I am truly thankful
-inasmuch as it stands for the principles which have been my political
-platform ever since the Greenback party was organised. It is only
-financial inability that kept me from becoming a subscriber at the start,
-for I felt very certain it would be a powerful educator, and the copies
-at hand prove my hopes fully realized. If it could be gotten into the
-hands of those who feel the need of a change in conditions but still
-can’t be made to understand the cause of these conditions, it would
-indeed be a powerful factor in the reform movement. The copies received
-are out doing missionary work; there is enough strong and conclusive
-argument in any one of them to set an unprejudiced mind to thinking
-seriously whether these things are so. I have been in this movement over
-thirty years, and having passed my eighty-first birthday, feel that I
-am not destined to work much longer, but when I see the circumstances
-which inevitably tend to an enthrallment of the masses, I feel like doing
-my best to avert the coming disaster. My hope lies in the integrity of
-an intelligent citizenship and it is through outspoken literature that
-intelligence can be acquired.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _E. J. Whelan, Tipton, Mich._
-
-I like the way you write and the way you put it, but I am discouraged.
-It doesn’t seem as though the rank and file will ever see the point.
-The most of them will agree with me about the condition of the country,
-but when they come to vote, they vote the same old ticket. That is the
-way they do. Some one gets hold of them before election and they vote
-it straight. Only a short time ago a friend of mine said to me that he
-thought we as a Government were getting right where Russia is, and it
-would take the same internal revolution to get rid of the monopolies
-and trusts that are holding us down. Now I will venture anything that
-that same man will vote with the old G. O. P. and vote a straight ticket
-too. Now it makes me sick, but I think if they can stand it, I can, and
-have made up my mind to let the whole thing go to the devil. It looks as
-though the men with Hon. before their names were thieves. It is called
-“graft” now.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _F. A. Jeter, Alto, Tex._
-
-I am on your side, never have been on any other way and I know that if
-the laboring people do not get some relief, and that soon, we are gone.
-Your Magazine has done good here. Has changed hot-headed Democrats to
-Populists.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _A. C. Shuford, Newton, N. C._
-
-In a letter some time back you stated that you believed the “Money
-Question” to be infinitely more important than any other before the
-American people. You are undoubtedly correct in the view you take of the
-matter. People take the same superstitious view of money that they do
-of religion, and how to reach the reason of the average man through all
-this thick covering of superstition is quite a problem. I have thought
-over this problem for years and am not much nearer the solutions of it
-now than when I first began. I have practiced caution in my contact with
-men, and to look back for twenty years I can see quite a change has taken
-place in my own neighborhood as well as elsewhere. I have been a great
-admirer of Jefferson and have read everything he has written which I
-could get my hands upon. His boldness in attacking the church is a marvel
-to me. Here is the power which enslaves the minds of the people and keeps
-them from using their thinking machines. The result of such methods is
-that the average man is afraid to think for himself. No step of progress
-can be made until this vast machine is shattered, and yet care must be
-used in doing so, because man must have some foundation upon which to
-stand. Do not misunderstand me, please. I am a believer in Christian
-principles as I understand them.
-
-The money power and other monopolies are allowed to maintain their grip
-through the church largely. How best to expose and open this organisation
-to attack is a problem I wish you or some other man would solve. The
-average politician knows well how to play upon this feeling which the
-Church creates and as long as the organisation is allowed to continue its
-process of enslaving the minds of our children, just so long will the
-crop of “Grafters” be an abundant one.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Sallie T. Parrish, Adel, Ga._
-
-I believe your Magazine is more eagerly awaited than any other
-publication extant, and I think the people read what you write first. I
-am sure I do. You are the only writer who has ever made politics more
-fascinating to me than romance.
-
-I used to read your paper when I was a child almost as ardently as I read
-the Magazine now. Some of the editorials appealed to me so strongly that
-I preserved them in my scrap book, not because I understood them then,
-but because I felt intuitively that there was something sublime in them.
-
-Not long since I showed one of those selections—The Highest Office—to
-a young man—a Democrat and a teacher in the same school that I was. He
-finished reading it just as the bell rang for the morning session. The
-moment the opening exercises were over he sprang upon the rostrum, shook
-his black hair out of his face and exclaimed: “Children, I have found a
-gem! Let me read it to you.”
-
-Your Magazine is being read by many honest Democrats who a few years ago
-thought the Democratic party was all it claimed to be and that you were
-wrong. Now they frankly endorse your principles and praise your courage,
-honesty and brilliant intellect.
-
-I must thank you for a clearer knowledge of political questions, public
-affairs and economic conditions than I ever would have had had it not
-been for you.
-
-Your “Bethany” I consider one of the treasures of my modest collection
-of books. Not long ago one of those reasonable, broad-minded, intelligent
-Democrats was telling me how much he liked your Magazine. He said he
-read everything in it—“Pole Baker” and all the rest—that he didn’t think
-you had ever written an uninteresting sentence in your life and that he
-thought you the purest, most upright man in public life today.
-
-I asked him if he had read “Bethany.” He had not, but when I told him
-about it he was anxious to do so. I sent him mine. He is a man near sixty
-and he read it with all the intensity and abandon that a sentimental girl
-of sixteen would devour one of Laura Jean Libbey’s novels. He and I were
-alternate day watchers at the bedside of a convalescent patient—one very
-dear to us both—but I had it all to myself that day until late in the
-afternoon, when the blessed trained nurse decided to forego a part of her
-nap and relieve me awhile.
-
-I think you have done and are doing the world more good than any other
-man in it, and I hope that you may be granted many years of life and
-strength to champion the cause of humanity and labor for justice, truth
-and equity, and I know that some time your noble life will be rewarded.
-
-I am very glad you have added the department of “Books” to your Magazine.
-I don’t think it could be improved now, unless you were to add an amateur
-or young writer’s department.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Mrs. B. C. Rude, Lyons, N. Y._
-
-I am getting TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE from the news-stand and like it very
-much. It is refreshing to see one man who _dares_ say what he believes.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Halley Halleck._
-
-I have read every issue of your Magazine up to and including December
-publication. It is certainly the greatest publication of the kind in
-existence. As an educator it has no equal. It expresses more opinions and
-views and in the most fearless manner of any paper in the world. Long may
-it live and reach all parts of the globe!
-
-The question which you are so ably advocating is taking root and
-spreading and arousing public opinion so as to bring the monarchical
-money-kings to justice. May God speed the time when they will be handled
-as other criminals, to wear the stripes, balls and chains!
-
-That local state government is no exception I got from that
-ex-representative of the Legislature, the King Lobbyist, Hamp McWhorter.
-He has an office in the Equitable building, and any senator he thinks he
-can use he simply ’phones one of his henchmen at the Capitol, telling him
-to send such and such a senator to his office, where he gets in his dirty
-work.
-
-In another instance, when a member a few years ago introduced a
-resolution to have the Governor appoint a committee to investigate the
-merging of railroads, the vice-president of the Southern Railroad was
-soon in a seat beside him, making inquiries as to what would satisfy him.
-Well, the member was appointed local attorney at a salary of five hundred
-per annum for a number of years. The motion was quickly withdrawn and if
-this individual ever represented the road in a case I never heard of it.
-However, he drew the salary and rode on a free pass.
-
-This lobbyist is for suing. He commences with his free pass on probable
-candidates. As I remember, at a station a man who was a country merchant,
-farmer and mill owner presented a pass to the agent and asked if it was
-valid. The agent informed him it was genuine. Sure enough, he was a
-candidate and elected as senator the next race.
-
-Don’t you think the Texas law should be applied, which is that the guilty
-party is taken out and given a good thrashing the first time and for the
-second offence double the dose?
-
- * * * * *
-
- _W. D. Wattles, Winchester, Ind._
-
-Permit me to express my appreciation of the February number of WATSON’S.
-It is the best Magazine I have seen, and I have seen most of the good
-ones. I like your practice of publishing short, pointed articles,
-and your cartoons are of the best. Your educational and news summary
-departments seem to me to be especially valuable. I shall take it into my
-pulpit Sunday evening, and read from your editorial.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _D. C. Pryor, Uvalde, Tex._
-
-When I was a boy I saw a carpenter place side by side three pieces of
-lumber which he was pleased to call “dimension timber.” These pieces were
-something like forty feet long and were two inches wide and eight inches
-deep. He took iron spikes and nailed the three pieces together until
-they looked to be all in one piece. He told me it was “a girder” for the
-“warehouse” he was constructing. I wanted to know why he did not use a
-solid piece of timber of the same measure. He answered by saying that the
-three pieces united together with the stronger part of the one fitting
-opposite the weaker part of the others would give the girder a greater
-strength in the power of resisting the immense weight that would have to
-be borne than if the girder had been made of just one piece of lumber.
-
-In connection with the foregoing incident I wish to draw a pen picture
-of a scene which is passing before my vision: At Washington, within
-the shadow of the Capitol, standing side by side facing the west upon
-the steps of that magnificent structure, are three of the greatest
-men of renown the world has ever known. In the centre of the group
-stands the “Immortal Lincoln,” to the right of Mr. Lincoln stands the
-“Irreproachable Jefferson,” and to the left stands the “Irrepressible
-Watson”—whose mind is the very incarnation of Jeffersonian principles.
-Above this scene on either side, hanging toward the centre at half mast,
-are our national colors, beneath which is a life size portrait of “The
-Father of Our Country.” Above the portrait in raised letters I read
-“Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.”
-
-Now I wish to impress upon those who may care to read this article and
-who are tired of living under the present system of “graft and greed,”
-and to those of us who have always believed in party lines and are more
-or less prejudiced in favor of our political tendencies, that there can
-be no reformation ever made in either of the old parties that exist at
-the present time. I therefore believe we should endeavor to secure the
-very best “dimension timber” that can be had out of the now scattered
-ranks of the Republican, Democratic and Populist parties, and with the
-nails of iron and bands of steel bring them together and make of them
-a girder for our country that the gods of ancient Greece could not
-knock asunder! And why not at an early date advertise this new party
-and organize party clubs throughout the land and let the watchword be
-“Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty”?
-
-I would suggest that we name this “new party” Demo-Re-Polican or so word
-the name that each member from an old party may not feel that he had lost
-all of his former identity. I have not the least hope of electing as the
-chief magistrate of the nation a Southern man for years to come, and it
-is useless to put one at the head of the ticket to be slaughtered just to
-make a Roman holiday. But Mr. Watson can be our leader, and when we win
-“There will be glory enough for us all.”
-
- “CONCKALOCHIE.”
-
-(This is an Indian word for encampment, or a bringing together of the
-tribes for the exchange of commodities.)
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Edwin Hyde Nutt, Dresden, N. Y._
-
-I think you are on the right track exactly, and will do all I can to get
-you some new subscribers. I live in a land of Gold-bugs, and if there is
-a place on earth that needs a missionary it is Yates County, N. Y. We
-have lost our interest in Mr. Bryan. How could he stultify himself to
-vote for Parker, we can’t see. Think he will have a hard time to make
-Democrats out of old Greenbackers. He knows the greenbacks are the best
-money in the world. Why does he try to break up the Populist Party?
-
- * * * * *
-
- _R. N. Crowell, Rob Roy, Ind._
-
-I am on the down-hill of life; nearly sixty-four years old. Have been a
-student of history for twenty-five years and would love to do something
-to free us from the slavery and tyranny of boss rule. When I go hence I
-will leave a posterity behind me and would love to know that I have done
-a little something to make our country a free and independent and a
-Christian people in deed and in truth. Have traveled in fourteen states,
-been through the Indian Territory and have had some opportunity of
-learning something of the situation that we now are in both religiously
-and politically.
-
-I glory in the principles of Washington, Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln and
-the People’s Party. I admire Thomas E. Watson because he stands square
-to the front for right and justice for the common people against money,
-greed and selfishness for place and power. Brother American, wake up and
-help shake off the shackles that our money lords are binding us with
-before it is too late!
-
-Yours for liberty, peace and righteousness, for God and a common
-brotherhood of man. Let us unite and tear down the walls of sin and
-selfishness and bring in the millennial age of peace and righteousness
-that we may be called the children of God in deed and in truth.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _T. M. Barton, Butler, Ky._
-
-You evidently have mistaken me for my deceased brother, William, who was
-an ardent Populist, while I am a good Republican “from away back.” I am
-not with you in public ownership, free silver, etc., but with you heart
-and soul in downing the great trusts, monopolies, etc. Now it seems to
-me this can be done in no better way than by standing right at President
-Roosevelt’s back. We can hardly hope to find an abler, more courageous
-and more earnest champion of the people than he. Personally, Mr. Watson,
-as I have measured you, mentally and morally, by your speeches and
-writings, I like you, just as I do many a good Democrat and Populist,
-without agreeing with them politically. The fact is that the late
-elections have given us a great lesson in free thought and free action—in
-placing principle and patriotism above party allegiance. As we witness
-the aggressive greed, the intolerable impudence, the great power of the
-great corporations, we may well remember “Eternal vigilance is the price
-of liberty.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Peter E. Cooper, Dover. N. J._
-
-Like very much your arrangement of having only four numbers to a volume,
-as four will make a convenient size to handle when bound. Hope you will
-continue that feature.
-
-In making changes, spoken of in January issue, I hope you will not change
-the size (you can add as many pages as you like) as present size is very
-convenient and, when bound, will look much nicer if of uniform size.
-
-I am going to have mine bound in full law sheep, as I consider them a
-valuable addition to any library.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _William Hamilton, Cleveland, O._
-
-I am interested in the success both of your Magazine and its ideas and
-would be pleased to know how you are coming on and what the prospects
-are.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _Educational Department_]
-
-
-A STORY CONCERNING GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON
-
-A correspondent, in the course of a private letter, reports a very
-interesting tradition which illustrates the character and bearing of The
-Father of his Country.
-
-I give it in the language of the writer:
-
- “To return to General Washington. Your picture of him makes me
- want to repeat to you a piece of tradition that was handed down
- to me by my father.
-
- “My father’s uncle, Governor George R. Gilmer, of Georgia, told
- my father that _his_ father, Thomas M. Gilmer, of Virginia,
- _told him_ that General Washington was the most extreme type
- of the aristocrat that this country had ever produced. That he
- had seen him drive up in his coach and four to a country court
- house at election time to vote that he would alight, and with
- head erect and neither looking to the right nor the left, as
- the crowd uncovered, parted and almost prostrated themselves
- to the ground, would march up, deposit his ballot, and without
- the slightest acknowledgment to the crowd or to any individual,
- without even so much as a nod or turn of the head, he would
- march in state through the path made by obsequiousness and
- reverence and love back to his coach, where he would sit the
- picture of rigidity and indifference as he rode away.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- GEORGETOWN, PA., Jan. 17, 1906.
-
- _Hon. Thomas E. Watson, Thomson, Ga._
-
- DEAR SIR: Can you direct me where I can get Alexander Stevens’
- “War Between the States”? I would like to purchase this book.
-
- Yours truly,
-
- ⸺ ⸺.
-
-ANSWER
-
-The book is out of print, but is easily obtained through the old book
-dealers.
-
-The price ranges from $5 to $10.
-
-Try Joseph McDonough, Albany, New York, or The Americus Book Company,
-Americus, Ga.
-
- * * * * *
-
- SAN SABA, TEX., Feb. 5, 1906.
-
- _Hon. Thomas E. Watson, Thomson, Ga._
-
- DEAR SIR: I see in the newspapers that Mr. So and So’s seat in
- the New York exchange is worth nearly $100,000. What is meant
- by that? Why is it worth so much and what do they do? Thanking
- you in advance for the information, I am.
-
- Very truly yours,
-
- ⸺ ⸺.
-
-ANSWER
-
-The New York Stock Exchange is simply an exclusive gambling hell where
-very rich gamblers bet on the rise and fall of the stock of the big
-corporations.
-
-The “nearly $100,000” is the entrance fee.
-
-The reason why the price is so great is because the operations and the
-opportunities are so vast.
-
-Compared to the colossal stakes and winnings of the Stock Exchange, the
-gambling which goes on at Monaco, or at Tom Taggart’s place at French
-Lick Springs is puerile. Since the world was created, no such gigantic
-gaming has been known as the mad speculations in the New York Stock
-Exchange.
-
-Of course, the losses are as large as the gains, but those on the inside
-of the Exchange have an enormous advantage over those on the outside.
-Those on the inside are generally the masterful fellows who shear the
-lambs outside.
-
-The organized, experienced and expert players within the Exchange have
-the same point of advantage over the gullible, unorganized public that
-the cool dealers at the gaming tables have over the men and women who
-buck against the bank.
-
-For the privilege of _getting on the inside of the game_, Mr. So and So
-pays nearly $100,000.
-
- * * * * *
-
- NEW YORK, Jan. 7, 1906.
-
- _Hon. Thomas E. Watson, Thomson, Ga._
-
- DEAR SIR: Will you kindly answer the following questions in
- your _Educational Department_?
-
- (1) What is the difference between Single Tax and Populism?
-
- (2) Is it true that Grover Cleveland is to receive $12,000 per
- year from the “Big Three,” and, if so, why?
-
- (3) Why was not the Prudential Company investigated? Their
- premiums are about the same as the others. In talking with
- their agents I find them the same as agents of the “Big Three.”
-
- (4) Is Paul Morton treating the policy holders justly when he
- _takes_ $80,000 per year as his salary?
-
- Your Magazine is a God-send to the people at large and I trust
- it will be read by men and women throughout the country.
- Thanking you in advance, I am.
-
- Very truly,
-
- ⸺ ⸺.
-
-ANSWER
-
-(1) Single Tax puts all the burden of supporting the Government on one
-form of wealth, viz.: the value of land.
-
-Populism equalizes taxation, and would compel each owner of property to
-pay in proportion to his wealth.
-
-The Single Taxer would put all the load on land, leaving money, stocks,
-bonds and personal property of every sort untaxed.
-
-Populists cannot see any justice in taking the value out of the land of
-the farmer, while twelve billion dollars of railroad stocks and bonds go
-untaxed.
-
-Carnegie holds about three hundred million dollars in the bonds of the
-Steel Trust. Those bonds are as good as gold. They pay Mr. Carnegie a
-regal income. Why should my land have the value taxed out of it and
-Carnegie’s bonds go free? There is no justice in this scheme. It does not
-measure up to the Populist dogma of “Equal rights to all.”
-
-(2) Yes. To cloak insurance rascality with his respected name. The
-robbers who run those insurance companies simply bought the use of Mr.
-Cleveland’s name. He consents to play the humble but useful part of decoy
-duck for $1,000 per month.
-
-Gen. Robert E. Lee, just after the Civil War, was offered $50,000 per
-year by one of these very companies. He refused to sell the use of his
-name. He was a poor man, and went to teaching school for a living.
-In this quiet, modest, but noble way “the greatest soldier that the
-Anglo-Saxon race ever produced” (see Theodore Roosevelt’s “Life of
-Thomas H. Benton”) was supporting his family at the time of his death.
-Mr. Cleveland is not a poor man. His income is $5,000 per year, over and
-above what silly magazines pay him for occasional articles which are
-valueless. Therefore Mr. Cleveland need not have sold his name to the
-life insurance rascals. But the $12,000 tempted him, and he sold out.
-
-(3) Dryden’s Prudential was investigated and very rotten it was shown to
-be.
-
-(4) No. He is simply stealing the money. Calling it “salary” does not
-keep it from being loot.
-
- * * * * *
-
- CHICAGO, Feb. 7, 1906.
-
- _Hon. Thomas E. Watson, Thomson, Ga._
-
- DEAR SIR: Will you please give me the information as set forth
- in the following questions?
-
- (1) How many years must an alien live in this country before he
- can take out his final papers?
-
- (2) Can an alien, on declaring his intentions to become an
- American citizen, exercise the voting franchise before getting
- final papers?
-
- (3) I have been nine years in this country and never bothered
- about taking out my papers as a citizen. If I were to declare
- my intentions of becoming a citizen now, how long would it be
- before I could exercise the vote franchise?
-
- Thanking you in anticipation of an early answer, I remain,
-
- Yours respectfully,
-
- ⸺ ⸺.
-
-ANSWER
-
-(1) The conditions under and the manner in which an alien may be admitted
-to become a citizen of the United States are prescribed by sections 2
-and 165 to 174 of the revised Statutes of the United States. The alien
-may, immediately upon landing in this country, declare upon oath before
-a Circuit or District Court of the United States, or a District or a
-Supreme Court of the Territories, or a Court of Record of any of the
-states having common law jurisdiction and a seal and clerk, that it his
-bona fide intention to become a citizen of the United States. He cannot
-take out his final papers until after he has resided at least five years
-continuously within the United States, and within the State or Territory
-where such Court is at the time held, one year at least. He cannot take
-out his final papers until the lapse of two years after declaring his
-intention. Accordingly, if the alien should immediately declare his
-intention upon landing, it would be necessary for him to wait until the
-expiration of five years before taking out his final papers. However,
-if he had resided three years in the United States before declaring his
-intention, then he could secure his final papers at the end of two years.
-
-(2) The right to vote comes from the state. Naturalization is a Federal
-right. In nearly one half of the states of the Union an alien who
-has declared his intention has the right to vote equally with fully
-naturalized or native born citizens. In the other half, only citizens
-vote.
-
-(3) In your case, living in the State of Illinois, it would be necessary
-for you to declare your intentions and take out your final papers
-inasmuch as only citizens of the United States can vote in that state.
-
-In Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri,
-Nebraska, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas and Wisconsin, an alien who
-has declared intention is permitted to vote. In some of these states
-additional qualifications are added. For example, in Indiana he must
-have resided one year in the United States, not necessarily in Indiana.
-In Michigan he must have declared his intention two years and six months
-prior to November 8, 1904; otherwise he is barred from voting. In
-Missouri, if he has declared intention not less than one year, or more
-than five, before election. And so on. In Nebraska, if he has declared
-his intention thirty days before election, provided he has resided within
-the state six months. And so on, several of the other states having
-similar qualifications. In the states not mentioned the requirements
-are that voter must be a citizen by nativity or naturalization. In some
-of the states there is a provision that the citizen shall have paid a
-registration fee of $1, as in Delaware. That he shall have paid taxes
-within two years, if twenty-two years old, or more, as in Pennsylvania.
-If he can read and write, as in Massachusetts. If he can read or
-understand the Constitution, as in Mississippi. If he has paid all his
-taxes since 1877, as in Georgia. If he is an Indian, with several tribe
-relations, as in South Dakota.
-
-As was said before, naturalization is a Federal right. The laws relating
-to it apply to the whole Union alike, and provide that no alien may be
-naturalized until after five years’ residence. Even this doesn’t give him
-the right to vote unless the state confers the privilege upon him. On the
-other hand, the right to vote comes from the state, but the state could
-not confer this right upon an alien who had not declared intention.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _HOME_
-
-_BY Mrs. Louise H. Miller._]
-
-
-HOME DEPARTMENT
-
-The Home Department welcomes suggestions, recipes, useful hints, brief
-articles, short accounts of what women have done in their homes and home
-towns, and brief, _true_ stories of “Heroism at Home.” We are all working
-together and we want to put into our Department anything that will make
-the housewife’s life brighter and more useful. We, all of us, are the
-editors of “Home”; let us make it as good as we can.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Every month there will be a _prize of a year’s free subscription
-to WATSON’S MAGAZINE_, sent to any address desired, _for the best
-contribution_. There will also be, every month, a _prize of another such
-free subscription for the best true story of “Heroism at Home.”_ These
-two prizes will not be given to the same person.
-
-The names of those contributing recipes and suggestions will be printed
-with what they send in, unless they request to have their names omitted.
-The names of those contributing stories of “Heroism at Home” will _not_
-be printed unless in exceptional cases. The reason for not printing
-the names in this case is that the stories are true and the characters
-in them are real people who might be sensitive about having their most
-private affairs set forth in type with their right names appearing in
-it. If we published the names and addresses of the person who sends in
-the story about them it would be almost the same as publishing their own
-names. In each number there will be a note saying that such and such a
-story receives the prize, but no names will be given. The names in the
-story will be left blank or fictitious names will be supplied. Under the
-head of “Heroism at Home” are further particulars.
-
-There is no need to worry about “not knowing how to write.” What our
-Department wants is the _facts_. If any corrections are really needed,
-they can easily be made. We aren’t trying to be “authors”—we’re just
-women trying to help one another.
-
-The Editors of the Magazine tell me that it will simplify matters very
-much if we make a few simple rules for sending in contributions. Let us
-see how the following will work out:
-
-1. _Make all contributions short and to the point._
-
-We have only a few pages altogether; there are a lot of us to contribute
-and there are many things to talk about.
-
-2. _Address everything carefully and in full to Mrs. Louise H. Miller,
-WATSON’S MAGAZINE, 121 West 42d Street, New York City._
-
-3. _Write on one side of the paper only._
-
-4. _No letters or manuscripts will be returned._
-
-Make a copy of everything you send if you want to keep it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=May Number.=—A continuation of this month’s subject for discussion.
-
-=June Number.=—Our common ornamental flowers, wild and cultivated.
-
-=July Number.=—What women can do toward improving and beautifying their
-home cities, towns, or country districts.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Department this month is something like! The Other Editors have taken
-hold! I knew that I should have to write most of it for the first two
-months, until time enough had passed for contributions to come in from
-the rest of you. Now the suggestions, recipes, articles, and stories of
-“Heroism at Home” have begun to come from all over the country and our
-Department begins to take on its permanent form. Every month from now on
-ought to be a big improvement over all that went before.
-
-The letters received have made me very happy, for they contain many
-words of praise and good wishes for the Department and prove that the
-writers are ready and willing to help edit it and that they _can_. Don’t
-misunderstand me. The words of praise are not for _my_ work in the
-Department, but for the Department itself—for the plan of having us all
-work together for our common good. It is a good plan and, now that you
-are actually at work with me, I know we are going to work that good plan
-out and work it out _well_!
-
-Unfortunately, some of the letters did not reach me in time for
-publication in this number. They will not be lost to the Department on
-that account, however. Also, the final date set for letters on Why Women
-Should be Interested in Politics came so soon after the day when the
-March issue was mailed out that there was hardly time for many to reach
-us. The Magazine was very late last month. The Editors couldn’t help it,
-and they are trying hard to get this April number out promptly on time.
-After this we will not set any particular date for letters to be in, but
-if, for instance, you want to say something in the May number, send it to
-me as soon as you can after getting this issue.
-
-After talking with the Editors and thinking it over by myself I can
-see that it will not always be best to publish every letter as soon as
-it comes in. For example, an excellent letter has been sent to us from
-Nebraska telling how the women of a certain town have organized and done
-a great deal for the beauty, comfort and usefulness of their little city.
-It came in response to something I had said in the Department. Now this
-letter is just the kind of thing we want, but it seems to me better not
-to use it in this issue which is devoted chiefly to woman’s interest in
-politics.
-
-
-MAKING YOUR COMMUNITY BETTER
-
-Don’t you think it would be better to devote a whole number later on to
-the subject of what women can do for their native towns or districts?
-They have organized in a great many places and there are several national
-societies devoted to civic improvement. The members either do things
-themselves, or use their influence to secure good local laws to bring
-these things about. It is surprising how much they accomplish.
-
-The field is a large one and covers many things—beautifying public
-squares and streets, making front and back yards attractive, improving
-the schools and school-yards, securing parks for the people, making
-better the towns’ sanitary conditions, establishing dinner-clubs for
-factory girls, pushing the right kind of legislation for the community,
-planting trees, flowers and grass, establishing traveling or stationary
-libraries, starting church or public lecture courses, public baths,
-hospitals, suppression of smoke and other nuisances such as overhead
-telephone wires and ugly advertising boards—oh, there is no end to
-what can be done! Of course, no two communities need just the same
-improvements and town and country have different problems, but wherever
-you live you will find something that can be made better. And we women
-can do it! “A revolutionizing power as to all that changes the ‘order of
-one day’ lies in feminine hands, through the use of what is distinctly
-hers,” says that wise woman who, under the name of “C,” writes those
-splendid articles called “Home Thoughts” for the New York _Post_.
-
-All this isn’t a matter of theory. These things _have been done_ in
-many places. And why shouldn’t woman be able to bring about public
-improvements? More than half the population of the United States are
-women. In many places we can vote. Everywhere we wield a great influence
-over those that do vote. And surely we have brains enough.
-
-To my mind, local women’s clubs organized for some such purpose as this
-are a good deal more worth while than women’s clubs organized merely for
-self-improvement. Work for the improvement of others—that is the best
-way to improve yourself. Be a citizen as well as an individual. Women’s
-literary and current events clubs are good institutions when they don’t
-try to do foolish things or make us neglect our home duties, but these
-same clubs might do the world, and the members, too, greater good if they
-would also turn their attention to helping the whole community to better
-things.
-
-But to return to that Nebraska letter. I suggest that we keep it till
-our July number and devote that whole issue to the question of women and
-civic improvement. I hope that every one of you who has done any work
-of that kind, or seen it done, will write to the Department and tell us
-about it. Remember that the July number comes out June 25 and that the
-letters should reach me about three weeks before that time. Write now.
-
-
-_FLOWERS FOR JUNE NUMBER_
-
-June is a month of flowers, how will it do to devote the June number to
-them? That is a very big subject, so we’d better narrow it down a little.
-Suppose we consider only the ornamental flowers common to our gardens,
-woods and fields. Let us all contribute something as to the care and
-raising and nature of them.
-
-We will not “study botany,” as they do in school and college, but,
-besides collecting information on planting, watering, repotting etc., we
-can get a very good bird’s eye view if what flowers _are_. Nearly all of
-us have probably raised flowers or seen them raised, but there are enough
-interesting facts about them to fill a hundred numbers of our Department.
-Let us try to collect as many interesting facts as possible so that we
-can have a broader knowledge when we see them or work with them in the
-future.
-
-We will not include the plants or trees that bear our common fruits and
-vegetables. This is a subject by itself and perhaps we can take it up in
-some later number.
-
-Though we are going to confine ourselves to our common flowers and
-plants let us get a general idea of where they belong in the vegetable
-kingdom—in regard to ferns, mosses, mushrooms, sea-weeds, lichens, etc.
-
-For instance, which of these is the nearest relative to the asparagus—the
-oak, the fern, the lily, the mushroom or the rose? The question isn’t
-important to us in itself, but a very little effort will enable us to
-understand the general arrangements of the plants so that it will be an
-added pleasure all our lives.
-
-What _is_ a plant? What is it composed of? What does it eat? Drink?
-Breathe? What are the leaves for? The roots? The flowers? Why do plants
-differ so among themselves? Why does one grow from a bulb, another from
-fine roots? Why is the seed of a maple put in that peculiar little case
-you crunch under foot on the pavement?
-
-Oh, there are lots of “whys”! The nice part of it is that it is all very
-simple, after all. We can find out a great deal with very little trouble.
-There are plenty of easy books on the subject, nowadays, and a good many
-people who know about plants. Many of you know all these things, and
-more, without asking.
-
-The things suggested in the last paragraph _are_ important to us if we
-are raising flowers. If you raise flowers you are a flower-nurse and a
-flower-doctor. How can a nurse or doctor do much for a patient unless she
-knows what the patient eats, drinks and breathes, and what the various
-members and organs of the patient are for?
-
-Where did our flowers originally come from? Are they all native to
-America? If not, how did they get here? Were they always as they are now?
-
-How do plants reproduce their kind? Do all plants have seeds? Do seeds
-always grow into plants just like the one on which they grew? If so,
-have all the many varieties existed from the first? If not, how can you
-get another plant like the parent? Do you know what Luther Burbank, the
-“California Wizard,” is doing? Has a seed one parent or two? Where is it,
-or where are they? It’s easy to ask questions, isn’t it?
-
-Yes, and it’s surprisingly easy to answer them, if you try. An
-encyclopedia will help you, if you consult it. So will an unabridged
-dictionary, though it doesn’t say much and is often very technical. Of
-course a botany will and there are many “popular” books now that give
-you much interesting information. Don’t make a lesson out of it. You may
-be able to answer some or all of the above questions without help of any
-kind. If not, take a few minutes some time soon and browse around among
-some of those books and pick up anything that strikes your fancy. If
-there are no books handy, ask your friends. It is as good as a game of
-“Authors” any day! If your friends don’t know, you are very lucky. Then
-you can do a little observing and thinking on your own hook. That is a
-hundred times better than being told or taught.
-
-There is nothing that can be made more deadly dry and tedious than
-“botany”: there are few things that can be made more delightful and
-interesting than a commonsense study of flowers!
-
-Have flowers played a part in history? What was the “War of the Roses?”
-What is the fleur-de-lis, the emblem of France and used so much in
-decoration and jewelry? Do you remember the story of Narcissus in Greek
-mythology? What other flowers have figured in history? Do you remember,
-in our February number, what royal family had the broom flower as their
-badge? What is the national flower of Scotland? Of Ireland? Of our
-country?
-
-Do we Americans use much taste in making bouquets? What is your idea of a
-really beautiful and artistic bouquet? Do you know the Japanese idea of a
-bouquet?
-
-Is it healthful to have many plants around you? How do plants keep the
-water fresh in an aquarium?
-
-Tell us your best remedies for insects that injure plants? What plants
-are best for the house in winter? In summer? Do you know how to make good
-window-boxes? Tell us anything you know about plants and their care.
-
-Would your town or district be pleasanter and better to live in if more
-flowers and trees were growing in it? What are parks worth to a large
-city? But there. I am running into our subject for July!
-
-Are you supposed to answer all those questions? Bless you, no! No one
-_has_ to do anything in our Department. We get work enough in our daily
-lives—our Department is to afford us a change and relief from everyday
-work. It isn’t any the less play because we can profit by it and learn
-things from it. And perhaps it will teach us how to turn some of our
-daily work into an interesting kind of game (if we haven’t learned how to
-do that already) and yet do it better than we did before. The questions
-are merely to suggest things for our June number. Pick out a few that
-interest you and find out something about them or tell us what you know
-already. Mercy, no! You don’t _have_ to! But you’re likely to find a
-little of it amusing and pleasant and to add a bit more interest to your
-life.
-
-If we only know how, and try, we can make our lives _so_ much more
-pleasant for ourselves and those about us! It is very easy. And it
-doesn’t take much time or brains or money or anything else, except
-“gumption” enough to try.
-
-
-_For May, June and July_
-
-So for May we will continue our discussion of woman’s interest in
-politics; in June, our common, ornamental flowers, wild and cultivated;
-in July, what women can do toward improving and beautifying their native
-town or district.
-
-
-_Suggest Future Subjects_
-
-I have asked the printer to put the above announcement at the beginning
-of our Department for the sake of convenience. I believe it will be a
-good plan to announce our monthly subjects three numbers ahead all the
-time, so that we can have plenty of time to think them over in advance,
-make suggestions and send in information.
-
-Now, what shall we have for the August number? If there is something you
-are interested in or want to talk about or hear others talk about, send
-it in to the Department. Do this not only for August but for all the
-following numbers. I chose the subject for the first few months in order
-to get our plan started. Now I have had more than my share of “chooses”
-and all the others are for you to select. It may be that I can arrange
-to have a special prize offered each month for the best monthly topic
-suggested. I’ll try.
-
-
-_WHY SHOULD WOMEN BE INTERESTED IN POLITICS?_
-
-There is one answer that is sufficient in itself—Because her daily bread
-depends upon politics!
-
-Is there any particular reason why she should go about her daily work
-like a mole and pay no attention to the things that make her life hard or
-make it easy? Doesn’t she suffer from unjust laws and bad conditions and
-profit by just laws and good conditions as much as her husband does, or
-her father, son, or brother?
-
-Someone objects that politics is for the man to take care of; housework
-is woman’s sphere. That isn’t quite a fair statement of the case. The
-man’s part in the care of the family is his business: the woman’s is her
-housework. Politics is a third question. Why should the man alone have
-this to see to? A good many objections will be offered to this, too, _but
-all these objections will boil down to just one thing_—because he _does_!
-And that isn’t any reason at all. If you were asked why little children
-should work in factories and kill their health and youth, would you
-consider “Because they do!” a sufficient or sensible reason?
-
-The men say that when women discuss anything they never get anywhere
-because they fail to _define_ the terms they use, and may all be talking
-about different things under the same name. I think men make this mistake
-about as much as we do, but let’s be on the safe side this time and
-define just what we mean by “politics.”
-
-Politics in our country have become so disreputable that we are likely to
-feel that having anything to do with them is bad taste or even degrading.
-It is natural to feel that way, but is it silly, nevertheless. It is
-bad taste, or even degrading, to have anything to do with a notorious
-criminal, but _not if you are making him better_ instead of letting him
-make you worse! This is particularly true when it is partly _your fault
-that he became a criminal_!
-
-Now as to the definition of politics. The Standard Dictionary gives this:
-
- 1. The branch of civics that treats of the principles of civil
- government and the conduct of state affairs; the administration
- of public affairs in the interest of the peace, prosperity,
- and safety of the state; statecraft; political science: in a
- wide sense embracing the _science_ of _government_ and _civil
- polity_.
-
- 2. Political affairs in a party sense; the administration of
- public affairs or the conduct of political matters so as to
- carry elections and secure public offices; party intrigues;
- political wire-pulling; trickery.
-
- 3. A man’s political sentiments, party preference, or
- connection.
-
-The word, then, has three shades of meaning. The third one we need not
-bother with, since it merely means any man’s opinion on the things given
-under Number 1 and Number 2.
-
-Now let’s contrast Number 1 and Number 2. There are some large words
-there, but if we take it a piece at a time we shall at least see that
-there is a tremendous difference between the two shades of meaning.
-
-In Number 1 politics means the fair and unprejudiced study of how a
-nation should be governed, but in Number 2 politics means _How much can
-you get out of it regardless of the general welfare_!
-
-In Number 1 the object is the “peace, prosperity and safety of the
-state,” but in Number 2 the object is to “carry elections and secure
-public offices”—“party intrigues; political wire-pulling; trickery.”
-
-It is Number 1 we are considering primarily. True, if our daily bread
-depends on politics, we are also interested in “how much we can get out
-of it,” but we mean by this how much we can get justly and honestly—our
-equal share _along with everyone else_. “Equal rights to all, special
-privileges to none.”
-
-No, no! I’m not advocating the People’s Party principles just because
-I quote one of their watchwords. That motto is not theirs alone, but
-that of every honest citizen, no matter to what party he belongs. It is
-merely an expression of the principles set forth in the Declaration of
-Independence. Whatever I may believe personally, it is no part of my
-business to plead the cause of any political party in our Department. We
-have nothing to do with parties. Our object is to consider how our nation
-is governed and how it _should_ be governed—national, state, county,
-township and city governments, under whatever names these divisions may
-be called in different places.
-
-We are primarily concerned with definition Number 1. We want to know how
-our nation should be governed. After that we will consider Number 2, and
-see how it _is_ governed.
-
-Now, considering the awful amount of writing and talking there is about
-politics, the infinite number of questions there are to decide, and the
-unending difference of opinion on these questions, we can see at the
-outset that we can’t decide it all in two numbers of our Department. Nor
-in a hundred. We are not going to try to. All we want is an intelligent
-idea of the general situation and of our duty in the matter.
-
-What is government at bottom? In the beginning there was no government
-or organization of any kind, not even the family organization. Each man
-or woman lived his or her own life separate from all others. The first
-organization came about when a man and woman decided to live together
-and raise children. They soon found that when they had a child to take
-care of they could not go on independently of each other as they had
-before. They had two things to do—to care for the baby and keep it safe
-every minute from wild beasts and other people, and to secure food for
-themselves and their child. If they both went hunting for food there was
-no one to watch the baby; if they both watched the baby, there was no
-way of getting food. They saw that they had to have some _arrangement_.
-They had to _divide_ the labor. So the woman tended the baby and the man
-went hunting for all three. Each of them gave up a little of the former
-independence and received a new thing in _return_—help from another
-person. Thus the “family” began. It was the first step towards _society_
-and government. They gave up part of their freedom _in return for help_
-from others.
-
-People lived by hunting animals and gathering fruits and berries at
-first. If a man laid by any food for his family, another man was likely
-to take it away while he was away hunting. He found it pretty hard to
-have to do anything himself and he at odds with other men. Pretty soon
-it dawned on him that it would pay to make some “arrangement” with
-those other men. He wouldn’t rob them, if they didn’t rob him. Later he
-arranged with a few of them to keep their families close together so that
-some of the men could protect them while the other men hunted for all.
-In some such way began the “town.” Each of them gave up a part of his
-freedom _in return_ for help from others.
-
-When many towns had sprung up these towns began to see they could to
-advantage make “arrangements” among themselves (just as individual men
-had done) for protection and other purposes. Thus the “state” or country
-came into existence. Each town gave up part of its “independence” _in
-return_ for help from other towns.
-
-Thus “society” was formed and grew more and more complex. Of course,
-I have only sketched the process in a very general way, but the idea
-is there. The one point we have to consider is that no one of these
-arrangements or institutions—the family, town and state—would be possible
-_unless_ every member gave up part of his original freedom _in return_
-for help from others. A _bargain_ has to be made. For instance, the
-different men and their families each made a bargain with the whole
-number to give up part of their freedom, time and energy to the band. _In
-return_ each was to receive his share of the freedom, time and energy the
-others had given to the band or town. Each man made a _bargain_ with the
-town. He owed the town something: the town owed him something.
-
-That was the beginning of government, and that is the arrangement at the
-bottom of any government to this day. Every government (town, county,
-state or national) is just a bargain between the various individuals and
-all of them taken together. Each owes something to all: all owe something
-to each.
-
-The point is, in each case, is this bargain a _fair_ one? Does the
-individual give up more than he receives in _return_?
-
-In olden times the average individual did give up far more than he got
-in return. Often he didn’t get much besides protection against some
-other government. Yet for this he frequently had to give up _nearly all_
-his freedom, time and energy. A few individuals gained control of the
-government and, though they might not contribute as much as the others,
-took most of what the others gave for the use of the whole number,
-calling themselves kings, or dukes or emperors. The mass of the people
-forgot that originally the “government” meant _all_ the people. They came
-to consider the few who had gained control of the government as _the
-government itself_. That is, they let themselves be cheated out of their
-share in it.
-
-Our Declaration of Independence was one of the things that resulted when,
-after centuries of misrule and suffering, the mass of the people began
-to wake up to the fact that they had been cheated all that time under a
-bargain which had originally been fair. They had been giving more than
-they got in return.
-
-In an absolutely fair government every individual would receive just as
-much as he gave and give just as much as he received. A modern government
-is so vast and so complex that it would be hard to measure each man’s
-share exactly, but the nearer any government comes to that, the better
-and fairer it is. England, for example, comes nearer to that ideal than
-does Russia; Russia nearer than Afghanistan.
-
-The chief trouble in Russia is that the mass of the people have to give
-more than they receive. A comparative few have gained possession of
-the government and each takes a very, very large share of what _all_
-contribute, leaving almost no share at all for the majority.
-
-Of course it is almost impossible to trace out just what each Russian
-peasant gives up to the government, and what he receives in return.
-Without a government of some kind he could not produce or hold anything
-except by force against his fellows—land, goods, money, family, all would
-be _totally_ insecure. As it is, he does get _some_ security in these
-respects. In return he gives practically _all_ his freedom, time and
-energy. On the other hand, a Grand Duke may give up to his country hardly
-any freedom, time and energy, and yet be rolling in wealth. Something is
-wrong. It is not a fair bargain. It is not a good government.
-
-How about _our_ government? Is it a fair bargain?
-
-Modern civilization is very complex. No two men can really give just the
-same amount to the common country, since all men differ in ability. But
-the country asks only certain things from its individuals. To be fair
-the point is to _ask the same from all_. The country gives only certain
-things to its individuals: the point is to _give the same to all_. Our
-country doesn’t demand military service in time of peace, as do many
-other countries. And, in _return_, it doesn’t give us a tremendous
-standing army. If it _did_ demand military service, to be fair it would
-have to make the demand equally of _all_ able to bear arms. If it _did_
-give us a big standing army, to be fair it would have to use this army to
-protect us _all_ equally.
-
-If our country taxes certain goods, it must tax them everywhere—not for
-one man and not for the next. If there is a tax of one cent on every bale
-of a certain commodity, each man should pay one cent for every bale he
-owns. If there is a tax of one cent on every dollar, each man should pay
-one cent for every dollar he owns.
-
-Is this the case in the United States?
-
-If the Government gives certain privileges to a few men, it should give
-the same to all. Is this always done in our country?
-
-Of course all may not always want a certain privilege. It is open to all,
-but only a few use it. Is this all that is required of the Government?
-Or, since the Government has nevertheless given some of the general fund
-to only a few, should these few make some adequate _return_ for what
-they have used from the common property? Is this always done in our
-country?
-
-Ask yourself similar questions about every case that comes up. What I
-have said doesn’t pretend to “explain politics,” but it ought to give
-everyone a test or basis to refer everything back to. Ask yourself
-whether any law or custom is a _fair bargain_. You can tell well enough
-when you deal with the grocer or the milkman whether you are getting a
-fair bargain. Try to in these other matters.
-
-But to come back to why women should take an interest in politics. One
-reason has been suggested—that her daily bread is affected by them.
-Another has been hinted at—that it is partly your fault that politics as
-practiced in this country are corrupt (definition No. 2). Since we are to
-devote the next number of our Department to this same question, we will
-do little now in this issue except suggest reasons and ask questions. I’m
-not going to do all the expressing of opinion just because I happen to
-have the chance all to myself this month. By next month I hope there will
-be letters and opinions from a great many of you.
-
-In some parts of our country women can vote and it is likely that some
-day they will do so everywhere. When the country or state gives her
-the right to vote does that put her under any obligation to do or give
-anything in return for this privilege?
-
-Who gives women (or men) the right to vote—the city, state or country?
-
-Is it fair to give it to some women and not to all? Is it fair to give it
-to men and not to women?
-
-Would politics be purer if women took more interest in them? If women
-voted?
-
-In those places where women cannot vote what can they do towards securing
-good government? Can they do anything through their husbands, brothers
-and fathers? Through their neighbors? Through their own children? Can
-they do anything through the church? The schools? Last year, when
-Philadelphia threw off boss-rule, what was the method that succeeded in
-making the corrupt politicians surrender after all other methods had
-failed?
-
-Can you tell the Department of any instance where the women have brought
-about, or helped to bring about, reforms in town, country, state or
-national government even when they were not allowed to vote?
-
-Do you remember the saying that “the hand that rocks the cradle rules the
-world”? How much truth is there in it?
-
-If you had a really intelligent idea of politics as they should be and as
-they are, would it bring you into closer touch with the men-folks of your
-family? Would it broaden your horizon? Would it interfere with household
-duties? Would it make you a better citizen? Could you accomplish real
-good by having this knowledge?
-
-What is the best way of acquiring an intelligent idea of the subject,
-it you haven’t one already? Take the opinion of those around you? Read
-weighty and technical books and articles? Read first a very simple book
-on civics—on the organization of our Government? Would it be a good plan
-to read your boy’s school text-book on this subject?
-
-Can some one point out a few articles in the numbers of this Magazine
-which make their point very clear and are easy enough for anyone to
-understand? Send the Department the names of a few that appealed to you,
-so that some more of us can venture on them. Similar articles in other
-magazines which the average woman can grasp without a previous extensive
-knowledge of politics or political economy? Books?
-
-Can you decide a question until you have heard both sides of it?
-
-Is it safe to believe all you read, or does it pay to consider when you
-read it, who wrote it, what personal or party reason he may have had for
-writing it?
-
-Consider your local newspaper. Do you know the difference between the
-“set” matter and the “plate” matter and the “ready-print” matter in its
-pages? Why is this difference _very_ important in deciding as to the
-value of an article in that paper? Who writes set matter? Has he “any
-fish to fry” when he writes? Who writes plate and ready-print matter?
-Has he any fish to fry? With a little care you can tell these three
-kinds of printed matter apart in your local paper. (Ready-print matter
-is used only in some country weeklies and dailies and some other small
-local papers. It can be “spotted” by noticing what pages of the paper
-always have it. Unfold the paper and lay it flat on the floor. If it is
-ready-print and has few pages enough to make only one sheet, all of the
-pages on one side will be ready-print. There won’t be any local articles
-or items in the print. Both ready-print and plate are in different type
-from set matter.) If a corrupt man or corrupt men wrote the ready-print
-and plate could they wield a vast influence? More than by writing the set
-matter? It is well worth thinking about.
-
-Are there many magazines or papers that are not controlled by political
-or business interests? How much can you believe in a publication
-controlled in that way?
-
-The voters of the country are divided into several political parties.
-Would it be better or worse if there were no regular parties and every
-voter voted independently?
-
-What is a real democracy? Is the United States a real democracy now? Why?
-
-What is meant by direct legislation—the initiative, referendum, recall
-and imperative mandate? Big words, but they stand for things worth
-knowing about and having an opinion on. And they are easy enough to
-understand. Would these things tend toward real democracy? Have they been
-tried in actual practice? If so, have they proved a success? Why? What
-effect would they have on the whole party system?
-
-There, I think that is enough questions for one person to ask. Someone is
-likely to ask me a question in return—_How_ do politics affect our daily
-bread? Well, there are several hundred answers to that. Let’s each of us
-suggest for the May number one or more ways that politics (according to
-both definition No. 1 and definition No. 2) affect our daily living.
-
-We are not going to try to become experts in politics, but we do want to
-have an intelligent general idea of them. It is our _duty_. In our May
-number I hope to have many opinions from women all over the country.
-
-
-[Illustration: _THE INTEREST OF EVERYDAY THINGS._]
-
-We had a glimpse last month at some of the interesting things concerned
-in bread and bread-making. The house is full of things we have known so
-long that we scarcely think of them except as parts of the daily routine,
-but which, if we turn our attention to them, prove veritable mines of
-information, history, travel and even romance.
-
-
-_Sponges_
-
-A sponge is the skeleton of a very, very, tiny animal, or rather of a
-colony of thousands of such animals that live under water. When the
-little animals die they leave behind them this network of elastic fibers
-that they have built up. For a long time it was thought that sponges
-were plants, and even now scientists know really very little about
-these little animals. You have noticed how many kinds of sponges there
-are. These different varieties are caused partly by differences in
-temperature and chemical composition of the water and partly by the fact
-that there are more than one species or variety of the animal itself.
-There is no need to enumerate all the kinds of sponges from the fine,
-soft ones used in surgical operations to the big, coarse ones used for
-washing carriages. Nearly all the sponges inhabit salt water and the
-best ones come from the Mediterranean, particularly the Levant or that
-eastern part of the Mediterranean bounded by Syria, Asia Minor and the
-Holy Land and Egypt. Others are found in the waters around Florida and
-in those near Australia. The sponges are secured by means of native
-divers. In some places these men work all day long from sunrise to sunset
-through six months of the year, resting during the winter. The work
-is, of course, very hard and few of them reach old age. Often they are
-treated with inhuman cruelty by their employers and many are killed by
-sharks. Particularly in Florida there have been attempts made to raise
-sponges artificially, but though it is easy to secure the spawn of the
-tiny animals and succeed in getting them to attach their little colonies
-to stones, coral or other objects under water, the sponges never reach
-any considerable size and are commercially useless. They have also tried
-to propagate them by cuttings or slips, but here arises the difficulty
-of making the cuttings attach themselves to other objects, which is
-necessary to their development. And the little animals themselves, they
-go right on very quietly drinking in water and getting all they need
-from it—air, food and drink—whether they are off the coast of Europe,
-Asia, Africa, America or Australia or in a little glass aquarium being
-looked at through a microscope by a dried-up old man with spectacles and
-side-whiskers. And we use the sponges.
-
-
-_Maize_
-
-The right name of what we call corn or Indian corn is maize. The word is
-derived from the Spanish word _maiz_, which comes from the native Haitian
-word _mahiz_. Corn in Europe means what we call wheat. Maize, or corn,
-like all our grains, belongs to the big Grass Family and is a native of
-America. Most of our other grains come from Europe and Asia, just as we
-ourselves did. It probably came from the table-lands of Mexico and Peru
-and has always been the chief food of the Indians. It was introduced into
-Asia, southern Europe and northern Africa and spread quickly and widely
-for a while. However, the climate was not hot enough for it in Europe and
-it is not raised there very much now. The English generally consider it
-fit only for animals and rather turn up their noses at us for eating it
-ourselves. The only time I ever saw any offered to an Englishman he was
-very polite about it but managed to avoid eating even a single mouthful
-from the nice, tender ears. Other nations are horrified at seeing
-otherwise well-bred Americans pick up a roasting-ear and gnaw it off
-the cob, and it must be confessed that it does look pretty bad unless a
-person is careful to hold it with only one hand and bite it off daintily.
-Many Americans who travel in Europe miss it terribly and one woman
-confessed to me that her chief reason for coming home was just to get
-some real American corn once more. I understand, though, that the English
-look on our popcorn very differently. It is said that two New England
-spinsters introduced it over there a number of years ago and their little
-stand rapidly became so popular that they amassed a very considerable
-fortune and lived happily ever afterwards. We use sweet corn not only on
-the cob, for fritters, puddings and so on, as corn-meal and for stock,
-but extract from it whisky, starch and glucose sugar. Besides sweet corn
-and popcorn the common kinds are flint and dent. Sweet corn gets its name
-from the large quantities of sugar in it. Popcorn pops because it has
-a great deal of oil and this oil explodes when sufficiently hot. Corn
-varies in color from white to black, but most of it is yellow or white.
-Like wheat, Government experts and other scientists in this country,
-Canada and elsewhere have been experimenting with corn for years and by
-cross-breeding and selection (about which processes I hope the Department
-will receive some interesting contributions for our June number) they
-have vastly improved the old varieties and produced many new ones.
-
-When I was a child I remember being much impressed on being told that
-you never, _never_ could find an ear of corn with an odd number of
-rows in it. Maybe you can, but I never have been able to, and, as that
-advertisement says, “there is a reason.”
-
-Can someone tell us for our June Department? You may have heard the story
-of the Southern planter before the War who offered to give freedom to
-any slave who could find an ear of corn with an uneven number of rows.
-None of them could, though it is easy to believe they hunted a good deal,
-until finally another white man showed one of the slaves how he could cut
-a row out of an ear when it was very young so as to leave no mark when he
-presented it and demanded his freedom. The master kept his word and the
-slave went free.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: _VARIOUS HINTS._]
-
-It was almost equally hard to award the prize for the best general
-suggestion or recipe sent in. After some careful deliberation, it seemed
-that, all things considered, the free subscription this month should go
-to Alicia E. Storm, of Plessis, N. Y., though we hesitated, especially
-between this and Mrs. Richardson. A little later I hope to be able to
-send a little souvenir to _everyone_ who sends in a contribution and
-doesn’t get a regular prize. In case this plan carries out, as I think
-it will, of course all who have contributed before that time will be
-remembered. And always there is the gratitude of those who benefit from
-your suggestion, and my own sincere thanks and your consciousness of
-having helped other women in their daily trials and perplexities.
-
-
-_Home Talk._
-
-We have no kitchen cabinet, and we keep a small table set for three in
-our kitchen, which is not large. The cooking stove, sink, and cupboards
-taking most of the room. I needed a small table to use for work and
-mixing table. There was a space behind the stove. I bethought me of the
-crate in which my sewing machine came. It is just the thing. The table
-is just about the right height, and the shelf below is as convenient as
-the top. I find that on baking day it helps very much to get everything
-one needs before commencing work. I use an earthen mixing bowl. After the
-bread and biscuits, I make pies, as the lard is then cold. Then I make
-my cakes and afterward doughnuts. It is a saving of time and fuel if one
-can bake a variety at once, as in cold weather victuals keep longer than
-in summer. A convenience for storing pies can be made by having several
-shelves sawed out large enough to hold your tins. One can use laths (four
-of them) for uprights, fastening them well at the four corners of the
-bottom shelf; then fasten the others about three inches apart. This gives
-more space, and keeps pies from being mussed.
-
-Did you ever experience the difference between two neighborly calls? Mrs.
-A. relates the latest bit of gossip, making up in insinuations what she
-lacks in fact. She talks about her dressmaker, criticizes the appearance
-and dress of her friends, and gives you an uncomfortable feeling—thinking
-perhaps you will be the subject of unpleasant remarks. Mrs. B. is fresh
-and cheery. She asks about your plants, and tells of the growth of her
-own—of every new bud. She tells of the cunning things her baby has said,
-of the nest her canary is building, of the new book she is reading. She
-tells, perhaps, of some ludicrous mistake she has made in her cooking,
-laughing at the same. This woman may not be intellectual in the highest
-sense, but she is charming. Her call will have made you happy all the
-day. We leave the effect of our presence—sometimes for long. So should we
-act that no sting of uneasiness be left in the hearts of those with whom
-we come in contact.—_Alicia E. Storm, Plessis, N. Y._
-
-
-_Valuable Pointers_
-
-Every work is easy and pleasant if you go at it as you go to a picnic. In
-house cleaning I fix one room at the time. It takes a week, but I have
-the most of each day and I do my work better, as I don’t have to hurry.
-No confusion in the regular routine of work; one thorough sweeping and
-dusting is enough for one day. If the tablecloth is clean enough for the
-home folks, it is all right for company. Don’t try to cook a variety of
-dishes each day. You won’t hold out so well, and one or two will do as
-well, and change them every day. Sheets, towels and some other things
-can be used all right without ironing. If you smoothed all the wrinkles
-out of all the rough clothes, you might have the wrinkles in your face.
-I read and rest some every day. Prepare two dinners on Saturday, and go
-to church and Sunday-school. I do have some trouble and everyone does,
-but I am always thankful, and my life-work is a delight to me. Let us try
-to do all things to the glory and honor of God. Although in the country,
-we have one of the best “teachers.” Our children attend, cold or hot,
-regularly. They are taught the Sunday-school lesson at school Friday
-afternoon.—_Mrs. E. A. Richardson, Thomaston, Ga._
-
-
-_To Make Sure of Milk Churning in Cold Weather_
-
-Many persons who churn in winter have trouble because butter will not
-come if chilled, and are obliged to throw the milk away, or feed it to
-the stock. If they will steam, not boil, the milk after milking, they can
-allow it to freeze solid and it will churn all right if thawed and warmed
-properly. This recipe has been worth many dollars to me, and hope it will
-help other women housekeepers.—_Mrs. D. L. Burrows, Gibson, Ga._
-
-
-_To Polish Nickel on Stoves_
-
-Use stove polish. It is the very best thing. Rub a light coating over it
-and polish with polishing cloth or brush. The cloth or brush is generally
-sufficient. Only give an occasional coat of polish.—_Mrs. D. L. Burrows,
-Gibson, Ga._
-
-
-_To Clean Iron Kettles_
-
-Boil skim-milk in it and then wash with good soap-suds. Use six quarts
-for an eight-quart kettle, and boil and simmer for twenty-four hours.
-This will also prevent future trouble.—_Mrs. E. R. Putney, Kansas City,
-Mo._
-
-
-_To Remove Large Stones From Fields_
-
-Make the stone very hot on one side only; pour water on it to make it
-crack, and help it along with a heavy hammer. Another way, in the winter,
-is to bore a hole pretty well into the stone, fill with water and plug it
-firmly shut. The force of the water as it freezes will crack the stone.
-Still another way is to make a hole in the direction of the veins or
-cleavage of the stone, put in a cleft cylinder of iron, then drive an
-iron wedge between the two halves of the cylinder. _L. L. Deweese, Piqua,
-O._
-
-
-_Shoe-Soles_
-
-Melt together tallow and common resin, two parts of first to one of
-second. Apply hot—as much as the sole will absorb. Neat’s-foot oil is
-good also. These remedies keep the leather soft, prevent its cracking,
-and make it waterproof.—_Mrs. N. O. Baker, Jersey City, N. J._
-
-
-_To Clean Wall Paper_
-
-Take off the dust with a soft cloth. With a little flour and water make a
-lump of stiff dough and rub the wall gently downward, taking the length
-of the arm each stroke, and in this way go round the whole room. As
-the dough becomes dirty, cut the soiled parts off. In the second round
-commence the stroke a little above where the last one ended, and be
-very careful not to cross the paper or to go up again. Ordinary papers
-cleaned in this way will look fresh and bright, and almost as good as
-new. Some papers, however, and these the most expensive ones, will not
-clean nicely. In order to ascertain whether a paper will clean nicely, it
-is best to try it in some obscure corner. Fill up any broken places in
-the wall with a mixture of plaster of Paris and silver sand, made into
-a paste with a little water, then cover the place with a piece of paper
-like the rest, if it can be had.—_Mrs. B. C. Benton, Denver, Col._
-
-
-_To Clean a Chimney_
-
-Place a piece of zinc on the live coals in the stove. The vapor thus
-produced will carry off the soot.
-
-
-_For a Cut_
-
-Sift powdered resin on the wound, wrap with a soft, clean cloth, and wet
-occasionally with water.—_Miss Anna Paisley, New Orleans._
-
-
-_To Cleanse Sponges_
-
-Wash in a solution of a teaspoonful of ammonia to two quarts of water,
-and afterwards in a solution of one part of muriatic acid to twenty-five
-of water. Sponges should be thoroughly rinsed, aired, and dried after
-every using. Unless they are kept very clean it is not well to use them.
-A piece of rough towel or tablecloth hemmed at the edges is much better.
-Another way to clean sponges is to steep them in buttermilk for some
-hours, then squeeze out and wash in cold water. Lemon juice is also good.
-
-
-[Illustration: _HEROISM AT HOME._]
-
-
-_A PRIZE FOR THE BEST TRUE STORY_
-
-Every month the Department will publish a little story of heroism _in the
-home_—not any one act of heroism, but the tale of how someone _lived_
-heroically, _lived_ self-sacrifice _in everyday life_. It must be _true_
-and must be about somebody you know or have known or know definitely
-about. _It must not have over 500 words._ The shorter, the better.
-_Whoever sends in the best story each month will not only have it printed
-but will receive a year’s free subscription to WATSON’S MAGAZINE sent to
-any name you choose. Tell your story simply and plainly._
-
-_Please state whether the names and places mentioned in your story are
-real or fictitious._ The Department does not print real names in these
-stories. Please do not send in stories about someone rescuing another
-from drowning or anything like that—we don’t want stories of single acts
-of heroism but of lives bravely and unselfishly lived out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The stories of “Heroism at Home” have begun to come in. We can not
-print all of them in this number, but there will be a place for the
-others later on. Only one told of a single heroic incident. It was a
-brave, unselfish act, but that isn’t what we are going to use under this
-head—not things done suddenly, perhaps on impulse or by instinct, but the
-kind of heroism that lasts day after day. This one story, too, was told
-in verse and though it was good I fear we had better confine ourselves to
-simple prose. I hope the writer will send us another good true story in
-prose and of heroic _living_.
-
-The prize this month is awarded to “Her Career.” It was very hard to
-decide among several stories that told of some very beautiful and useful
-lives, so I got others to help me. I imagine it is never going to be
-easy to decide which is the very best of the stories each month. How the
-stories are told is not considered at all, but the heroic lives described
-are very hard to weigh against one another. But I will do the best I can.
-
-
-_HER CAREER_
-
-No, she never wrote a book, nor went as a missionary to Japan, nor won
-a degree in college. She never even taught school, nor belonged to a
-woman’s club.
-
-But she has been the inspiration of her family and has radiated blessings
-on all she knew.
-
-Thirty years ago she was a dark-haired, dark-eyed bride of eighteen.
-They were poor, but they had health and strength and bright dreams of
-the future. They built a small log house on the land they had bought on
-credit and began to improve it. Their days were filled with hopeful work
-and their nights brought rest and refreshing sleep.
-
-But soon a shadow fell across the sunlight that streamed on her pathway.
-Her husband began to drink. He was soon a helpless victim of the fiery
-appetite and could not go where liquor was without getting drunk.
-
-She was refined and regretted to the very depths of her soul her
-husband’s weakness. Sometimes she was righteously indignant, but
-she never upbraided him with moral lectures in which she posed as a
-mistreated angel, though she often talked it over with him after the
-“spree” was over.
-
-Children came. The “sprees” became more frequent and things looked more
-gloomy, but she worked tirelessly and trusted everlastingly.
-
-At last the county voted liquor out. This did some good; the temptation
-was farther away. But even then he would make several trips a year to
-the nearest liquor town and always with the same result. If a neighbor
-were going to town at the same time she would ask him to look after her
-husband. And when the erring man staggered home she would put him to bed
-and cook him something to eat—not always ham and eggs and delicacies, but
-the best she had. She never slipped anything in his coffee to cure him
-secretly.
-
-And she has almost won. He is not proof against them yet, but the
-“sprees” are few and far between.
-
-Six children call her mother—two womanly daughters well married, another
-a lovable and accomplished young woman, a handsome son, with his mother’s
-wonderfully calm eyes, who detests liquor, and two young girls at school.
-
-A neat white house with green blinds has taken the place of the log
-structure. She is a model housekeeper and has always done all her
-work—cooking, sewing, washing, ironing, scrubbing, milking, churning,
-sweeping, poultry-raising and one thousand and one other things. Besides
-this she has tied up sore toes and cut fingers, poulticed boils, applied
-hot salt to all manner of aches and pains; doctored mumps, whooping-cough
-and la grippe; and successfully nursed measles, pneumonia and fever.
-
-Her face has lost some of its freshness and her hair is turning gray, but
-she is still the blessed counselor of her family and she still finds
-time to visit and make herself a true, cheerful friend and neighbor.
-
-
-_HER SACRIFICE_
-
-Miss ⸺ lives in ⸺, Ohio. She was born on a farm where she lived with her
-father and mother and two brothers and one sister. The father became
-surety for a friend who failed, and it took the father’s farm to pay the
-debt. The family therefore left the farm, and moved to the county-seat,
-in the suburbs, and in a small house and two lots began life anew. He
-rode the country buying stock for other men, kept cows and peddled milk
-in the town, kept forty hens and sold eggs, cultivated the lots in garden
-produce, and kept the family together. One fortunate result of leaving
-the farm, the children were put into the city schools. Miss ⸺ graduated
-in the high school, and obtained a certificate to teach. The two brothers
-married and left the city. Then finally the sister married and left. Miss
-⸺, at the age of 26, was left to care for her parents in their declining
-years.
-
-She obtained a position as teacher in the city schools and devoted her
-wages to the care of the home, and looked after her parents when out
-of school hours. There came offers of honorable marriage, for she was
-strong, healthy, comely and attractive. She could not consider them.
-Her parents could not do without her. They were declining in strength
-and looked to her for the care of the household. She taught on, and
-with her wages kept them in comfort. Two years ago the good old mother,
-weary of life, departed for the better land. Two years longer the old
-father lived, kept the house during the day while the daughter was in
-the schoolroom and awaited the sound of her footsteps in the evening
-returning from the school. In January he lay on the bed stricken with
-a fatal sickness, though unknown to him or her, and while they talked
-together as she bent over him he ceased to breathe, and she was left
-alone in the world, unmarried, without a home, and the prime of her good
-life spent in assiduous care of her parents—at the age of forty years!
-All hope of a home and family of her own sacrificed to her sense of duty
-to her father and mother! What is to be her reward? Many another has made
-a like sacrifice, but how is she to recoup the loss of the fourteen years
-spent in their service—the loss of her own home and family and children
-and all the sweet consolations of the state of motherhood? Was it not
-a heroic life? How few would have met it! Only those who know of her
-self-sacrifice will know how to honor her. Her fidelity, so unobtrusive,
-will be little noted by the world. But how grand and noble the sacrifice
-she has made!
-
-
-_QUIET COURAGE_
-
-Elizabeth Stanton was born about sixty-five years ago in a beautiful
-Southern town. She was the youngest daughter of Judge James Stanton, one
-of the ablest jurists of the state.
-
-Few young ladies had superior advantages to Elizabeth, and fewer still
-possessed her amiable disposition and strong character. Being beautiful,
-accomplished and wealthy, it is no wonder she married the only son of a
-millionaire. A few years after their marriage her husband erected the
-finest residence in the state. Although built forty years ago it stands
-proudly today without an equal in the state.
-
-Elizabeth had everything that heart could wish save one—her husband
-was dissipated and grew more so as years came on. But no ear save the
-Master’s ever heard her complain and she was always cheerful.
-
-A few years after the Civil War her husband died, leaving his palatial
-home mortgaged and his vast estate squandered. Elizabeth was left with
-three children and a small amount of money. She gave up her magnificent
-home and wealth without a murmur and returned to her old home. In a
-few years she married again, a man of fine personality, a scholar and
-typical Southern gentleman, one born to wealth and knowing little how to
-acquire it. His fortune was like that of most Southern people after the
-Civil War. They remained in their native home till their small fortune
-was nearly gone. Then they removed to Florida and lived on a homestead,
-in a tent with a dirt floor for two years. Elizabeth had never before
-lived without servants, never cooked a meal or laundered a handkerchief.
-Now she did all her own work, even to the washing, and taught a country
-school several months of each year. She found time to visit and elevate
-the poor, rough people around her, and never by word did she let them
-know she was not of their class. She was greatly admired and beloved by
-all who knew her. During these years of hardship she was just as bright
-and cheerful and apparently as content as when she trod the marble floors
-of her former mansion. She smilingly remarked to me once that she was
-glad they had been chastened. It had made her a better woman and was the
-means of her husband’s conversion. As fortune always favors the brave,
-she did not always live in poverty. In a few years they had a fine orange
-grove bearing, and her husband was elected to a high office.
-
-I have never known a more heroic life of any woman. When clouds have
-hovered over me I have thought of this brave, beautiful character and it
-has been my inspiration.
-
-
-[Illustration: _RECIPES, OLD AND NEW._]
-
-From a collection of recipes that dates back almost to “War-Time” we
-shall give a few every month. Along with them will be given new recipes
-of the present day.
-
-
-_Bread Pudding_
-
-One pint bread crumbs, fine, one quart milk, three or four eggs. Season
-and sweeten to taste, then bake. Spread a layer of jelly or jam quite
-thick or white of eggs a little sweetened, and brown a little.
-
-
-_Ginger Snaps_
-
-Three cups of molasses, one cup of brown sugar, two small cups of lard,
-four tablespoons of ginger and one of cloves, and enough flour to roll
-them out.
-
-
-_Corn Batter Cakes_
-
-One and a half pints of corn-meal, the same of milk, one half teaspoon of
-salt, five eggs beaten together and put in with the corn-meal and milk,
-one and a half teaspoons of baking-powder.
-
-
-_Sponge Cake_
-
-Six eggs, one pint of flour, one pint of sugar, three-fourths of a cup of
-water, two tablespoons of baking-powder.
-
-
-_Pea Soup_
-
-One half peck peas. Take the shells and put on with two quarts of water.
-When well boiled take off and put through the colander. Take the water
-and pour into it the peas. Let boil until very soft and tender. Take off
-and put through the colander again. Take a quart of cream, or cream and
-milk, two even tablespoons of flour and less than one ounce of butter.
-Put in and let come to a boil. Pepper and salt to taste.
-
-[Illustration: _CHANGING THE DIRECTION_
-
- _Warren, in Boston Herald_]
-
-[Illustration: _Before_ _After_
-
- _DeMar, in Philadelphia Record_]
-
-[Illustration: “_Sh— Sh— You Blamed Ass!_”
-
- _Rogers, in N. Y. Herald_
-
- April, 1906]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _BOOKS_
-
-_BY Thomas E. Watson._]
-
-Note: _Reviews are by Mr. Watson unless otherwise signed._
-
-
- =On the Field of Glory.= By Henryk Sienkiewicz. Little, Brown &
- Co., Boston.
-
-After the reader has finished reading this book he disapproves of the
-title. He has been taken into ancient Poland, where the winter snows
-lie deep, where the wolves of the forest come with the night to make
-danger for the traveler. He has been shown how the upper class lived in
-the time of the Soldier-King, John Sobieski. He follows the thread of
-a passionate and tender and happily ended love-story. He laughs with
-and at the four brothers, the huge, rude, boisterous, but brave and
-good-hearted foresters. He feels impressed by the genius of the author
-during the whole time, for he knows that this strange Polish world, with
-its unfamiliar men and women, is a creation born of the mental processes
-of a great literary artist.
-
-It is not an historical novel in the sense that “Quo Vadis” was. There is
-no field of glory at all. John Sobieski does not appear before us as Nero
-was made to do in the book just named.
-
-The John Sobieski of this novel might be any other King. So far as we are
-told about his appearance, manners, dress, personal peculiarities, he
-might have been Rudolph of Hapsburg or Henry of Valois.
-
-There are no battles, no sieges, no heroic advance or retreat. As the
-book closes, the Polish army has set out from Cracow to Vienna; and
-that’s as near as we approach the field of glory.
-
-With the heroine the reader never gets in full sympathy. She drives away
-the man who has always loved her and whom she loves _without knowing it_.
-
-She then consents to wed her hideous, lecherous, old guardian. More
-indignant than the bride, the spirits of the Unseen World resent this
-unnatural union, and they prevent it by claiming the groom while the
-marriage feast is being eaten.
-
-With the hero the reader is on good terms from first to last, for his is
-a fine character finely drawn.
-
-When the guardian and intended husband is dead, and the rejected lover
-is far away, the hero is subjected to trial and temptation, beset by
-dangers, marked for destruction by a lustful brute, neglected and hated
-by family connections. It is then that human interest of the deepest kind
-centres in the poor orphan girl _Panna Anulka_, whom we had condemned
-on account of her readiness to marry old _Pan Gideon_. We follow her
-fortunes then with painful attention and we rejoice when she is saved.
-
-While “On the Field of Glory” is not, perhaps, so great a book as “Quo
-Vadis,” its atmosphere is purer, its store of love more tender and its
-portrayal of ancient manners and character apparently quite as faithful.
-
-
- =The Strange Story of the Quillmores.= By A. L. Chatterton.
- Stitt Publishing Company, New York.
-
-To write a novel which shall hold the reader with a strong and constant
-grip, and yet give him no love-story, is a feat not done by everyone that
-tries it. Mr. Chatterton tells no story of love, but I have not read many
-books that interested me more than “The Strange Story of the Quillmores.”
-Mr. Chatterton’s pictures of life are true to life: his men are the men
-who wear breeches—not impossible abstractions who say or do things which
-no human beings ever said or did. And his women are as real as his men.
-
-_Uncle I’_ and his store, where the neighbors buy all sorts of things,
-from ham to coffins, and where a group of loafers and tattlers is
-generally on hand, are as well known to the reader as if he had been
-there. _Uncle I’_ must be a character taken from life. He is full of
-quiet humor, homely wisdom, sound common sense, manly courage and loyalty.
-
-Old-fashioned _Uncle I’_, keeping his old-fashioned carry-all store,
-swapping stories and repartee with his old-fashioned neighbors,
-struggling heroically with his old-fashioned telephone, and with it all,
-living up to the best standards of honesty and usefulness—yes, _Uncle I’_
-is a complete artistic success.
-
-So is _Doctor Gus_. True, he reminds the reader, in a general way, of Ian
-Maclaren’s Scotch country doctor, but _Doctor Gus_ is American, and he is
-stamped with sufficient individuality to make him a very live man to the
-reader.
-
-What could be better than the old German woman, _Mother Treegood_? The
-chapter in which _Mother Treegood_ comes to visit Uncle I’s wife, who is
-broken with grief on account of her dying daughter, is one that is worthy
-of Dickens. It has the heart-throb of human sorrow, human sympathy, human
-love.
-
-I don’t know of anything more touching, in its simple unpretentious way,
-than the story of how _Mother Treegood’s_ boys, the twins, ran away from
-home, and how one of them was drowned in the Ohio River, and was sent
-home for burial.
-
-“My pretty boy was to our house brought, aber no one could him know—he
-was in the wasser—de water—so long—_oh das Kalte, Kalte Wasser!_ so many,
-many days. I took more of the fever—und go out of my head—und so I never
-my Liebling seen again.”
-
-The cry that was heard in Ramah, “_Oh, that cold, cold water!_”
-
-Then, later on, there came a little box of tin-iron, “mit a hole cut in
-the on-top side.” But let _Mother Treegood_ tell it in her own way:
-
-“One day there came by the express company a little bundle. When it
-was opened—it was an oyster can—a box of tin-iron, mit a hole cut in
-the on-top side. The letter was from de other boy—und it say—that his
-brudder, who vas ver-drownded, did begin his business life in a hotel
-in Cincinnetty, as a bellboy, und he safe his money und put it in the
-oyster can. Und in dat oyster box was the shin-plasters, the five
-centses, und de ten centses—yoost as he take them in for noospapers and
-shoe-blacking—und it was yoost enough, ach mein lieber Gott!—yoost enough
-to pay for his grave at Brookfill.”
-
-Surely this is very effective. It probably happened just that way. To
-know that it could, and perhaps _did_, is just the right impression for
-the author of a novel to make on the reader.
-
-Another splendid episode is that wherein a “run on the bank” begins,
-as the funeral of Colonel Quillmore is in progress. The chapters which
-relate the tragedy, the fire in the Colonel’s laboratory, the wild ride
-of _Father Lessing_ and _Uncle I’_; the dramatic climax where _Mrs.
-Quillmore_ lashes herself into raving madness; the funeral procession
-whose mourners get caught up in the growing excitement of the “run on the
-bank,” and leave the hearse to fly to the bank for their money; the nerve
-and resource of _Doc. Gus_ in saving the bank, and in saving the cashier
-from the would-be lynchers—are chapters which bear convincing testimony
-to the power and creativeness of the author.
-
-The book is so finely conceived and written that one is tempted to scold
-the author for a few glaring faults which are well-nigh inexcusable.
-
-Why paint _L’Oiseau_ so black when he was to be white-washed at the end?
-There was no need to have him behave so brutally to the boy, _Lanny
-Quillmore_. It was a blunder to make him insult the boy, incur the
-hatred of the boy, assault the boy, and drive the boy from his own home.
-The lad is allowed to think and believe that _L’Oiseau_ is on terms of
-criminal intimacy with _Mrs. Quillmore, Lanny’s_ mother. There was no
-necessity for this. If _L’Oiseau_ was brother-in-law to _Mrs. Quillmore_,
-and was prompted by paternal interest in paying her such suspicious
-attention, and in being out in the woods with her at unseasonable hours
-in the night, why permit the lady’s son to torture himself under a
-misapprehension?
-
-What earthly reason was there for keeping from her only son a knowledge
-of the fact that _L’Oiseau_ was her brother-in-law, and that her abnormal
-physical and mental condition required these unusual and suspicious
-attentions from him?
-
-Again, _L’Oiseau_ was rambling about at night with _Mrs. Quillmore_ when
-she lost consciousness, fell by the wayside, was found by the priest, and
-succored by _Doc. Gus_.
-
-What had become of her escort, _L’Oiseau_?
-
-He had mysteriously disappeared, and _Doc. Gus_ had a right to put the
-worst construction upon his conduct. _Father Lessing_ knew the truth; why
-did _Father Lessing_ allow _Doc. Gus_ to remain in ignorance?
-
-But the most serious blunder in the plot relates to the climax—the fire
-in _Colonel Quillmore’s_ laboratory.
-
-_Doc. Gus_ sees the shadow of two men thrown upon the window shade. Only
-one of these men is accounted for, and the reader is left not only in
-doubt as to what happened, but in hopeless confusion. He cannot adopt any
-theory which will explain _all the facts_.
-
-Now, _that_ is against the rules. Let the plot be ever so complicated,
-the mystery ever so deep, the author _must_ either clear it up himself,
-or furnish the reader with the clue. Wilkie Collins, in spite of his
-bewildering tangles, unravels everything before he quits. In “Edwin
-Drood,” the book which Dickens was writing when death interrupted the
-story, the author had constructed one of his most involved and difficult
-plots. Before he had furnished the key to the riddle, he died. Yet
-Edgar Allan Poe was able to tell, with unerring certainty, just how the
-story was meant to end. By a keen analysis of the facts which Dickens
-had already related, and by a course of reasoning that left no room for
-doubt, Poe demonstrated that _Jasper_, the guardian and devoted friend
-of _Edwin Drood_, had murdered him; that jealousy was the motive; that
-the body of the victim was hidden in the new tomb which the inflated ass,
-_Sapsea_, had recently built for the deceased _Mrs. Sapsea_; and that the
-corpse was located by old _Durdles_, the drunken workman whose skill with
-his hammer was so great that he could, by tapping, tapping, tapping on
-the outside or a wall, tell whether a foreign substance, such as a human
-body, was inclosed within.
-
-Poe’s own matchless story, “The Gold Bug,” illustrates the rule which
-Mr. Chatterton broke. There are all sorts of mystifications to start
-with, but they are cleared up at the end.
-
-Even in Frank Stockton’s famous “The Lady or the Tiger,” the rule is
-kept. The reader is left in a dilemma, but he can clear up everything by
-choosing one horn or the other. If he says that it is the lady who is
-behind the door which is about to be opened, no mystery remains. If he
-says that it is the tiger which is behind the door, nothing is left of
-the puzzle.
-
-But in the Quillmore story there is no possible explanation _which will
-dispose of the facts_. If _Colonel Quillmore_ died in the laboratory,
-and _L’Oiseau_ did _not_ kill him, who did? What about the _two_ men
-quarreling in there at the time of the tragedy? What becomes of that
-other man? And how could _Quillmore’s_ son meet him again in Paris? With
-the exception of _L’Oiseau_, no one had _the motive_ to kill _Colonel
-Quillmore_; and the author made a point of showing that other people were
-afraid to go near the laboratory.
-
-But if the _Colonel_ did _not_ die in the laboratory, how did his false
-teeth get into the mouth of the dead man when _Doc. Gus_ dragged him out
-of the flames? How did the _Colonel’s Masonic ring_ get on the dead man’s
-finger? How did the _Colonel_ make his escape without being seen, and,
-_who was it that he quarreled with and killed before he fled_? Nobody
-appears to have been missing from the neighborhood. Usually when somebody
-is killed, somebody is missed.
-
-Had Mr. Chatterton refrained from putting another man in the laboratory,
-had he left the _Colonel_ dead in the flames, identified by his Masonic
-ring, had he left the reader to suppose that the sudden death of the
-_Colonel_ and the sudden blaze which broke out in the building resulted
-from some dangerous chemical experiment, such as the _Colonel_ delighted
-in—the story would have lost not a grain of interest and would have
-escaped a flagrant violation of the rules of literary construction.
-
-
- =The Game and the Candle.= By Frances Davidge. D. Appleton &
- Co., New York.
-
-Frances Davidge set herself too difficult a task when she attempted to
-make the characters in her novel. “The Game and the Candle,” speak in
-epigrams on every other page. The consequence is that the story, with
-its really brilliant beginning, develops into a commonplace love-story,
-and is only saved from absolute banality by its unforeseen and dramatic
-ending. In the field of literature which attempts to picture New York
-society the story will not find an enduring place, but it serves its
-purpose very well. The novelists are numberless who have sought to
-satirize our men and women of wealth and leisure; but few have given us
-any books that have lived longer than their allotted span of one brief
-season. The big society novel has not yet been written. Miss Davidge
-evidently knows a great deal of the foibles, the follies and the manners
-of the people of whom she writes, and her career is worth watching. At
-present she seems a bit immature and prolix, but there is no doubt as
-to her ability to write amazingly clever dialogue and to tell a story
-logically and well. Some of her characters are greatly overdrawn. One
-wishes that there were less of _Gussie Regan_, the hair-dresser; and
-_Emily Blair_, lovable as she is, could never have existed. Altogether,
-however, the story is pleasing and will find, doubtless, a large and
-appreciative audience.
-
- H. C. T.
-
-
- =The Carlyles.= By Mrs. Burton Harrison. D. Appleton & Co., New
- York.
-
-In “The Carlyles” Mrs. Burton Harrison relinquishes the modern field
-which she has occupied for so long and with such marked success, and goes
-back to Civil War times for the scenes of her story. The Reconstruction
-period has been covered by innumerable writers. Indeed, it has been so
-frequently used by novelists and proven so fruitful a field, that one is
-apt to be overcome at the courage of an author who selects it now as the
-background for a tale; but Mrs. Harrison brings a certain freshness and
-charm to a subject that, it would seem, could inspire none. The opening
-chapter, which describes the impoverished condition of the _Carlyles_,
-brought on by the ravages of war, reveals the author at her best, and
-shows her intimate knowledge of life in Richmond in the ’60’s. The
-splendid fortitude of old _Mr. Carlyle_ in the face of his calamity and
-financial ruin, and the pride of the aristocratic Southerner are depicted
-with faultless art.
-
-The story itself is the old one of a girl who is unable to choose between
-two lovers, one of whom, of course, is a Yankee soldier and the other
-a Southerner fighting as a lieutenant-colonel under Lee. The usual
-complications occur. _Lancelot Carlyle_, a cousin and lover of _Mona_,
-the heroine, is imprisoned at Fort Delaware, and of the long period of
-his confinement Mrs. Harrison writes graphically, describing minutely the
-terrible ordeal of prison life. Fine as this portion of the novel is,
-however, it is in the chapters dealing with quiet domestic scenes that
-Mrs. Harrison writes with most force and distinction. The incident of the
-Christmas dinner-party, with the unheralded return of _Lancelot_ and the
-sudden death of old _Alexius Carlyle_, is handled with consummate skill.
-The author has written no finer passage in any of her previous novels,
-nor one more certain to move her readers to tears.
-
- H. C. T.
-
-
- =The House of Mirth.= By Edith Wharton. Charles Scribner’s Sons.
-
-Undoubtedly no novel during the past season has elicited more favorable
-criticism and more numerous letters from constant readers than “The
-House of Mirth.” The book had a certain artificial success from the
-start, because the impression went abroad that here at last was a book
-about Society, meaning the smallest number of the narrowest brains in
-any community from Kankakee to New York. On this very account there are
-a few millions of people in the United States who would not care to read
-it; but in view of the fact that some of the most serious critics have
-hailed “The House of Mirth” as a great American novel—only the bookseller
-now speaks of _the_ American novel—a good many of the few millions, being
-persons of means and intelligence, would be tempted to indulge themselves
-in the rare luxury of such a boon. We cannot profess to treat the book as
-a true picture of American Society; because while we know how to wear the
-clothes and order the things to eat and drink, when we have the money,
-we have never, in our best-dressed and best-fed moments, been able to
-convince ourselves that we are anything but hopelessly middle class. Yet
-we are happy—sometimes; and we are bound to marvel at some of the things
-the society people in “The House of Mirth” do. For the most part they act
-like those people in New York who are loosely described as Fifth-avenue
-bohemians, which means they are people of much money, thoroughly informed
-about the decorative issues of life, with nothing to do but bore
-themselves and with a taste and intelligence that, in literature or the
-theatre, never craves anything more exciting than a musical show or a
-third-class novel, written by a man in Chicago, about lords and ladies
-of some corner lost and forgotten in Continental Europe. Our marvel that
-these society people should seem so underbred is only an exhibition of
-our unfamiliarity with a certain social stratum. We would have no right
-to make record of it, if it were not for the fact that so many people, of
-the better class themselves, have written letters of protest to divers
-publications, protesting against the impression that “The House of Mirth”
-is a story accurately representing New York society. We quote one letter
-from the _New York Times Saturday Review_:
-
- “I am not a literary man, much less a literary critic, but
- I look forward each week to the appearance of _The New York
- Times Book Review_ with renewed interest and read the various
- criticisms of your readers as to the merits of “The House of
- Mirth,” which in almost every instance meets their approval as
- a literary production of unusual merit. The writer, however, an
- octogenarian, born and bred in New York City, member of one of
- its oldest families and presumably familiar with its society,
- can but look upon “The House of Mirth” as a gross libel upon
- that society, and as an insult to a class as pure, as refined,
- and as intellectual as may be found the world over....
-
- “That such a condition as is therein described does exist in
- the lower strata of New York society, which may be termed
- swelldom, composed largely of “newrich” who swarm from other
- parts of the country to exploit their newly acquired wealth in
- showy equipages, wondrous wardrobes, and loud manners to the
- disgust of refined people, cannot be denied; but why a lady
- who has the entrée into the best society should elect to open
- the sewers of its lowest strata and allow its fœtid airs to
- escape through the medium of her pen is beyond the ken of your
- contributor.”
-
- T. R. W.
-
-For our part, we prefer to depend upon the octogenarian who has just
-spoken, and who asserts his membership in one of the oldest families in
-New York, for an opinion upon the accuracy of “The House of Mirth” as a
-Society novel. As a novel pure and simple it seems to us to be radically
-defective in imaginative power, slow and cumbrous in construction, and
-wholly ineffective to impose an illusion. We say this with regret because
-we have read a good many of the author’s short stories from the time
-the first volume of them was issued; and the impression conveyed by her
-work in the short story field, as contrasted by the impression of this
-novel, makes clearer to us than ever the conviction that to write a short
-story a short-story writer is required, and to write a novel a novelist,
-and they have always been two persons from Mr. Kipling down and across.
-The author’s style is clear, sharp, refined, as before; but the gross
-defect of “The House of Mirth” is that the characters are pushed here and
-there by the author like so many wooden soldiers on a cardboard field
-of battle. They have no more volition than marionettes. In fact they
-are merely described names except in the instances of the three chief
-characters. One could have borne with the waxlike fibre of the attendant
-persons if the figure of _Lily Bart_, the heroine, would stand the gaze
-of the naked eye during even half the book. _Lily_ is described by the
-author as possessing a fine sense of diplomacy in intercourse with the
-people of her set, yet her whole register of action from the first page
-reveals her as moving through the comedy without prudence, yet without
-conscience, with maneuver, yet without skill; with an under-appeal to
-the reader’s sympathy, yet exasperating the reader until in the moment
-of tragedy he feels that the heroine deserved all she got and ought to
-have got it sooner. But, when one gets away from the book, one feels that
-the fault is not the fault of the character, but of the author who has
-paltered by trying to make literary academics and psychology square with
-life itself and a good story.
-
-The minor irritations of the book are the absolutely fictional flavor of
-the names of most of the characters, the use of English or Continental
-idiom, and the mummery of the illustrations. Among the English
-phrases which the author so much affects is the word _charwoman_ for
-_scrubwoman_. It may be that Society calls a scrubwoman a charwoman, but
-we would like to see any society man or woman do it to the lady’s face.
-
-It is announced that Clyde Fitch is to dramatize “The House of Mirth” for
-production next fall and that he will adhere to the construction of the
-story as much as possible. The book is worthy of Mr. Fitch’s lofty talent.
-
- R. D.
-
-
- =Letters and Addresses.= By Abraham Lincoln. Unit Book
- Publishing Company.
-
-Even if there were a man, at this day of awakening in the United States,
-who could honestly say he had no interest in politics, providing he had
-any intelligence at all and ambition to think, he could not pass over
-such a book as “Lincoln’s Letters and Addresses” for the simple reason
-that on account of the style alone, the reading of them is a solace and
-a refreshment that endures. Of course, most of us are familiar with the
-addresses and the letters that have been so widely quoted, repeated, and
-learned by heart in school, that they are become as household words;
-but in such a book as this, containing infinite riches in little room,
-one secures not only the loftiest kind of pleasure but also a strangely
-intimate and attractive vision and understanding of the gaunt, unshapely
-figure whose genius towers higher as the years are added to the history
-of our country.
-
- R. D.
-
-
- =Contrite Hearts.= By Herman Bernstein. A. Wessels Company, New
- York.
-
-Some books are interesting because of their content alone; some only on
-account of the personality of their author: some for the reason that both
-the author and the content of his book are humanly valuable. Of the third
-distinction is “Contrite Hearts,” a story of Jewish life in Russia and
-the United States, by a writer who on occasion before has shown that he
-can use an alien language with simplicity and force. He has shown before
-also that he can present a picture of the people of his race without bias
-and with a due understanding of their defects and qualities. The Jew in
-America as presented in melodrama is a creation almost wholly of the
-romance spirit of the theatre. It is not to be denied that the prevalence
-of the very poor Jews in the lowest ranks of traffickers among men has
-provided an obvious type. In sharp contrast to this is the growing
-dominance of the Jew in the very highest ranks of commerce. Between the
-two must of necessity exist the Jew of the middle class; and all these
-varieties of the race have expanded to their utmost in the United States
-rather than in any other country. From a purely artistic standpoint,
-therefore, there is nothing more evident than that the field of Jewish
-manners and customs is wide and rich ground for the novelist. The
-transmutation in one generation of a peasant in Russia, with no rights
-beyond those of a street mongrel, to a man in the most advanced as well
-as the most vigorous civilization of the day, is material too obvious to
-be overlooked by the most casual scribe.
-
-Mr. Bernstein, while not a writer of dramatic quality has that quieter
-and more sincere gift native to Russians, whether Jew or Gentile, of
-presenting life as an actuality against the artificial background of the
-printed page. Many who are called novelists among ourselves, and who have
-never talked or written any language but English, could learn a good deal
-of simplicity from this foreign-born author. Of course, one runs across
-the traces of his birth in certain peculiarities that even constant
-practice cannot wear out. These blemishes, however, are never vulgar as
-are the strainful phases of an indigenous author who uses his language as
-a race-track tout spreads himself with the flashy colors and fabrics that
-the clothier and the haberdasher of his station provide. It is rather
-interesting to hear what one of the characters in “Contrite Hearts” has
-to say of this country.
-
-“Here in America it is different. All are equal. Everyone is free.
-And all roads to success are open to the able, the enterprising, the
-persevering. There is no difference here between Jew and Gentile.
-People flock hither from all lands, and within a few years the Jew, the
-Frenchman, the German, the Irishman, the Italian—all are proud that they
-have become American. You ask me about the Jews, about Jewish affairs,
-about Jewish institutions—well, we have various kinds of Jews here.
-Orthodox Jews—these are the plain Jews like ourselves. Reform Jews—Jews
-who imitate the ways of the Christian. There are also Jews here who try
-to be both Orthodox and reform at the same time—that is, neither this nor
-that.”
-
-Is this all true?
-
- R. D.
-
-
- =Politics in New Zealand.= By Prof. Frank Parsons. Edited by
- Dr. C. F. Taylor. Dr. C. F. Taylor, Publisher, Philadelphia, Pa.
-
-This is one of the Equity Series published quarterly by Dr. Taylor, and
-contains the chief portions of the political parts of a book entitled,
-“The Story of New Zealand,” by Prof. Frank Parsons and Dr. Taylor. The
-latter is a large, heavy book selling at $3.00, and is doubtless the most
-complete history of New Zealand and exposition of present conditions
-there ever published. It is a beautifully illustrated volume containing
-860 pages, and includes history, description, the native people (the
-Maoris) and their treatment by the whites, the splendid resources of the
-country, and, more than all, a full and interesting account of the rise
-and development of the remarkable institutions and government of New
-Zealand which are attracting the attention of all the rest of the world.
-
-As Dr. Taylor well says in his explanatory note in “Politics in New
-Zealand,” the size and cost of the “Story of New Zealand” prevent it from
-reaching the masses of our people, and the political facts, particularly
-of that progressive country should reach the mind and thought of our
-voters. “It is,” he says, “with a view of placing these political facts
-within the easy reach of the masses of our people, that I have selected
-the most important of these facts from the large book and arranged
-them as you see them in this unpretentious pamphlet.” “Politics in New
-Zealand” is now being used in combination with subscriptions to WATSON’S
-MAGAZINE. (See advertising pages.)
-
-The great value of “Politics in New Zealand” lies in the fact that it
-gives the workings of many Populistic ideas put into actual practice. In
-this country the People’s Party has been obliged to theorize and resort
-to an appeal to the reasoning faculties of the people. It has been unable
-to point out many illustrations of the actual working of its theories,
-except by reference to foreign countries. For example, to sustain its
-contention for public ownership of railroads, it has been obliged to use
-the lines in Germany and other monarchies as illustrations. The United
-States is such a vast domain as compared with countries in Continental
-Europe, that considerable discrimination is necessary in order to draw
-a fair conclusion. Besides, the European countries are so old that the
-habits of the people are a great factor not to be lightly dismissed. In
-using New Zealand, however, as our object lesson, the conditions are
-more, nearly parallel. It is true that country is much smaller than
-the United States, but in point of age and habits of the people, there
-is much similarity. Accordingly, New Zealand is without doubt the best
-object lesson in the world for proving the soundness of Populistic
-theories.
-
-Those who have either bought or sold real estate in the older portions
-of the United States, understand the difficulties and uncertainties
-surrounding land titles under the system which is in vogue generally. As
-Prof. Parsons points out, it is often necessary to search through many
-big volumes of deeds and mortgages, and carefully construe the provisions
-of various wills and conveyances in order to follow the title to its
-source, and form an opinion as to its validity. And even then the opinion
-of the most accomplished expert may prove fallacious, and the purchaser
-may lose his land through some defect of title. As early as 1860 the
-New Zealanders passed an act to remedy this condition of things by
-establishing what is known as the Torrens system of title registration.
-The owner of land may give the registrar his deeds and the claims of all
-persons interested, and the registrar investigates the title once for
-all. He accepts it if he finds it valid, and registers the applicant as
-proprietor, giving him a certificate to that effect. The certificate
-gives an indefeasible title in fee, subject only to such incumbrances and
-charges as may be entered on the register. An independent purchaser has
-only to consult the register to learn at once who is the owner of the
-land, and what burdens, if any, rest upon it. He is not obliged to trace
-the title back to the Government Patent. This system is now in force in
-some places in the United States, but its adoption is generally opposed
-by those who profit by examining titles—that is to say, the lawyers.
-
-There were some telegraph lines constructed under the provincial
-governments of New Zealand prior to 1865, but nothing was done in a
-national way until that year. Then the General Assembly authorized the
-Governor to establish electric telegraphs and appoint a commissioner
-to manage them. Existing lines and offices were to be purchased, new
-lines built, and a national system developed. The commissioner made
-the regulations, fixed the rates, and employed operators to transmit
-all messages presented. Afterward the telegraphs became a part of the
-postal system. This naturally led to government ownership and operation
-of the telephone when the latter means of transmitting intelligence was
-introduced. It is also a part of the postal system, and as Prof. Parsons
-points out, “The Government is ‘hello-girl’ as well as postmaster,
-telegraph operator and banker.”
-
-Mr. Gladstone secured the establishment of postal savings banks in
-England in 1861. New Zealand adopted the idea in 1865, and since that
-time nearly every country in the civilized world, except the United
-States, has followed England’s example. The object of the New Zealand
-Post Office Savings Bank Act (1865) was stated to be: “To give additional
-facilities for the deposits of small savings at interest, and with the
-security of the Government behind it.” Practically all the money order
-offices in New Zealand (470 a few years ago) were open under the Postal
-Banking Law for the transaction of savings bank business, while there
-were but five private savings banks in the Islands. In New Zealand there
-is a place of bank deposit for each 1,800 people. In the United States
-there is one for each 7,650 people. The total deposits in all sorts
-of banks is $110 per head of population in the United States, $125 in
-Great Britain, and $140 in New Zealand. Comment seems to be unnecessary.
-The postal banks will not receive less than a shilling at a time, but
-printed forms are furnished on which stamps may be pasted, one or more
-at a time, until the total amounts to a shilling or more, when the slip
-can be deposited as cash to the amount of the stamps pasted on it. The
-great advantage of postal banking, and in fact all government banking, is
-its safety. No postal bank in any country has ever closed its door for
-liquidation, or experienced a run on its funds.
-
-In view of our insurance scandals and the recent investigation, the
-chapter on Government Insurance is especially interesting at this time.
-In 1870 New Zealand adopted the Australian ballot and a public works
-policy, together with a Government Life Insurance Department. As the
-author points out, “The philosophy of this new departure was very simple.
-The purpose of insurance is the diffusion of loss. Instead of allowing
-a loss to fall with crushing weight on one individual, or family, it is
-spread out over a large number of stockholders or premium payers. If
-it is a good thing to distribute loss over a few thousand people who
-hold stock in a given company or pay premiums to it, it is still better
-to distribute the loss over the whole community. It is also wise to
-eliminate the expenses and profits of insurance so far as may be, and put
-the guarantee of the Government behind it, so that it may reach as many
-people and afford as much security as possible.”
-
-The insurance department was popular from the very start. The latest
-report when this book was written (1901) showed in force 42,570 policies
-covering $51,000,000 of insurance, or practically half the total business
-of the Colony. The Government office had beaten the private companies in
-fair competition, for there was no attempt to exclude private insurance
-companies. It had, in 1901, a much larger business than any of the
-companies, and almost as much as all the companies put together. This
-refers, of course, to the ordinary life insurance business, for there
-were 21,000 policies in industrial societies, which were not included
-in the regular life insurance statement. Two of our companies mixed up
-in the recent scandal, the Equitable Life and the New York Life, had,
-in 1901, been in the Colony 15 and 13 years respectively. The Equitable
-had 717 policies in force and the New York Life 139, as against 42,570
-Government policies.
-
-The people of New Zealand prefer the Government insurance because of
-its safety—it has the guarantee of the Government behind it. It is in
-no danger of vanishing through insolvency, as ordinary insurance does
-now and then. Because of its cheapness, the rates being lower than
-any ordinary private companies; and because of its freedom from all
-oppressive conditions. The only conditions are that the premiums must be
-paid, and the assured must not commit suicide within six months after
-the insurance is taken out. As Professor Parsons says, “The policy is
-world-wide. The assured may go where he will, do what he likes—get
-himself shot in battle, smoke cigarettes, drink ice-water and eat plum
-pudding, or commit suicide under the ordinary forms after six months,
-and the money will still be paid to his relatives.” Instead of wasting
-valuable time and gray matter on devising schemes to prevent scoundrels
-from looting private insurance companies, why not devote a little
-thought to inaugurating a system of government insurance?
-
-An unique institution in New Zealand is the Public Trust office,
-established in 1872. Its purpose is to serve as executor, administrator,
-trustee, agent, or attorney, in the settlement and management of the
-property of decedents, or others, who for any reason are unable or
-unwilling to care for it themselves; to insure honest administration and
-safe investment; to provide for a wise discretion that may avoid the
-difficulties and losses incident to a strict fulfilment of wills and
-trusts imperfectly drawn; and to give advice and draw up papers, wills,
-deeds, and other instruments for the people in all parts of the Colony.
-
-“In the earlier years,” says the author, “nominations for representatives
-were made and seconded vocally at an assembly of the voters of the
-district. But since the Act of September (1890) representatives are
-nominated by petition in writing, signed by two or more voters of the
-district, transmitted with the candidates’ assent and a $50 deposit
-to the returning officer, who immediately publishes the names of the
-candidates. Each candidate must be nominated on a separate paper which
-must be transmitted to the returning officer at least seven days before
-the polling day. If the nominee doesn’t get one tenth as many votes as
-the lowest successful candidate, the $50 deposit is forfeited to the
-public treasury. This shuts out frivolous nominations. The nominations
-are usually made some time before the voting day, and the candidates go
-about the district and meet and address the electors in all parts of it.
-No candidate would stand any chance of election who failed to give the
-people he wished to represent an opportunity to get acquainted with him
-and ask him questions about his attitude on issues likely to come before
-the next Parliament. Seamen, sheep-shearers and commercial travelers are
-permitted to vote by mail. Such person gets a ballot paper filled up
-by the Postmaster with the names of the candidates in the applicant’s
-district, and the postal voter then marks the ballot and mails it.”
-
-Another Populistic economic theory put in practice in New Zealand is the
-Land and Income Assessment Act which abolishes the personal property tax
-and establishes graduated taxation on land values and incomes. The avowed
-objects of the law are to tax “according to ability to pay,” “to free
-the small man,” and, “to burst up monopolies”; and its cardinal features
-are the exemption of improvements and of small people and the special
-pressure put on the big monopolies and corporations and on absentees.
-
-All improvements are exempt. All buildings, fencings, draining, crops,
-etc.—all value that has been added by labor, all live stock also and
-personal property; only the unimproved value of the land is taxed.
-Mortgages are deducted also in estimating the land taxes as they are
-taxed to the lender. There is a small-estate exemption of $2,500, where
-the net value of the estate doesn’t exceed $7,500. So that if a farmer
-has no more than $2,500 of land value left after deducting improvements
-and mortgage liabilities from the value of his real property, he pays no
-land tax.
-
-Besides the three exemptions mentioned, there is another conditional
-exemption. If an old or infirm person owns land or mortgages returning
-less than $1,000 a year, and can show that he is not able to supplement
-his income, and that the payment of the tax would be a hardship, the
-commissioner may remit the tax. Here the custom is quite the other way.
-The millionaire swears off his tax. Out of 110,000 land owners, in New
-Zealand, only 16,000 pay tax.
-
-The graded tax begins when the unimproved value reaches $25,000. It rises
-from ¼ of a cent on the pound of $25,000 to 16⁄4ths, or 4 cents, a pound
-on a million dollars, or more, of unimproved value. This graduated tax is
-in addition to the ordinary level-rate land tax levied each year, which
-is 2 cents on the pound. Absentee owners of large estates have still
-another tax to pay. If the owner of an estate large enough to come under
-the graded tax has been out of the country a year, this graded tax is
-increased 20%.
-
-The income tax applies to net income from employment, and net profits
-from business. There is an absolute exemption of $1,500, except in the
-case of absentees, and companies whether absentees or not, and a further
-additional exemption up to $250 a year for life insurance premiums, if
-the citizen wishes to spend his money that way. All income derived from
-land or from mortgages, so far as they represent realty, is outside this
-tax, which affects only income from employment or business. The farmer,
-who derives all his income from land, pays no income tax. The same may be
-said of a lawyer, doctor, teacher, artisan, or any other person who makes
-no more than $1,500 a year. The total number of income-tax payers is only
-about 5,600.
-
-United States Consul Connolly, reporting to our Government in 1894 and
-1897, has considerable to say regarding taxation in New Zealand. He says
-that country excels in the matter of taxation. That in a very short time
-the system of taxation had been revolutionized and the incidence almost
-entirely changed, not only without disturbing to any appreciable extent
-existing interests, but with the most beneficial results. He says the
-income tax was most fiercely denounced as inquisitorial, destructive of
-the first principles of frugality and thrift—in fact all the forms of
-evil lurked in the shadows of the words “income tax,” and a united effort
-was made to resist this “iniquitous tax,” but all to no purpose. And that
-in 1897, after six years of experience, the more liberal and fair-minded
-of those who opposed the income tax frankly admitted that it is a fair
-and unembarrassing tax. “In New Zealand the land and income tax is now
-popular; it is accepted in lieu of the property tax; it is a success.”
-
-In the United States the Government is paternalistic toward banks,
-railroads and manufacturing interests. It loans its credit to the
-national bankers at most advantageous terms, but has persistently refused
-to favor other classes in a similar way. In New Zealand, however, in
-1894, there was established a Government loan office which lends public
-funds to farmers, laborers, business men, etc. at low interest, and on
-easy terms. The security taken is on freehold, or leasehold, interest
-clear of incumbrances and free of any breach of conditions. The loans are
-on first mortgage of land and improvements. No loan is to be less than
-$125, or more than $15,000, and the sum of the advances to any one person
-must not exceed $15,000. There are two kinds of advances, fixed loans
-and installment loans. The first may be for any period not exceeding ten
-years, and the principal is due at the end of that term. The second is
-for 36½ years, and part of the principal is to be paid each half year.
-Interest in both cases is at 4½%, if paid within fourteen days of the
-time it is due (5% if payment is not prompt); and in the case of an
-instalment loan, 1% more is to be paid for the reduction of the principal.
-
-Passing over the chapters devoted to the labor department, the state
-farm, the factory laws, the shop acts, the 8-hour day, industrial
-arbitration and co-operation, all of which are of intense interest,
-but of such a nature as to preclude brief statement, we come to the
-Government ownership and operation of the railways. The year 1894 Prof.
-Parsons calls “the glory year of land resumption. Government loans to
-farmers, nationalization of credit, labor legislation and judicialization
-of strikes and lock-outs.” It was in this year that another important
-move was made through a vital change in the national railway policy. In
-1887 a commission system was inaugurated, under which the roads were
-put in the hands of commissioners appointed by the Governor, with the
-assent of Parliament. This did not prove satisfactory to New Zealand. The
-commissioners managed the roads with a view to making a good financial
-report. They were looking for profit. In the Parliamentary debates it
-was charged that rates were so high that firewood went to waste in the
-forest, and potatoes rotted in the fields, while the people in the
-cities were cold and hungry in the years of depression; that goods were
-frequently hauled more cheaply by wagon than by rail; that while rates
-were reduced somewhat now and then, it was done by reducing wages; that
-the pay of the men was cut while the salaries of high-priced officials
-were increased, and so on. This is a striking parallel to conditions in
-the United States today.
-
-Prof. Parsons admits that the commissioners were honest, but they
-were simply railroad men, running the roads to make money for the
-treasury. Finally public indignation became intense. The air was full
-of complaints, and in 1893 the abolition of the commission was made an
-issue in the campaign, and the people, by an overwhelming majority,
-elected representatives pledged to put the roads under direct control of
-the Minister of Railways and the Parliament, and to bring the railroads
-within speaking distance of the people.
-
-The result of this change is that the roads are no longer run primarily
-for profit, but for service; and the men are treated with the
-consideration due to partners in the business. It is announced that the
-definite policy of the Government shall be that all profits above the 3%
-needed for interest on the railway debt shall be returned to the people
-in lower rates and better accommodations. This is in striking contrast to
-the facts brought out in the letter of Engineer William D. Marks to Hon.
-Wharton Barker, recently printed as a public document at the instance of
-Senator Tillman of South Carolina, in which it is shown that the people
-of the United States are today paying interest on a fictitious railway
-capitalization of something like $7,000,000,000.
-
-In 1899 the Minister of Railways announced a reduction of 20% on ordinary
-farm products and 40% on butter and cheese, etc. These concessions, Prof.
-Parsons declares, amount to one seventh of the receipts—equivalent to
-a reduction of $150,000,000 on the yearly freight rates in the United
-States. That alone would be a yearly saving of almost $2 a head for
-the people of the United States. In 1900 Mr. Ward, the new Minister of
-Railways, announced a general lowering of passenger fares as the first
-fruits of his administration. “The announcement was received with cheers
-by the audience—stockholders in the road.” Care is taken in New Zealand
-that small men shall not be put at a disadvantage. The State roads carry
-400 pounds at the same rate as the ton rate, or the train-load rate, and
-one bale of wool goes the same rate as a thousand. No such thing is known
-in New Zealand as the lowering of rates to a shipper because of the great
-size of his shipments. All the rates are made by the management openly.
-There are no secret modifications of the tariff. There may be a variation
-on scheduled rates to equalize a long haul, or enable a distant mine or
-factory to reach the market in condition to compete with nearer rivals,
-but the total charge is never lower than the rate that is given to others
-for the same service.
-
-The State roads are used to advance the cause of education. Children in
-the primary grades are carried free to school. Other children pay $2.50
-to $5, according to age, for a three-months season ticket up to sixty
-miles. This gives them a possible 120 miles a day for 3 to 6 cents in
-round numbers, or 20 to 40 miles for a cent. A child who goes in and out
-six miles each day rides 12 miles for 3 cents.
-
-It is impossible in the limits of this article to more than touch upon
-many of the other advances made in New Zealand. The Referendum is now
-used to a considerable extent in local affairs, and its use is being
-extended. Old age pensions are in force, being a much better method than
-maintaining poor houses. Immigration is carefully guarded. The State is
-now opening coal mines and engaging in the business of furnishing fuel to
-the people. Many other innovations of this character are being considered
-and put in operation from time to time.
-
-Prof. Parsons summarizes his study of New Zealand in some sharp contrasts
-and conclusions, from which we quote in part:
-
-“The United States is in form a Republic, but ... an aristocracy of
-industrial power. New Zealand is in form an Imperial Province, but in
-fact it is substantially a Republic. The will of the great body of the
-common people is in actual control of the Government.
-
-“In America, farmers organize for agricultural needs, and the working-men
-organize for labor purposes, but they do not join forces to take control
-of the Government in their common interest, as is the case in New
-Zealand. Not only have our farmers and workers failed to get together,
-but neither group has learned to use the ballot for its interest in any
-systematic way. The farmers divide at the polls and organized labor
-divides at the polls. In New Zealand the small farmers are practically
-solid at the ballot box, and organized labor is solid at the ballot, and
-the two solids are welded together into one irresistible solid.”
-
- C. Q. D.
-
-
- =BACK HOME. By Eugene Wood. S. S. McClure Co., New York.=
-
-It isn’t often that an author writes a real review of his own book. Well,
-maybe he does, too, but it seldom happens that he writes it as a preface
-to the book itself, very seldom that it is an interesting one, very, very
-seldom that it tells you what to expect to find in the book, and very,
-very, _very_ seldom that he isn’t too much wrapped up in his own private
-idea of his story to write a fair one from our point of view. However,
-Eugene Wood, being unconventional and other pleasing things, has done all
-this in the preface to his “Back Home.” When you have read the preface,
-you are glad you did, instead of feeling sorry you wasted time on it and
-fearful lest a book by the same author of that preface will be something
-of a bore. After Mr. Wood’s preface you know Mr. Wood and about what to
-expect in Mr. Wood’s book. You like one, and you know you are going to
-like the other.
-
-It would be the easiest thing in the world for the reviewer to sit down
-and write reams of “copy” on “Back Home” and the good things therein, but
-it is much more to the point for him who reads to listen to Mr. Wood
-himself. If you are human instead of petrified, you will enjoy both the
-preface and the book. Both reach for the heart-strings, and the terms—the
-term is good.
-
-Here is the larger part of the preface:
-
-“Gentle Reader:—Let me make you acquainted with my book, ‘Back Home.’
-(Your right hand, Book, your right hand, Pity’s sake: How many times have
-I got to tell you that? Chest up and forward, shoulders back and down,
-and turn your toes out more.)
-
-“Here’s a book. It is long? No. Is it exciting? No. Any lost diamonds
-in it? Nup. Mysterious murders? No. Whopping big fortune, now teetering
-this way, and now teetering that, tipping over on the Hero at the last
-and smothering him in an avalanche of fifty-dollar bills? No. Does She
-get Him? Isn’t even that. No ‘heart interest’ at all. What’s the use of
-putting out good money to make such a book; to have a cover-design for
-it; to get a man like A. B. Frost to draw illustrations for it, when he
-costs so like the mischief, when there’s nothing in the book to make a
-man sit up till ‘way past bedtime’? Why print it at all?
-
-“You may search me. I suppose it’s all right, but if it was my money,
-I’ll bet I could make a better investment of it. If worst came to worst,
-I could do like the fellow in the story who went to the gambling-house
-and found it closed up, so he shoved the money under the door and went
-away. He’d done his part.
-
-“And yet, on the other hand, I can see how some sort of a case can be
-made out for this book of mine. I suppose I am wrong—I generally am in
-regard to everything—but it seems to me that quite a large part of the
-population of this country must be grown-up people. If I am right in
-this connection, this large part of the population is being unjustly
-discriminated against. I believe in doing a reasonable amount for the aid
-and comfort of the young things that are just beginning to turn their
-hair up under, or who rub a stealthy forefinger over their upper lips
-to feel the pleasant rasp, but I don’t believe in their monopolizing
-everything. I don’t think it’s fair. All the books printed—except, of
-course, those containing valuable information; we don’t buy those books,
-but go to the public library for them—all the books printed are concerned
-with the problem of How She got Him, and He can get Her.
-
-“Well, now. It was either yesterday morning or the day before that you
-looked in the glass and beheld there The First Gray Hair. You smiled a
-smile that was not all pure pleasure, a smile that petered out into a
-sigh, but nevertheless a smile, I will contend. What do you think about
-it? You’re still on earth, aren’t you? You’ll last the month out, anyhow,
-won’t you? Not at all ready to be laid on the shelf? What do you think
-of the relative importance of Love, Courtship, and Marriage? One or two
-other things in life just about as interesting, aren’t there? Take
-getting a living, for instance. That’s worthy of one’s attention, to a
-certain extent. When our young ones ask us: “Pop, what did you say to Mom
-when you courted her?” they feel provoked at us for taking it so lightly
-and so frivolously. It vexes them for us to reply: “Law, child! I don’t
-remember. Why, I says to her: ‘Will you have me?’ and she says: ‘Why,
-yes, and jump at the chance.’” What difference does it make what we said
-or whether we said anything at all? Why should we charge our memories
-with the recollections of those few foolish months of mere instinctive
-sex-attraction when all that really counts came after, the years wherein
-low passion bloomed into lofty Love, the dear companionship in joy and
-sorrow, and in that which is more, far more than either joy or sorrow,
-“the daily round, the common task?” All that is wonderful to think of in
-our courtship is the marvel, for which we should never cease to thank the
-Almighty God, that with so little judgment at our disposal we should have
-chosen so wisely.
-
-“If you, Gentle Reader, found your first gray hair day before yesterday
-morning, if you can remember, ’way back ten or fifteen years ago—er—er—or
-more, come with me. Let us go ‘Back Home.’ Here’s your transportation,
-all made out to you, and in your hand. It is no use my reminding you
-that no railroad goes to the old place. It isn’t there any more, even
-in outward seeming. Cummins’s woods, where you had your robbers’ cave,
-is all cleared off and cut up into building lots. The cool and echoing
-covered bridge, plastered with notices of dead and forgotten Strawberry
-Festivals and Public Vendues, has long ago been torn down, to be replaced
-by a smart, red iron bridge. The Volunteer Firemen’s Engine-house, whose
-brick wall used to flutter with the gay rags of circus-bills, is gone
-as if it never were at all. Where the Union School-house was is all
-torn up now. They are putting up a new magnificent structure, with all
-the modern improvements, exposed plumbing, and spankless discipline.
-The quiet, leafy streets echo to the hissing snarl of trolley cars, and
-the power-house is right by the Old Swimming-hole above the dam. The
-meeting-house, where we attended Sabbath-school, and marveled at the
-Greek temple frescoed on the wall behind the pulpit, is now a church
-with a big organ, and stained-glass windows, and folding opera-chairs on
-a slanting floor. There isn’t any “Amen Corner,” any more, and in these
-calm and well-ordered times nobody ever gets “shouting happy”.
-
-“But even when “the loved spots that our infancy knew” are physically the
-same, a change has come upon them more saddening than words can tell.
-They have shrunken and grown shabbier. They are not nearly so spacious
-and so splendid as once they were.
-
-“Some one comes up to you and calls you by your name. His voice echoes in
-the chambers of your memory. You hold his hand in yours and try to peer
-through the false-face he has on, the mask of a beard or spectacles, or a
-changed expression of the countenance. He says he is So-and-so. Why, he
-used to sit with you in Miss Crutcher’s room, don’t you remember? There
-was a time when you and he walked together, your arms upon each other’s
-shoulders. But this is some other than he. The boy you knew had freckles,
-and could spit between his teeth, ever and ever so far.
-
-“They don’t have the same things to eat they used to have, or, if they
-do, it all tastes different. Do you remember the old well, with the
-windlass and chain fastened to the rope just above the bucket, the chain
-that used to cluck-cluck when the dripping bucket came within reach to be
-swung upon the well-curb? How cold the water used to be, right out of the
-north-west corner of the well! It made the roof of your mouth ache when
-you drank. Everybody said it was such splendid water. It isn’t so very
-cold these days, and I think it has a sort of funny taste to it.
-
-“Ah, Gentle Reader, this is not really ‘Back Home’ we gaze upon when we
-go there by train. It is a last year’s birds’ nest The nest is there;
-the birds are flown, the birds of youth, and noisy health, and ravenous
-appetite, and inexperience. You cannot go ‘Back Home’ by train, but here
-is the magic wishing-carpet, and here is your transportation in your hand
-all made out to you. You and I will make the journey together. Let us in
-heart and mind thither ascend.
-
-“I went to the Old Red School-house with you. Don’t you remember me? I
-was learning to swim when you could go clear across the river without
-once ‘letting down.’ I saw you at the County Fair, and bought a slab of
-ice-cream candy just before you did, I was in the infant-class in Sabbath
-School when you spoke in the dialogue at the monthly concert. Look again.
-Don’t you remember me? I used to stub my toe so; you ought to recollect
-me by that. I know plenty of people that you know. I may not always get
-their names just right, but then it’s been a good while ago. You’ll
-recognize them, though; you’ll know them in a minute.”
-
- A. S. H.
-
-
-
-
-_The Easter Hope_
-
-BY CORA A. MATSON DOLSON
-
-
- We look across the days of March,
- Of knife-keen winds, and barren hills,
- To where the skies of April arch
- Above the beds of daffodils.
-
- Oh, hearts of Hope! The hours are long,
- While melting drifts o’erflood the rills;
- Yet do these winds blow, keen and strong,
- Toward those beds of daffodils.
-
- The Easter promise cannot fail!
- The stone will move when God’s hand wills,
- And we again our loved ones hail,
- Who sleep, as sleep the daffodils!
-
-
-_Explained_
-
-MRS. GIVEM—Why are you out of work?
-
-WEARY WILLY—I was a life-insurance president and made so much money I had
-to resign.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _The Say of Other Editors_]
-
-
-Clark Howell’s politicians and newspaper supporters over the state are
-sending up a unanimous wail because TOM WATSON, a Populist, manifests
-some interest in Georgia politics. They swear he is trying to break up
-the Democratic party and gain control of the state. Well, what about
-Major J. F. Hanson, the Republican president of the Central Railway?
-He has been active in state politics for a long time, and wields more
-influence than a thousand ringsters who are “cussing” TOM WATSON. If it
-is a high crime for Populist Watson to take a hand in Georgia politics,
-what kind of crime is Republican Hanson guilty of when he joins Hamp
-McWhorter and Sam Spencer in a prolonged struggle to dominate the public
-policies and politics of Georgia? Will some of the political time-servers
-please answer?—_Newnan (Ga.) News._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The fact that Mr. Howell has never replied to the question why he was so
-anxious for Watson to call and see him, leads us to believe that he was
-after the same thing he accuses Smith of—attempting to get what honey he
-could out of the Populist beegum.—_Washington (Ga.) Reporter._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The latest proposition is to put the Quay statue at Harrisburg in
-a niche. That would be a good plan provided they wall up the niche
-afterward.—_Broken Bow (Neb.) Beacon._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The railroad rate bill was passed by the House by a vote of 346 to 7,
-last week Thursday.
-
-The bill is now up to the Senate. It may stay there for some time before
-it passes, if it is passed at all.
-
-The corporation-ridden Senate is a disgrace to a people who are said to
-elect their public servants. The men who made the Senate so far from the
-touch of the common people either were short-sighted, or defrauded the
-real American citizen out of one of the most necessary needs in this age
-of graft and political corruption.
-
-The Grange favors the direct nomination and election of our United States
-Senators, and in due course of time we, the people, shall be electors
-in deed and action. By direct vote of the people, making the senators
-responsible and answerable to the masses, alone can we inject purity into
-our elections and accomplish reform in public affairs.—_Sandusky (Mich.)
-Salinac Farmer._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Up to January 16 the _Congressional Record_ contained 2,300 columns
-of speeches made so far by congressmen, but it has to record only one
-important bill passed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-William Jennings Bryan’s costume in the honorable position of a “Datto”
-of Mindanao consists of a high hat and a black silk apron. In cold
-weather he is permitted to varnish his legs.—_McEwen (Tenn.) New Era._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The members of the lower house of Congress are debating the railroad rate
-bill this week. At the end of that time the public will know which ones
-are entitled to railroad passes under the new regulation of the companies
-that only employees are to receive them.—_Matthews (I. T.) News._
-
- * * * * *
-
-We admire patriotism but we don’t like toadyism. It makes us tired to see
-how quick some editors sneeze when a high official takes snuff. And when
-the snuff is taken purely and solely for political effect it makes it all
-the more disgusting.—_Marshville (N. C.) Our Home._
-
- * * * * *
-
-“This is the time,” says Senator Platt, “when little bosses will find
-their level.” And it is also the time when some great bosses are finding
-rock bottoms.—_Stanberry (Mo.) Owl._
-
- * * * * *
-
-What’s the difference between a street curb boodler and one that
-sells out for a promise of an appointment? Ans.—One gets his money
-before voting while the other gets it afterwards, if he does not get
-left—principle same.—_Batavia (O.) Democrat._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Why are all the candidates opposing Hoke Smith? There must be some
-reason for it. Everyone had faith in him, believed him far superior to a
-majority of other people, until he got into the race. Why this change?
-Why so many attacks upon him? Is it because he is advocating reforms
-which have already been adopted by several of the other Southern states?
-It must be because he stands for something, and is not ashamed or afraid
-to tell what it is.—_Marietta (Ga.) Courier._
-
- * * * * *
-
-With Clark Howell devoting most of his time to “cussing” out TOM WATSON,
-Hoke Smith is sailing smoothly on to the gubernatorial chair.—_Dalton
-(Ga.) Citizen._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The New York Sun puts it this way: “If John Mitchell’s statement at the
-miners’ convention is not a bluff, there will be either an enormous
-increase in the coal bills of the American people or the most costly and
-disastrous strike the country has ever seen.” But what do the mine owners
-and the striking mine workers care about that, so long as the people
-who buy the coal are willing to bear their suffering in silence—paying
-without a murmur any price the coal barons put on their product; and
-feeling well assured that nothing will be done by the suffering people
-to change the laws by which these barons are enabled to inflict this
-suffering.—_Waterbury (Conn.) Examiner._
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the last ten years stocks and bonds amounting to $12,500,000,000
-have been floated in this country. This additional capitalization of
-the industries and railroads of the country is about equal to the total
-value of all grain crops raised by the farmers during the same period.
-It is one-third more than the total value of the products of all mines
-in the country for the same period. It is equal to one-eighth of the
-total wealth of the United States in 1900. That is the way the “great”
-financiers absorb the wealth produced by the toilers of the nation. After
-studying the above statistics you may realize the force of Gov. Johnson’s
-statement that fictitious valuation and the consequent tax on the
-producers is the great curse of this country. Ignatius Donnelly used to
-tell a story about a hen that laid an egg in a nest fitted with a false
-bottom. The egg disappeared, and the hen laid another, continuing in her
-vain effort to have an egg show up in the nest until there was nothing
-left of her but the feathers. The fictitious capitalization is the false
-bottom that takes the products of the laborer, leaving him nothing to
-show for his efforts.—_Willmar (Minn.) Tribune._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Hepburn rate bill now pending in Congress is nothing more nor less
-than the Hearst bill with a few loopholes in it for the convenience
-of those railroad companies that may desire to side-step its
-provisions.—_Globe (Ariz.) Register._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The fact that the congressmen of both old parties are almost a unit for
-the railroad rate bill now pending in Congress, should be enough to
-satisfy any reasonable man that the people can get their rights only
-through a new party. The bill is a miserable pretense engineered by
-railroad tools in Congress, and its object is to make the people believe
-they are going to get relief through the old parties.—_Chillicothe (Mo.)
-World._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gov. Magoon testifies that men may be put to death in the Panama Canal
-zone without trial. It seems to be easier to put them to death than to
-put them to work.—_Athens (Ill.) Free Press._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The time has come when we need men that stand for something. The day is
-past when our forefathers stood for truth, honor, principle; and all that
-was right must be called into play again or this republic will be but an
-iridescent dream.—_Marion (Ala.) Democrat._
-
- * * * * *
-
-A writer in a recent issue of a so-called farm paper says the reason
-boys go to towns and cities to live is because they long for a life in
-which they will be independent of every one else on earth. Then why in
-thunder do they go to the cities to find it? A man might as well dig out
-gopher holes expecting to find wolves as to go to the cities to find an
-independent life. The place to find that is on the farm. Here we are our
-own boss, and if any one else does not like the way we do, we are in a
-position to tell him to go to—with no danger of losing our job.—_Irrigon
-(Ore.) Irrigator._
-
- * * * * *
-
-It now looks like Marion Butler is arranging to take charge of the
-Republican Party in North Carolina. We make no prediction about what will
-be or what will not be done. Those who know his past record will hesitate
-before surrendering entirely to a man who is so thoroughly repudiated by
-all classes in this state.—_Asheboro (N. C.) Courier._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Chicago Tribune asks: “Granting that it will take seven years to
-construct the Panama canal, have the seven years begun yet?” That is
-rather a hard question, not knowing the personality of the timekeeper.
-However, there is one thing in connection with the scheme that we are all
-well aware of—the big salaries of the political constructors have begun,
-all right.—_Farmington Valley Herald, Hartford, Conn._
-
- * * * * *
-
-According to the _Pantagraph_, Senator Cullom should be re-elected
-because he stayed in Washington after the session of Congress of last
-winter and did work that he was drawing a salary of $5,000 a year to do.
-The statement that his present illness was brought on by overwork seems
-preposterous. Who ever heard of a United States Senator overworking,
-unless it was to keep himself in office? From present indications, it
-seems that the people of the state are willing to give Mr. Cullom a rest
-from his overwork.—_Colfax (Ill.) Press._
-
- * * * * *
-
-John A. McCall, late head of a giant life insurance company, is dead,
-and, as far as mortal knows, is at rest for the first time for months.
-This erstwhile gentleman and master of high finance was “weighed in the
-balance and found wanting.” The weighing was done by fellow citizens,
-which made remorse all the more keen. Rapid decline followed and
-McCall, broken-hearted, deserted and despised, is gone. His fate should
-be an example to others who are tempted to do wrong. A half dozen other
-luminaries of New York, who were caught dead to rights in the insurance
-frauds, are fast following in McCall’s wake, and are even now all but
-ostracized by social and business associates. The weight of the common
-verdict against them is bearing heavily upon their shoulders, streaking
-their hair and furrowing their faces. Their sins are finding them
-out.—_Washington (Ill.) Register._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Old political systems are being broken up by the heat of public common
-sense and non-partisan movements. The independent American citizen
-and voter is going to make himself felt, by gosh!—_Mt. Vernon (Ind.)
-Unafraid._
-
- * * * * *
-
-John A. McCall has departed to the great bar of all time. There is no
-doubt but that shame and humiliation killed this proud, self-made man.
-
-Wrong-doing is bound to bring its death sentence to all lives, rich or
-poor.—_Milford Centre (O.) Ohioan._
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Some day, we pray to God, there will come a House which will hold tight
-the purse-strings, and, on some measure of right, say to our lords: ‘Pass
-the bill or get no money. We will go to the country on this issue.’ And
-then we will have achieved what the English House of Commons won in 1832,
-and our Senate will become the perfunctory body the House of Lords ever
-since has been.”—_St. Louis Dispatch._
-
-That sounds like it came from way up in the amen corner, and is likely to
-have many hearty responses.—_Salem (Va.) Times-Register._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mr. Rogers, of the Standard Oil Trust, is the last man in the world who
-should show contempt for the law. The law which is brought about through
-class legislation has enabled him to become a millionaire by robbing the
-public, and it is through respect for the law that an enraged public
-permits him to hold his ill-gotten gains.—_Rolla (Mo.) Sharp Shooter._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Well, the railroad rate bill has passed the House, with only seven
-negative votes—all Republicans. But in the Senate is where the tug-of-war
-comes.—_Malad (Ida.) People’s Advocate._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Pure food is once more an issue in both houses of Congress, and the bill
-bids fair to be defeated in the Senate, which numbers among its members
-not a few who have interests in groceries, fisheries, packing and canning
-houses that will be unfavorably affected by pure food legislation.
-The clause most necessary to the effectiveness of the bill, the one
-providing that all packages shall be labeled to show exactly the contents
-of the package whether medicine, food or beverage, and which enables the
-purchaser at least to know with what and when he is poisoning himself, is
-the very clause that seems in greatest danger of defeat.—_Adams (N. Dak.)
-Budget._
-
- * * * * *
-
-And now the assertion comes forth that a large white goat in a New York
-town by the name of Rockefeller, while the family heads were bowed
-in sorrow, climbed upon the porch and devoured the wreath of flowers
-which hung on the door. But, pshaw! that is only characteristic of the
-name—swiping all in sight.—_Wrens (Ga.) Reporter._
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is probable that when the Hepburn railway rate bill gets back to the
-lower house of Congress that it and its author will scarcely have a
-bowing acquaintance.—_Glenwood (Mo.) Phonograph._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The fight in Congress over the railway rate bill seems to center on court
-review of the orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Now the
-courts have the right under the Constitution to review all orders of the
-commission or they have not. Therefore why should the fight be over this
-feature of the bill unless the railroads believe that the courts have had
-this authority if denied in the measure, we are unable to comprehend. On
-the first blush we should say that the courts, if asked, would have this
-right, for they have claimed the right to review almost any and every
-thing till the Democratic Party was forced to denounce “government by
-injunction.” Still, the railroads occupy a peculiar position toward the
-people of the country.
-
-The stockholders in a railroad corporation have not the same rights the
-stockholders have in nearly every other corporate body.
-
-The railroads have been permitted to condemn our land for their use, but
-in so doing they incurred certain responsibilities to the public that are
-imposed on no other corporation.
-
-It would therefore seem but just that if railroads can force us to
-part with our real estate, surely we, the people, have a right to say
-that these roads shall be managed just as the people through their
-representatives in Congress desire, and unless such regulations are
-confiscatory the courts shall have no say.—_Tarboro (N. C.) Southern._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Having resigned from seventy corporations, Senator Depew must be awful
-lonesome when the directors meet and make a noise like declaring a
-dividend.—_Schaghticoke (N. Y.) Sun._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here is what we found in Sunday’s _Constitution_ about the Governor’s
-race.
-
-One article about Hoke Smith and Tom Watson brands them as assassins of
-Democracy. In another place is the following complimentary clipping
-about Estill: “The weekly papers are giving Colonel John H. Estill the
-squarest kind of a deal. The Savannahian is the man to watch and his
-following seems to be growing rapidly in all quarters of the state.”
-
-And on the same page is another clipping from the _Tifton Gazette_, in
-which Estill, Judge Russell and Mr. Howell are spoken of as men of the
-most sterling integrity, distinguished ability and unflinching honor, and
-either of them would do Georgia credit in the gubernatorial chair.
-
-Is it a wonder that the common people believe that Clark Howell, Estill
-and Judge Russell are in a combination to beat Hoke Smith?—_Lawrenceville
-(Ga.) Gwinnett Journal._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The old adage “competition is the life of trade” has been transformed
-to “combination is the life of trade” to suit the condition of the
-times.—_Oakland (Md.) Journal._
-
-“Wall Street Is Playing with Fire” is the startling head line in a local
-paper. There is no need for alarm, though. Wall Street has plenty of
-water to put out any fire.—_Almond (N. Y.) Gleaner._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The great copper war which for years has been waged between Heinze and
-the Amalgamated has been ended by what is practically a merger of the
-opposing interests. This fight between stock gamblers for the control
-of immense properties has for years divided the people of Montana
-into bitter factions, has disorganized politics, corrupted judges and
-legislatures and had a baneful effect upon all the people of the state.
-Now that the contending forces have made peace the public will probably
-be the more thoroughly fleeced.—_Warren (Minn.) Sheaf._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Precedent has been found which shows that Henry H. Rogers could have been
-legally made to testify. We have been of that opinion all the time, but
-it is only another instance where the sword of Justice and the law has
-proved insufficient when met by the shield and armor of gold.—_Santa Anna
-(Tex.) News._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Congress has decided to investigate the coal and oil trusts. A nice
-summer’s job is here cut out for somebody. It is hoped there will be
-no Garfield business about the investigation. The miserable failure
-Commissioner Garfield made of that Beef Trust investigation should be
-enough to disgust even a Roosevelt.—_Seaford (Del.) News._
-
- * * * * *
-
-According to a statement issued by the Bureau of Statistics last
-Saturday with reference to the number and value of farm animals in the
-United States, there are more cows than any other one domestic animal.
-But the horse, while next to the lowest in number, is more valuable.
-The mules rank lowest in number and the sheep lowest in value. The
-report shows that the total value of all the farm animals to be nearly
-$4,000,000,000.—_Hamilton (Tex.) Herald._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The United States Senate, by a vote of 38 to 27, has passed the shipping
-subsidy bill. The bill appropriates $200,000,000 of the taxpayers’
-money for the American merchant marine. What a lovely gift! Voting the
-people’s money to boost a class of wealthy business men. What a lovely
-principle!—_Veblen (S. Dak.) Advance._
-
- * * * * *
-
-While a lot of fellows have been sent to jail for stealing loaves of
-bread, hams, shoes and such, none of the big insurance thieves have even
-been indicted. Justice is not only blind, but she is deaf as a post,
-dumb as an oyster, and she couldn’t smell a fertilizer factory at ten
-feet.—_Pennsboro (W. Va.) News._
-
- * * * * *
-
-To judge from the Standard Oil witnesses in the New York investigation,
-we shall no doubt hear a demand for the Government to be ruled for
-contempt in wanting to know too much.—_Parco City (Okla.) Democrat._
-
- * * * * *
-
-John A. McCall, ex-president of the New York Life Insurance Company,
-who confessed that he stole hundreds of thousands of dollars belonging
-to widows and orphans and used the money as a corruption fund to help
-elect McKinley and Roosevelt presidents of the United States, is dead and
-gone,—we don’t know where, but if we were dead too, we wouldn’t hunt him
-up.—_Granville (Ia.) Gazette._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Members of the lower house are chuckling over the predicament one of
-their colleagues finds himself in. It seems the unsophisticated private
-secretary of this especial representative forwarded to Washington by
-mail three parts of a sectional bookcase, using his employer’s postal
-frank. The bookcases contained private books, and one of them is said to
-have concealed a miscellaneous collection of kitchen utensils intended
-for the owner’s home there. The entire collection was “unfrankable” and
-the local postmaster has called on the representative to pay postage on
-his property to the amount of $72. The name of the representative is
-being kept secret, but that doesn’t soothe his feelings to any great
-extent.—_Bowlder (S. Dak.) Pioneer._
-
- * * * * *
-
-President Roosevelt and Secretary Taft are said to favor a lock canal.
-If reports are true, that’s the matter with the project now. It’s locked
-with red tape and departmental interferences.—_Clifton (Tenn.) Mirror._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Governor Pattison of Ohio signed the Freiner two-cent fare bill which
-was accepted by the Senate and it is now a law. It will not go into
-effect, however, until thirty days have elapsed. The law provides that
-two cents shall be the maximum rate charged in Ohio for transporting
-passengers on the railroads of Ohio for all distances in excess of five
-miles.—_Winfield (La.) Comrade._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Senate has passed the corrupt subsidy bill granting $20,000,000 a
-year to the steel trust infant industry so that our merchant marine can
-compete with that of other nations. Isn’t that satisfactory evidence that
-U. S. senators should be elected by direct vote of the people? Remove
-the tariff and our ship builders can “compete” without a subsidy.—_Alva
-(Okla.) Renfrew’s Record._
-
- * * * * *
-
-There’s one consolation to the poor man when he thinks of John D.
-Rockefeller being the richest man in the world; he knows that the devil
-won’t let him bring a cent of it to hell with him.—_St Louis (Mo.)
-National Rip Saw._
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is just as true today as it ever was that the safest and most
-honorable way for a man to secure a competence is to do it little by
-little, taking a lifetime for the work. The haste to be rich and make
-money fast is the economic curse of America today. Every man wants to
-draw a prize in the business lottery and it is seldom indeed that he is
-content with small savings and safe investments.—_Headland (Ala.) Post._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Managers of the Hepburn Rate Bill contemplate providing it with a set of
-puncture-proof tires when it starts its round of the Senate.—_Alma (Neb.)
-Record._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The United States Senate passed a “Ship Subsidy Bill” the other day in
-just three minutes. Anything that has “Subsidy” (the proper word is
-graft) to it gets through just as soon as some member makes plain the
-amount of graft in the measure.—_Smith Crater (Kan.) Messenger._
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is being told that a Kansas man, accompanied by his little son,
-visited the Senate while in Washington last week and the boy was
-particularly interested in Edward Everett Hale, a magnificent looking old
-man. His father told him that he was the chaplain. “Oh, he prays for the
-Senate, doesn’t he?” asked the boy. “No,” replied the father, “he gets up
-and takes a look at the Senate and prays for the country.”—_Enid (Okla.)
-Echo._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Ohio legislature has passed a law making a uniform rate of two
-cents a mile on all railroads in that state. The railroads on the other
-hand have decided to cut off all forms of transportation except the
-two cent fare. This includes reduced transportation for conventions,
-1,000-mile books, all charity business, round trip rates, and clergymen’s
-rates.—_Stewartville (Minn.) Times._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Leslie Shaw, Secretary of the Treasury, says that we have the best
-banking system on earth. Still in the past few months failures in five
-national banks have footed up to almost $7,000,000. Now if these banks
-had had out a flood of asset currency, backed only by the assets of the
-banks, and no doubt they would have had, the Government would probably
-have lost as large a sum, and all of this would have had to come out of
-the people for the benefit of the speculators.—_Lansing (Mich.) Capital
-City Democrat._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The end of old Steve Elkins, the blocks-of-five-election buyer, he,
-who, with the aid of his father-in-law, Gassaway Davis, got control of
-most of the coal mines and railroads of West Virginia, is in sight. The
-extortions of the coal trust and railroad combine that Elkins organized
-have become so unbearable that the Republican governor of that state has
-appealed to Senator Tillman to secure an investigation. The Republicans
-of the Senate dare not deny it. When the truth comes out that will be the
-end of Elkins, for which all the people will give thanks unto God.—_Omaha
-(Neb.) Investigator._
-
- * * * * *
-
-They don’t seem to be doing much digging on that great canal, but they
-manage to bury a considerable amount of money there.—_Cresson (Tex.)
-Courier._
-
-
-_The Best_
-
-She (_indignantly_)—Stop, sir! You shall not kiss me again! How rude you
-are! Don’t you know any better?
-
-He (_cheerily_)—I haven’t kissed every girl in town, it is true, but as
-far as I have gone I certainly don’t know any better.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _News Record_]
-
-FROM FEBRUARY 8 TO MARCH 8, 1906
-
-
-_Home News_
-
-February 8.—John A. McCall, former President of the New York Life
-Insurance Co., is seriously ill at Lakewood, N. J.
-
- Richard A. McCurdy, former President of the Mutual Life
- Insurance Co., plans to leave the United States and make his
- home in Paris.
-
- The New York Life Insurance Company’s “house cleaning”
- committee reveal that Judge Andrew Hamilton has received
- $1,347,382 from that company since 1892. This is $283,383
- in excess of the total payments disclosed by the Armstrong
- Committee. The committee recommends legal action against John
- A. McCall for the recovery of the amount.
-
- Senator La Follette, of Wisconsin, introduces a bill in the
- Senate making it an offense for any Government officer,
- official or employee to accept a railroad pass or franking
- privilege over telegraph lines.
-
- By a vote of 346 to 7 the House of Representatives passes
- the Hepburn railroad rate regulation bill just as it came
- from the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, and
- declared by Chairman Hepburn to be exactly in accordance with
- recommendations of President Roosevelt on the subject.
-
- The House of Representatives passes the General Pension bill
- for the year ending June 30, 1907. The bill appropriates
- $140,245,000. Congressman Gardner, of Michigan, declares
- that when the last pensioner on account of the Civil War has
- disappeared from the rolls, $12,000,000,000 will have been
- expended.
-
-February 9.—The Illinois coal operators decide to refuse the demands of
-the United Mine Workers for an increase in wages.
-
- The Pennsylvania House of Representatives passes a resolution
- directing the attorney general of that state to ascertain
- whether any railroad companies in Pennsylvania are engaged in
- the mining of coal, and if so, to proceed against them.
-
- By reducing the rate of railroad fares to two cents a mile, it
- is estimated that the people of Ohio will be saved $4,000,000
- a year, or a sum equal to almost all the taxes paid for the
- support of the state government.
-
- The Senate Committee takes under consideration the Hepburn
- railroad rate bill.
-
- The taking of testimony against Senator Reed Smoot, the Mormon,
- ends. Senator Smoot’s counsel will introduce testimony in his
- defense.
-
- The House of Representatives passes 429 pension bills. The
- Judiciary Committee of the House begins an investigation to
- ascertain whether or not Congress has the power for Federal
- control of insurance.
-
- Secretary Taft appears before the Senate Committee on the
- Philippines and says the United States will probably suffer no
- reduction in tariff income under the Philippine tariff bill
- passed by the House of Representatives.
-
- Secretary Root proposes to reorganize the State Department and
- put it on a business basis.
-
- Charles E. Magoon, governor of the Panama Canal Zone, appears
- before the Senate Committee on Interoceanic Canals. He declares
- the sanitary conditions good, the Supreme Court of Panama
- capable and impartial, and advises the coinage of silver money
- for use on the Isthmus.
-
- The differences between President Dolan, of the United Mine
- Workers of the Pittsburg district, and the delegates to the
- convention are taken to the courts.
-
-February 11.—Samuel Glasgow, manager of a milling company of
-Spokane, Washington, claims to have received Chinese papers from his
-representative in China, claiming that a recent speech of William J.
-Bryan to Chinese merchants had been used to stir up renewed antipathy to
-American goods.
-
- John Mitchell, President of the United Mine Workers, reaches
- New York City to confer with the mine operators on the new
- scale of wages demanded by the miners.
-
- President Baer, of the Reading Railroad, states that the
- Pennsylvania Legislature has not the power to interfere with
- the vested rights of coal-carrying railroads.
-
-February 12.—The Senate passes the resolution introduced by Senator
-Tillman which directs the Interstate Commission to investigate the
-alleged discrimination by railroad companies in the matter of the
-transportation of coal and other commodities; as to whether the railroad
-companies own stock in coal companies or in other commodities carried
-by them; whether any of the railroad officers are interested in such
-commodities; whether there is any monopolizing combination or trust in
-which the railroads are interested, and whether any of the railroad
-companies control the output of coal or fix its price. The Commission
-also is directed to investigate the system of car distribution, and
-whether there is discrimination against shippers either in the matter of
-the distribution of cars or otherwise.
-
- Senator Lodge, of Massachusetts, makes a speech in the Senate
- favoring a revision by the courts of all rates made by the
- Commission. This would practically kill the effectiveness of
- the Hepburn bill.
-
- The Pennsylvania House of Representatives adopt a resolution
- that the Attorney General be instructed to inquire into the
- allegations that the Pennsylvania Railroad, the New York
- Central and the Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburg Railroad
- companies, and their leased lines, are directly or indirectly
- engaged in the mining of bituminous coal, and if it be found
- that they are engaged in this business that he proceed against
- them.
-
- Leaders of the United Mine Workers reach New York to hold a
- conference with their President, John Mitchell.
-
-February 13.—F. Augustus Heinze, defeated in the courts, sells his
-Montana copper mines to the trust, ending the great Montana copper war.
-
- John Mitchell and the wage-scale committee of the Mine Workers
- are working on the schedule of demands which will be presented
- to the mine operators.
-
- The committee to which Thomas W. Lawson has turned over all his
- proxies of the Mutual and New York Life Insurance Companies
- agree to employ counsel to aid them in their efforts to oust
- the new managements of the two companies. Five members of
- Lawson’s committee are governors of various states.
-
- Attorney General Hadley, of Missouri, who is conducting the
- State’s case against the Standard Oil Co., goes to Iowa
- and gets testimony from former officers of the Standard’s
- subsidiary companies. He states that he has made out his case
- against the Standard.
-
- George W. Beavers, of New York, former Chief of the Division of
- Salaries and Allowances of the Post Office Department, pleads
- guilty to a charge of conspiracy, and is sentenced to two years
- imprisonment. Machen and others have already been convicted and
- are serving sentences.
-
- The Bituminous Coal Trade League, of Pennsylvania, sends
- Congressman Gillespie, of Texas, a petition stating that
- Senators Elkins, of West Virginia, and Gorman, of Maryland
- have caused violations of the anti-trust laws. Former Senator
- H. G. Davis, of West Virginia, father-in-law to Senator
- Elkins, cousin to Gorman, and Vice Presidential nominee of the
- Democratic party in 1904, is also accused of being a party to
- these violations.
-
-February 14.—The “housecleaning” committee of the New York Life Insurance
-Co. submits a report to the trustees of the company, showing that
-$148,702.50 has been illegally contributed to campaign funds in the last
-three elections. The committee recommends that suits for the recovery of
-the same be brought against John A. McCall and all other officers who had
-anything to do with making the contributions.
-
- John G. Brady, Governor of Alaska, resigns.
-
- The House of Representatives passes the appropriation bill for
- fortifications. The total amount appropriated is $4,383,993,
- $600,000 of this to be spent in fortifying the Philippines and
- Hawaii.
-
- The Senate passes the ship subsidy bill. If the bill becomes
- a law it is estimated that $26,000,000, will be taken from
- the United States Treasury and paid out in bounties to vessel
- owners during the next ten years.
-
- The resolution of Representative Sulzer, of New York, calling
- for an inquiry regarding the sale of the old New York Custom
- House to the National City Bank, of New York, passes the House
- by a unanimous vote.
-
-February 15.—John Mitchell presents the demands of the miners to the mine
-owners. Committees are appointed to represent both sides.
-
- Congressman Longworth procures a license to marry Miss Alice
- Roosevelt. The President attends Mr. Longworth’s bachelor
- dinner.
-
- James W. Alexander is again stricken with paralysis and is in a
- sanitarium at Deerfield, Mass.
-
- Officers of the beef packers again testify that Commissioner
- Garfield promised that no evidence they gave would be used
- against them. The testimony brought out these facts: First,
- Commissioner Garfield apparently took the word of Armour &
- Co.’s general superintendent that the Armour Car Company,
- which has been declared the tap root of the Beef Trust, was
- not owned by Armour & Co., and had nothing to do with the
- fresh meat industry, and made no further attempt to get
- information concerning the private car line monopoly. Second,
- Swift & Co. gave information reluctantly to the Commissioner
- of Corporations, and only after consulting counsel. At this
- conference attorneys for the other packers in the trust
- were present. The secretary of Swift & Co. contributed the
- information that he sought this advice of counsel because he
- “wanted it.”
-
-February 16.—James W. Alexander, former President of the Equitable Life
-Insurance Co., is operated on. The physicians refuse to tell the nature
-of the operation, but give hopes of Alexander’s recovery.
-
- Reports from Memphis, Tenn., state that more than fifty per
- cent of the Southern peach crop has been killed and the other
- fifty per cent is commercially worthless.
-
- State Senator James Minton, of New Jersey, invites Thomas W.
- Lawson, Ida Tarbell and Attorney-General Hadley, of Missouri,
- to attend a public hearing on his resolution calling on
- Attorney-General McCarter, of New Jersey, to bring proceedings
- to annul the charter of the Standard Oil Company.
-
- Stuyvesant Fish, a member of the “housecleaning” committee of
- the Mutual Life Insurance Co., resigns because Standard Oil
- interests obstruct a thorough investigation of the company’s
- affairs.
-
- On account of the illness of Senator Tillman, the Senate
- postpones the vote on the railroad rate bill until February 23.
-
-February 17.—Miss Alice Roosevelt, the daughter of the President, is
-married, in the White House, to Congressman Nicholas Longworth, of
-Cincinnati.
-
- Justice Rufus W. Peckham, of the United States Supreme Court,
- advises the “housecleaning” committee of the Mutual Life
- Insurance Co. to bring action against Richard A. McCurdy,
- ex-president of the company, before he leaves this country.
-
- Fire destroys $1,000,000 worth of wheat at Duluth, Minnesota.
-
- President Peabody, of the Mutual Life Insurance Co., refuses to
- give his consent for an investigation of the company’s board of
- trustees by the “housecleaning” committee.
-
-February 18.—John A. McCall, late president of the New York Life
-Insurance Co., dies at Lakewood, N. J. His death was hastened by the
-recent insurance scandals. The New York _World_ sums up the result of the
-insurance investigation as follows:
-
- John A. McCall, dead, fortune shattered; J. W. Alexander,
- mental and physical wreck; James H. Hyde, self-expatriated in
- Paris; Robert A. McCurdy, preparing to follow Hyde; Robert H.
- McCurdy, preparing to follow his father; Judge Andy Hamilton,
- on the Riviera; Thomas D. Jordan, in seclusion; Andrew Fields,
- in seclusion; Louis Thebaud, going to Paris; W. H. McIntyre, in
- seclusion; George W. Perkins, reputation smirched; Chauncey M.
- Depew, damaged in reputation.
-
- John B. Stetson, the millionaire hat manufacturer of
- Philadelphia, dies at Gillen, Florida.
-
- John Mitchell and his associates, representing the anthracite
- miners, complete their demands to the coal operators. They will
- be presented in a day or two.
-
- President Roosevelt prepares to have the frauds in connection
- with the Indian affairs in Indian Territory investigated.
-
-February 19.—Eight suits are begun by the Mutual Life Insurance Co.
-against the McCurdys, Louis A. Thebaud, son-in-law of Richard A. McCurdy,
-and C. H. Raymond & Co., for restitution of moneys of the company
-illegally spent. This includes campaign contributions, illegal salaries,
-rebates and illegal commissions.
-
- President Roosevelt recommends to Congress a lock canal of
- eighty-five foot level across the Isthmus of Panama. The lock
- canal was also favored by the Canal Commission and Secretary
- Taft. A majority of the Board of Consulting Engineers favored a
- sea level canal.
-
- The United States Supreme Court decides that it is illegal for
- railroads to sell commodities which they transport as common
- carriers. The decision of the Court bears directly on railroads
- that own or operate coal mines.
-
- Congressman E. Spencer Blackburn, of North Carolina, is accused
- of accepting a fee for using his influence to obtain action
- by an executive department. The offense is similar to the one
- committed by Senator Burton.
-
- The trial of the beef packers continues at Chicago. E. Dana
- Durand, chief assistant to Commissioner Garfield, testifies
- that the Department of Commerce turned over certain data
- obtained from the packers to the Department of Justice.
-
- Sixteen miners are killed by an explosion at Maitland, Colorado.
-
- A sub-committee of the House Committee on Interstate and
- Foreign Commerce takes action on the Tillman, Gillespie and
- Campbell resolution to authorize the Interstate Commerce
- Committee to investigate the connection between railroads and
- coal and oil companies. All three of the resolutions will be
- embodied in one and sent back to the House for passage.
-
- The Interstate Commerce Commission orders an investigation
- of the rates and practices of the railroad carriers engaged
- in transporting oil from Kansas and Indian Territory to
- interstate destinations.
-
- Representative Campbell introduces a joint resolution to
- authorize the Interstate Commerce Commission to immediately
- investigate and report to Congress from time to time whether
- any interstate commerce carriers own or control any oil or
- other products which they ship as common carriers; whether the
- officers of such carriers charged with the distribution of
- cars and furnishing facilities for transportation are directly
- or indirectly owners of companies interested in oil products;
- whether a combination in restraint of trade exists between the
- carriers and the shippers of oil products, and whether the
- officers of oil companies are officers, agents or members of
- the directory of any common carrier.
-
- Congressman Mann, of Illinois, introduces a bill to make
- insurance business interstate commerce.
-
- Senator Tillman introduces a bill in the Senate to prohibit
- corporations from making money contributions in connection with
- political elections.
-
-February 20.—The McCurdys prepare to fight the suits brought against them
-by the Mutual Life Insurance Co. for the restitution of money illegally
-taken from the company. The McCurdys and Raymond & Co. also charge that
-other officials and trustees of the Mutual received rebates on their own
-policies.
-
- Opinions of prominent lawyers show that the Supreme Court’s
- decision against railroads owning commodities which they haul
- as common carriers will prevent railroads from operating if
- not from owning coal mines. Most of the big coal mines in
- the country are either owned, controlled or operated by the
- railroads.
-
- Commissioner of Corporations James R. Garfield testifies in the
- case of the Government against the beef packers now being tried
- at Chicago. He denies that he promised the packers immunity
- from prosecution or that all information given him would be
- regarded as confidential.
-
- Pittsburg, Pa., follows the example of other cities and throws
- off the yoke of boss rule. George W. Guthrie, a Democrat
- supported by the independent factions, defeats Alexander M.
- Jenkinson, the Republican candidate of the Frick-Mellon-Cassatt
- combination.
-
- The House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce
- recommends a favorable report to the House on the bill for an
- investigation by the Interstate Commerce Commission of the
- relations between railroads and coal and oil companies. This is
- the resolution introduced in the Senate by Senator Tillman,
- with a few modifications of the Gillespie and Campbell
- resolutions substituted.
-
-February 21.—President Roosevelt announces that he will not try to
-influence the Senate Committee’s action on the Hepburn railroad rate
-bill, but intimates that he will veto any bill that does not meet his
-approval.
-
- John Mitchell declares there will be a coal strike in the
- bituminous coal fields.
-
- The Senate passes a pure food bill by a vote of 63 to 4.
- The bill makes it a crime to ship from one state to another
- any article of food, drugs, medicines or liquors which is
- adulterated or misbranded, or which contains any poisonous or
- deleterious substances.
-
- General Grosvenor, of Ohio, is defeated for re-nomination to
- Congress. Gen. Grosvenor has been in Congress twenty years.
-
- The House of Representatives takes up the army appropriation
- bill. Chairman Hull, of Iowa, urges the need of preparing for
- an emergency, as there is fear of trouble with China.
-
- John A. McCall is buried in New York City. McCall left no money
- and the suits for recovery of money illegally paid Hamilton
- will be dropped.
-
- Because of his stand for an honest investigation of the Mutual
- Life Insurance Co., the trustees who fear exposure plan to oust
- Stuyvesant Fish from the presidency of the Illinois Central
- Railroad.
-
-February 22.—John Mitchell, president of the United Mine Workers, has
-another conference with several mine operators on a new scale of wages to
-be paid after April 1.
-
- Mrs. Minor Morris, who was forcibly ejected from the White
- House some time ago, issues a statement in which she denounces
- the President for her treatment.
-
- Senator Knox, of Pennsylvania, introduces a railroad rate
- regulation bill giving the courts the right to review any
- order or action of the Interstate Commerce Commission. It is
- the intention of the railroad senators to add the court review
- clause of the Knox bill to the Hepburn bill.
-
- In the report to the New York Legislature the Armstrong,
- or Insurance Investigating, Committee, makes the following
- recommendations.
-
- Not only should stock corporations be permitted to give
- policy-holders the right to vote, but an opportunity should be
- afforded for conversion into purely mutual companies.
-
- The law as to investments in securities should be amended so as
- to provide: That no investment in the stock of any corporation
- shall be permitted, except in public stocks of municipal
- corporations.
-
- The statute should forbid all syndical participations,
- transactions for purchase and sale on joint account, and the
- making of any agreement providing that the company shall
- withhold from sale for any time or subject to the discretion of
- others any securities which it may own or acquire.
-
- No officer or director should be pecuniarily interested in any
- purchase, sale or loan made by the corporation.
-
- Contributions by insurance corporations for political purposes
- should be strictly forbidden.... Any officer, director
- or agent, making, authorizing or consenting to any such
- contribution should be guilty of a misdemeanor.
-
- The company should be compelled to set forth in its annual
- statement to the Superintendent of Insurance all sums so
- disbursed (for lobbying), giving the names of the payees, the
- amounts paid and the specific purpose of the payment.
-
- Limit the amount of new business; prohibit bonuses, prizes
- and awards; limit renewal commissions to four years and to,
- say, 10 per cent. of the first year’s premiums; prohibit loans
- and advances to agents; limit total expenses to the total
- “loadings” upon the premiums.
-
- The companies should be required annually to file with the
- Superintendent of Insurance a gain and loss exhibit for the
- year in a prescribed form, showing the amount available for
- distribution, the amount of dividends declared and the method
- of calculation by which they have been determined.
-
- Section 56 should be repealed and the matter should be left
- subject to the general provisions of the Code of Civil
- Procedure relating to actions against corporations.
-
- In addition to requiring approval of the Superintendent of
- other than certain standard forms, provision should be made
- for the standardization of the new types of policies.... The
- issue of other policies than those thus provided for should be
- prohibited.
-
- The committee recommends publicity of names and addresses
- of policy-holders and the giving them the right to verify
- statements and prosecute for falsity. The committee recommends
- requiring statements in elaborate detail covering all
- transactions, and favors giving the Superintendent of Insurance
- power to examine under oath.
-
-February 23.—Stuyvesant Fish resigns as a trustee from the Mutual Life
-Insurance Co. and will head a committee of policy-holders to fight the
-present management.
-
- Insurance men plan to fight the new laws recommended by the
- Armstrong Committee before the New York Legislature, and, if
- unsuccessful there, to carry the matter before the courts.
-
- The Hepburn railroad rate regulation bill is reported by the
- Senate committee without any amendments. Through trickery of
- Senator Aldrich, the bill will be presented to the Senate by
- Senator Tillman as a Democratic measure.
-
- The House of Representatives passes a resolution ordering an
- investigation of the relations between coal and oil carrying
- railroads and coal and oil companies.
-
- Commissioner Garfield again testifies in the trial of the beef
- packers at Chicago. He admits that the Department of Commerce
- and Labor furnished the Department of Justice with evidence.
-
- Johann Hoch, the noted bigamist, is hanged at Chicago.
-
-February 24.—The House Committee on Immigration unanimously agrees on a
-bill to amend the immigration laws. The new bill will make naturalization
-uniform throughout the United States, and confines the issuance of
-citizenship papers to United States Circuit and District Courts, and
-to the highest court of original jurisdiction of each state. The bill
-further provides that an alien must be able to read, write and speak
-English before he can become a citizen.
-
- Since Senator Aldrich’s trick of having Senator Tillman, of
- South Carolina, report the Hepburn railroad rate bill, which
- makes it a Democratic measure, Washington despatches state
- that the long standing feud between the President and Senator
- Tillman will end.
-
-February 25.—C. Augustus Seton, who is under arrest in New York City,
-confesses to forging $4,300,000 worth of Norfolk and Western Railroad
-stock certificates.
-
- Coal mine operators give out statements saying there will be a
- strike, as they will refuse to grant the miners’ requests. T.
- L. Lewis, vice-president of the United Mine Workers, declares
- there will be no strike and that the operators will grant the
- requests of the miners.
-
- Harry Orchard, who assassinated the late Governor Steunenberg,
- of Idaho, confesses to taking part in 26 murders.
-
- Ex-Speaker David B. Henderson dies at Dubuque, Iowa. Mr.
- Henderson served two terms as speaker, succeeding the late
- Thomas B. Reed. He was elected in 1883 and served continuously
- until the end of the Fifty-seventh Congress.
-
-February 26.—The Missouri Supreme Court hands down a decision which
-it is believed will influence the Supreme Court of New York to order
-H. H. Rogers to answer the questions asked him in the Standard Oil
-investigation. At the time Attorney-General Hadley, of Missouri, was
-taking depositions in the case in New York City, Rogers was put on the
-witness stand. He refused to answer certain questions and expressed
-his contempt for Missouri Courts. Mr. Hadley went before Justice
-Gildersleeve, of the New York Supreme Court, and asked for an order
-forcing Rogers to answer or be held in contempt of court. The order was
-refused on the grounds that the questions involved had never been passed
-upon by the Missouri courts. Now comes the Missouri court with a strong
-decision which covers every point at issue.
-
- President Roosevelt intervenes to prevent the threatened coal
- strike.
-
- In accordance with a decision handed down by the Supreme Court
- of Texas, the Pacific, the United States, the American and
- Wells-Fargo Express Companies, and fifty of the principal
- railroads of the state, will have to pay $5,225,000 in
- penalties for violating the anti-trust law. The court holds
- that when a railroad company enters into an agreement with
- an express company which excludes other companies from doing
- a business on its lines, it restrains trade and stifles
- competition, which is prohibited by the anti-trust law.
-
- The supposed shrewd trick of Senator Aldrich in having Senator
- Tillman report the Hepburn railroad rate bill now has the
- Republican Senators embarrassed. The Senate seems to be in
- favor of the bill and the Republicans dare not let it pass as a
- Democratic measure. Realizing that something must be done, they
- appeal to Senator Spooner to draft a rate bill that will suit
- all factions of the Republicans and be put through the Senate
- as a party measure.
-
- William Nelson Cromwell, the New York lawyer who unloaded the
- Panama Canal property on the United States, and who has since
- acted as counsel to the President and Secretary Taft on Panama
- matters, appears before the Senate committee. He denies that he
- was the cause of ex-Chief Engineer Wallace’s resigning. When
- questioned as to his dealings with Secretary Taft he refused to
- answer.
-
-February 27.—Steel Trust officials and George Gould order the bituminous
-coal mine operators to make peace with the miners and prevent a strike.
-
- The Insurance Commissioners of Kentucky, Minnesota, Wisconsin,
- Tennessee and Nebraska ask the New York Insurance Department to
- co-operate with them in making an investigation of the Mutual
- Life Insurance Co.
-
- William Nelson Cromwell again appears before the Senate
- Committee on Interoceanic Canals. He continues to refuse to
- answer questions as to his dealings with Secretary Taft and the
- amount of his fees. Senator Morgan, of Alabama, produced a
- copy of Cromwell’s contract with the French company, or Panama
- Canal Co., which gave Cromwell the power to organize companies,
- issue stock, bonds, etc., and finance any and all sorts of
- organizations to further the idea of selling the canal to the
- United States.
-
-February 28.—It is reported from Pittsburg that the United States Steel
-Corporation, through President W. Ellis Corey, has demanded of the
-Pittsburg Coal Company, with which it has a twenty-five-year contract
-for coal, the minimum for each year being set at 8,000,000 tons, that
-there be no strike in the Pittsburg district. At the same time the Gould
-interests, so heavy in the West and Southwest, have ordered peace. As a
-result there will be no strike of the bituminous miners, who will receive
-a satisfactory advance.
-
- It is reported from Springfield, Ohio, that local militia,
- called out to check a race riot caused by the shooting of M.
- M. Davis, a brakeman, by a negro, has been unable to stop the
- riot. An appeal has been made to the Governor to send more
- troops. Early this morning houses were burning in the negro
- quarter, and the authorities are powerless.
-
- Yesterday the President signed the Urgent Deficiency Bill,
- which contains an appropriation of $118,000 for New York State
- to pay its claim for money to equip Government troops during
- the War of 1812.
-
- Five hundred delegates of the Independence League, guests of
- William R. Hearst, appeared yesterday at Albany to plead before
- the Governor and the Legislature for the passage of measures in
- which the league is interested.
-
- The Commissioners of Insurance in the states of Kentucky,
- Minnesota, Wisconsin, Tennessee and Nebraska have requested the
- Insurance Department of New York State to co-operate with them
- in an investigation of the Mutual Life Insurance Company.
-
- It is reported from Little Rock, Ark., that Thomas E. Jordan,
- former Controller of the Equitable Life Insurance Company, and
- who could not be located during the Armstrong Investigation, is
- stopping with his wife at Hot Springs, Ark.
-
- The debate in the Senate on the railroad rate question opens
- today with a speech by Senator Foraker, of Ohio.
-
- Yesterday, before the Senate Committee on Interoceanic Canals,
- Senator Morgan, of Alabama, in his examination of William
- Nelson Cromwell, produced an agreement between the Panama Canal
- Commission and William Nelson Cromwell, showing that for a
- large compensation the Panama Canal Company contracted to pay
- William Nelson Cromwell a large compensation to Americanize
- the Panama project. Mr. Cromwell said the enterprise proposed
- in the document was abortive and died long ago. Senator Morgan
- tried to learn from Mr. Cromwell how much he had received in
- fees from the old or new Panama Company and by persistent
- questioning deduced the fact that the total payments to Mr.
- Cromwell did not exceed $200,000, extending over a term of
- years, and giving to him from $10,000 to $15,000 a year. Mr.
- Cromwell declined to say what service he had performed for
- these sums, admitting only that his clients were satisfied. The
- inquiry will be continued.
-
- At a dinner yesterday at Washington the Republican members
- of Congress from New York proposed as the next nominee of
- the Republican Party for Governor of New York State, Charles
- E. Hughes, the inquisitor of the Armstrong Investigation
- Committee. The platform indicated was based on general reform
- and municipal ownership.
-
- The Inter-State Commerce Commission at Washington yesterday
- announced its decision in the cases of the Fred G. Clark
- Company against the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway
- Company and the Waverley Oil Works against the Pennsylvania
- Company and others. In these cases the New York, New Haven and
- Hartford Railroad Company was the principal defendant. The
- commission holds that the combination rates on petroleum and
- its product from Cleveland and Pittsburg to points reached
- by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad result in
- unreasonable and unjust rates, and that the refusal of the
- railroad company to consent to participate in through rates
- is unjust and the situation is such as to favor greatly the
- Standard Oil. In its final conclusion the commission holds
- that the act to regulate commerce does not authorize it to
- compel the establishment of joint rates or the conditions
- of interchange in case the connecting carriers fail to
- agree in respect thereto; and it therefore concludes that
- notwithstanding that the combination rates are unjust and the
- general shipping situation is such as to work a practical
- monopoly in favor of the Standard Oil Company, the Commission
- is without authority to grant relief in these cases and the
- petitions are therefore dismissed.
-
- Yesterday at Washington the House Committee of Agriculture
- decided by a vote of 8 to 7 not to recommend any appropriation
- to buy seeds for free distribution by the Department of
- Agriculture.
-
- Special counsel for the State of Missouri will make application
- before the New York courts to compel Henry H. Rogers to answer
- questions in the inquiry the State of Missouri has been making
- into Standard Oil methods.
-
- In the United States Circuit Court at Chicago yesterday, Judge
- Landis gave a decision that the Interstate Commerce Committee
- has the power to compel witnesses to answer questions in
- the hearing of Street’s Western Stable Car Line before the
- commission.
-
- At Oklahoma City, Okla., yesterday, the assistant
- attorney-general began to take testimony in the ouster case
- against the Standard and other oil companies. A wholesale oil
- dealer testified that he had been instructed to get samples of
- oil shipped if he had to steal them; and also that there had
- never been any competition between the Standard Oil and the
- Waters-Pierce Company in Oklahoma.
-
- At Albany yesterday, Senator Saxe’s bill to impose a tax on
- personal property wherever found, a measure designed to wipe
- out tax dodging by rich New Yorkers who establish their legal
- residence elsewhere, was passed in the Senate and goes to the
- Governor.
-
- At Aiken, S. C., yesterday, Professor S. P. Langley, Secretary
- of the Smithsonian Institution, died of paralysis.
-
-March 1.—Senator Foraker in the Senate yesterday made a speech, lasting
-three hours, in which he attacked the Hepburn railroad rate bill.
-
- For several hours last evening the city of Springfield, Ohio,
- was in the hands of a mob which burned two houses and partly
- destroyed a dozen others. All of these houses were inhabited by
- negroes. Hundreds of negroes have fled from the city.
-
- The annual report of the Pennsylvania Railroad shows a net
- income for the year 1905 of more than $38,000,000, an increase
- of about $10,000,000 as compared with 1904. The operating
- expenses were reduced and traffic increased.
-
- At the annual meeting of the Equitable Life Assurance Society
- yesterday the directors were informed that counsel of the
- society were definitely engaged in working out a plan of
- mutualization.
-
- Richard A. McCurdy, former president of the Mutual Life
- Insurance Company sails for Europe today for an indefinite stay
- abroad.
-
- William Nelson Cromwell reappeared yesterday before the Senate
- Committee of Interoceanic Canals and admitted that he drew the
- monetary agreement entered into between the Republic of Panama
- and Secretary of War Taft. This agreement caused criticism
- in the Senate recently because in fact it was a treaty made
- without consulting that body.
-
- At Washington the Foreign Relations Committee finished its
- work on the Santo Domingo treaty and reported it to the Senate.
- The Republicans voted solidly for the report and the Democrats
- against it.
-
- The Independence League of New York State has decided to
- perfect an organization in every assembly district in the
- State of New York. In William R. Hearst’s address at Albany
- he said: “The fundamental idea of the Independence League is
- independence of boss control, of corporate control and of any
- party subject to boss rule and corporation control.”
-
- Yesterday the Senate in executive session ratified the treaty
- between the United States and Japan relating to copyrights of
- works of literature and art.
-
-March 2.—It is reported from Washington that the President has been
-conferring with Senators, Representatives, members of the Interstate
-Commerce Commission and members of his Cabinet on the question of the
-Hepburn railroad rate bill, and he is willing to accept three or four
-amendments of the bill if they will strengthen it for trial before the
-courts.
-
- At Springfield, Ohio, the state militia charged the mob and
- dispersed it. The members of the Commercial Club of that city
- met to take action for the enforcement of the law, and said in
- speeches that the present conditions were due to politicians
- catering to negroes and low whites, and lax police and court
- methods.
-
- John F. Wallace, formerly chief engineer of the Panama Canal
- Commission, becomes an employee of the George Westinghouse
- Company at a salary of $50,000 per year. Mr. Wallace is to
- assist in building electric railways paralleling steam railways
- in many parts of the country.
-
- It is reported from Washington that our Government takes a very
- serious and gloomy view of the situation at Algeciras, and
- would not be surprised to see the Moroccan conference end in a
- rupture.
-
- The existence of a Mutual Life policy-holders’ movement of
- world-wide scope, at the head of which will undoubtedly be
- Stuyvesant Fish, became known yesterday through the exchange
- of telegrams between Lord Northcliffe, formerly Sir Alfred
- Harmsworth, and Mr. Fish. Lord Northcliffe is chairman of the
- British protection committee of the Mutual Life policy holders.
-
-March 3.—John R. Walsh, president of the Chicago National Bank, which
-failed December 18, 1905, was arrested yesterday on a Federal warrant
-charging him with violation of the national banking laws in making false
-reports to the Controller of Currency and with conversion to his own use
-of bank funds amounting to $3,000,000. He was released after giving a
-bond of $50,000.
-
- At Meridian, Miss., a tornado swept through the business centre
- of the town, destroying $5,000,000 of property and about
- thirteen lives.
-
- Springfield, Ohio, is quiet after two nights of rioting and
- incendiary fires. The state militia is still on duty.
-
- At Chicago, executives of all the Eastern railways in session
- failed to settle the differential rate controversy. On account
- of the attitude of the Erie Railroad it seems impossible to
- avert a rate war. Every line except the Erie voted for the
- arbitration of the question.
-
- The Senate Committee of the Philippines voted to smother the
- Philippine tariff bill yesterday. It is said that efforts will
- be made to have the measure reconsidered or called before the
- Senate.
-
- Commissioner of Public Works, J. M. Patterson, of Chicago,
- yesterday gave his resignation to Mayor Dunne. Mr. Patterson
- says he has become a convert to Socialism.
-
-March 4.—A delegation representing practically all life insurance
-companies doing business in the United States will go to Albany on
-March 9, the day set for the hearing of the bills that the insurance
-investigation has presented, to state the case of the companies before
-the Legislature.
-
- Ex-Governor James Stephen Hogg died yesterday at Houston, Tex.
- at the age of 55.
-
-March 5.—It is reported that on the evening before his death the late
-Ex-Governor Hogg said: “I want no monument of stone, but let my children
-plant at the head of my grave a pecan tree, and at the foot a walnut
-tree, and when these trees shall bear, let the pecans and walnuts be
-given out among the plain people of Texas that they may plant them and
-make Texas a land of trees.”
-
- At St. Augustine, Fla., yesterday, Lieutenant-General John M.
- Schofield, retired, died of cerebral hemorrhage at the age of
- 75.
-
-March 6.—In the House of Representatives at Washington, John Sharp
-Williams attacked the President and the Attorney-General and introduced
-a resolution, which was passed by the House, inquiring whether the
-Department of Justice had instituted criminal prosecutions against any
-of the individuals or corporations adjudged by the Supreme Court of
-the United States in the Northern Securities case to have violated the
-anti-trust laws.
-
- The Enterprise Transportation Company, carrying freight between
- New York and Fall River, Mass., appeared before the Interstate
- Commerce Commission in New York City, complaining that the
- trunk lines out of New York refused to make through freight
- rate arrangements with the Enterprise Transportation Company.
- Lawyers representing nearly all the big railroads were present.
-
-March 7.—Andrew Hamilton, who was legislative agent for the New York
-Life Insurance Company at Albany, returned yesterday to New York. On the
-steamship he was registered as “H. A. Milton.”
-
- The suit of the State of Kansas against the Standard Oil
- Company was dismissed by the Supreme Court of Kansas on March
- 5th. This ends, so far as present litigation is concerned, the
- movement begun a year ago by Kansas against the Standard Oil
- Company and re-establishes that corporation in the position it
- held previous to the effort made to exclude it from the state.
-
- Yesterday District-Attorney Jerome of New York City appeared
- before the grand jury and asked that indictments be found
- against the despoilers of the life insurance companies.
-
- In the 20th annual report of the Boston Chamber of Commerce,
- published yesterday, it is pointed out that Boston has become
- re-established as the second port of the country.
-
-March 8.—W. H. Moore, Municipal Ownership candidate for Mayor of Seattle,
-was elected on a platform pledged to municipal ownership of public
-utilities.
-
- All over the Dominion of Canada the banks are collecting
- American silver money and shipping it to Montreal, whence it
- is shipped to Washington and changed for gold. The removal of
- American silver from Canada will be a good thing for the banks
- and profitable for the government. The banks will be paid of ⅜
- of one per cent for collecting it and the government will bear
- all transportation charges. It is estimated that the government
- will clear at least one-half of a million dollars.
-
- It is reported that Andrew Hamilton, the legislative agent for
- the New York Life Insurance Company, who has just returned
- from Paris, consulted with District-Attorney Jerome before his
- return to find out just what his chances were with the law.
-
- It has been learned that the National City Bank and the Hanover
- Bank were the only two New York Banks who received yesterday
- their allotment of a special deposit of $10,000,000 of
- government funds which Secretary Shaw last week announced. The
- news has caused much talk and criticism in banking circles.
-
- In a special message to the Senate and the House the President
- said that the action of both houses in passing the resolution
- directing the Interstate Commerce Commission to investigate the
- subject of railroad rate discriminations and monopolies in
- coal and oil was hasty, ill-considered and ineffective.
-
-
-_Foreign News_
-
-February 9.—Mutiny is said to continue in the Russian Black Sea fleet.
-Admiral Chouknin is wounded by a woman at Sevastopol. Siberian plague has
-broken out among the Russian troops in Manchuria.
-
- Professor Cattier, a prominent Belgian, publishes a book
- stating that King Leopold has received $15,000,000 graft from
- the rubber trade of the Congo Free State.
-
- Passengers from Venezuela say President Castro is actively
- preparing for war with France. The people do not agree with the
- President’s views and a revolution may follow.
-
- The negro inhabitants of the Transvaal and Orange River
- Colonies, South Africa, are demanding of England all the
- political rights enjoyed by the whites.
-
- The Colonial Minister of France presents to the Council of
- Ministers, a plan for the political, administrative and
- economic reorganization of the French Congo.
-
- Because of recent disorders, King Charles dissolves the
- Portuguese Parliament.
-
- Fifty-five miners are drowned in a gold mine at Johannesburg,
- Transvaal.
-
- The foreign representatives unite in demanding that the Shah
- investigate conditions in the Province of Shiraz, Southern
- Persia. Reports from other parts of Persia also show strong
- feeling against the Shah.
-
-February 10.—A bomb kills four gendarmes at Warsaw. Assaults on police
-continue throughout Russian Poland.
-
- The English garrison at Tibet is reported surrounded by hostile
- tribes.
-
- The Irish members of Parliament again elect John Redmond
- chairman of the Irish Parliamentary party.
-
- An armed expedition is sent against the religious fanatics of
- Natal.
-
-February 12.—The general opinion at Algeciras is that France and Germany
-will reach an agreement on the Moroccan question.
-
- General fear of another uprising and massacre in China is
- expressed by despatches from different parts of that country.
-
- A proclamation is issued by the Governor-General at Odessa
- declaring the Russian Government will put to death any one
- found with deadly implements.
-
- Ex-Premier Balfour, of England, declares his policy to be one
- to build up British industries by maintaining a larger foreign
- market for manufacturers.
-
- The Imperial Protestant Federation sends a petition to King
- Edward, of England, asking him to refuse consent to the
- marriage of Princess Ena to King Alfonso of Spain.
-
- The new railroad over the Andes Mountains between Santiago,
- Chili, and Buenos Ayres, Argentine Republic, begins operations.
-
-February 13.—Another revolution is started in Santo Domingo.
-
- St. Petersburg police save one of the Government banks from a
- mob of revolutionists. Another armed revolt is frustrated at
- Kharkoff, Russia. Many political prisoners are being sent to
- Siberia.
-
- Reforms are being agitated in Persia which may result in that
- country’s being given a constitution.
-
- Despatches from Algeciras state that the United States will
- finally settle the dispute between France and Germany over the
- Moroccan question.
-
- Venezuela offers to arbitrate her differences with France.
-
- The British Parliament meets preliminary to the formal opening
- on Feb. 19.
-
-February 14.—Balfour and Chamberlain agree on a protective policy for
-England. This will have no effect at this time, as a new Parliament
-overwhelmingly in favor of free trade has just been elected.
-
- Despatches from Algeciras indicate that the American delegates
- to the Moroccan conference are gradually bringing France and
- Germany to a settlement of their dispute.
-
- The secret has leaked out that America, England and Japan have
- had a secret agreement concerning China since the close of the
- Russo-Japanese war.
-
- A monument at El Caney in honor of the Americans who lost their
- lives during the siege of Santiago is unveiled.
-
-February 15.—Fearing an outbreak in China, two of Admiral Sigsbee’s
-cruisers are sent to reinforce the American Far Eastern fleet.
-
- St. Petersburg reports show that the Russian Terrorists hire
- boys to throw bombs.
-
- The situation at Algeciras is unchanged.
-
-February 17.—The Czar of Russia prevents a disruption of his Cabinet by
-bringing about peace between Premier Witte and Interior Minister Durnovo.
-General Linevitch turns over his command of the Russian troops in the far
-East to Gen. Grodekoff. St. Petersburg police arrest a band of Terrorists
-and discover enough poisons to kill half the population of St. Petersburg.
-
- It is discovered that China has placed orders with German
- manufacturers for 1,000,000 small arms and 100 cannon.
-
- Venezuela completes all preparations for war. The Venezuelan
- Government appoints Guzman Garbiras to succeed M.
- Veloz-Goiticoa as Minister to the United States.
-
-February 18.—Clement Armand Fallières, recently elected President of the
-French Republic, assumes his duties.
-
- The Russian Government orders the Governor General of East
- Siberia to prevent Capt. Einar Mikkelson from hoisting the
- American flag on any island which he may discover in the Arctic
- Ocean north of East Siberia and between Wrangel Land and the
- Parry Islands.
-
- The body of the late King Christian IX of Denmark is entombed
- in Roskelde’s cathedral, Copenhagen.
-
- A despatch from Shanghai, China, states that nothing is known
- there of conditions requiring the sending of United States
- troops to that Country. The Methodist Foreign Missionary
- Society receives reports from its head missionaries at
- different Chinese cities stating that there is no danger of
- disturbances. The Southern Baptist Missionary Board, through
- its secretary, cables its missionaries to take refuge in the
- nearest seaports, where they can be under the protection of
- foreign consulates.
-
- The King of Hungary prepares to dissolve the Diet when it
- assembles today.
-
-February 19.—The Hungarian Diet is dissolved by armed troops and police.
-
- Another anti-Jewish riot occurs at Vietka, Russia. Most of the
- city is burned, but no deaths are reported.
-
- The “General Memorandum” issued by Admiral Nelson to his
- captains at Trafalgar is found at Merton.
-
- The mutineers of the Russian battleships _Kniaz Potemkin_, who
- were sentenced to death, have had their sentences commuted to
- imprisonment.
-
- King Edward opens the newly elected English Parliament. In his
- speech the King expresses a desire that the government of the
- country shall be carried on in a spirit regardful of the wishes
- of the Irish people.
-
-February 20.—Germany rejects the final proposal of France for a
-settlement of the Moroccan controversy. The points in dispute will now
-come before the delegates of all the Powers.
-
- A company of British mounted infantry and three officers are
- massacred by fanatics in Sokoto, Northern Nigeria.
-
- A despatch from Ekaterinodar, Ciscaucasia, states that a fight
- is in progress between a detachment of Russian soldiers and 600
- mutinous Kuban Cossacks.
-
- Members of the Hungarian Diet decide to accept the dissolution
- of that body without protest.
-
- The British House of Commons records its determination to
- resist any proposals which will create any system of protection.
-
- The Russian Government is trying many prisoners for
- participating in a movement to overthrow the Government. The
- political dissatisfaction throughout the Empire seems to be as
- great as at the beginning of the late revolution.
-
-February 21.—Ambassador White, head of the American delegation to the
-Algeciras conference, expresses the opinion that France and Germany will
-reach an agreement on the Moroccan question.
-
- Attacks upon Catholic missions are made by Chinese in several
- of the southeastern provinces of China.
-
- The British House of Commons pledges a system of intelligent
- self-government for Ireland.
-
-February 22.—German Reichstag passes a bill to extend reciprocal tariff
-rates to the United States until June 30, 1907.
-
- Fear that the Algeciras conference will end without France
- and Germany reaching an agreement on the Moroccan question is
- expressed by the French press.
-
- People returning from China declare that the situation is very
- critical and a revolution is feared. The feeling against the
- present government is strong and the boycott of American goods
- is rigidly enforced.
-
- Religious fanatics destroy a French post in Sokoto, Central
- Africa.
-
-February 23.—The American Minister to China states that he sees very
-little reason for apprehension over China’s affairs. Wu Ting Fang, former
-Minister to the United States, says China is passing through a crisis. He
-justifies the boycott of American goods. All missionaries are advised by
-Assistant Secretary of State Bacon to move to places where they can be
-protected.
-
- Despatches from Algeciras state that the fear of war over
- Germany’s rejection of France’s proposals on the Moroccan
- question is growing less.
-
- Bills providing for general suffrage are introduced in the
- Lower House of the Austrian Parliament.
-
- Reports from St. Petersburg state that Count Witte has not
- resigned.
-
- A revolt against the Turkish Government is reported to be
- spreading in Yemen, Turkish Arabia.
-
-February 24.—W. K. Vanderbilt, Jr., is attacked by a mob near Pisa,
-Italy, after his automobile runs down and injures a boy.
-
- Active preparations are being made at Manila for any trouble
- with China.
-
- Director General Ivanoff, of the Vistula Railroad, is
- assassinated at Warsaw, Russia.
-
- The Spanish Government distributes money in the famine stricken
- provinces to relieve the sufferings of the people and prevent
- disorders.
-
- The German Foreign Office states that there is little danger
- of war between Germany and France over the Moroccan question.
- French despatches say about the same.
-
-February 25.—More riots occur at Warsaw and Odessa, Russia. Six persons
-are killed and 15 wounded.
-
- The customs war between Austria and Servia ends. Servia agrees
- to Austria’s demands.
-
- Secretary Root says the United States has no right to interfere
- with conditions in the Congo Free State, Africa.
-
- President Castro, of Venezuela, declares he will clear his
- country of all foreigners, break up the Monroe Doctrine and
- humble France.
-
- Canada will appoint a commission to investigate life insurance
- business in Canada.
-
- Two packages of dynamite are found at a gate of the Forbidden
- City, Peking, China.
-
-February 26.—Despatches from Shanghai, China, tell of the murder of
-missionaries at Nan-Chang. Six Jesuits and two members of an English
-family are reported murdered. The remaining foreigners escaped to
-Kiu-Kiang in boats. Several missions at Nan-Chang and Kiang-se were
-destroyed, among them the American.
-
-February 27.—The Americans who escaped the Nan-Chang, China, massacre are
-reported safe at Kiu-Kiang.
-
- Cossacks knout several prisoners to death at Odessa, Russia.
-
- Ex-Premier Balfour is elected to the British Parliament from
- London.
-
- Duchess Sophie Charlotte, of Oldenburg, and Prince Eitel
- Frederick, second son of the Emperor of Germany, are married at
- Berlin. The Emperor also celebrates his silver wedding.
-
- France asks the Czar of Russia to use his influence to get
- Germany to agree to France’s terms on the Moroccan question.
-
- Premier Witte reopens negotiations to determine the extent of a
- proposed agreement with England.
-
- Japanese officers assume control of the Imperial War College
- and the Trade and Commercial Schools at Canton, China. The
- United States English and French war vessels sail for different
- Chinese ports to protect foreigners.
-
-February 28.—Duchess Sophia Charlotte Oldenburg, the daughter of the
-Grand Duke of Oldenburg and Prince Eitel Frederick, the second son of the
-Emperor of Germany, were married yesterday in the chapel of the palace at
-Berlin.
-
- President Caceres, of Santo Domingo, in a message to his
- Congress, recommends the revision of the Constitution, of the
- import and export duties, the improvement of the ports and
- public roads, the enactment of laws benefiting agriculture, the
- free administration of justice and other improvements becoming
- a civilized nation. He recommends to Congress also the study
- of the treaty now before the United States Senate and declares
- that it is necessary to the welfare of his republic.
-
- The leading papers of St. Petersburg evince no satisfaction
- over the announcement of the date of the meeting of the Duma.
- It is said that the Duma will be prorogued almost immediately
- until autumn.
-
- Premier Witte has become an advocate of an Anglo-Russian
- understanding and it is reported that negotiations are about
- to be opened in London to determine the extent of a proposed
- agreement. If they are successful the new grouping of the
- Powers will check Germany’s ambition.
-
- It is reported from St. Petersburg that Russia is using all her
- influence at Berlin to prevent a rupture between France and
- Germany.
-
- The French officials at the Moroccan Conference at Algeciras
- do not look favorably upon the Berlin report that Germany will
- make concessions if France will also yield something. The
- French say that they have made concessions to which Germany has
- not responded.
-
- It is reported from Manila that Japanese officers have
- assumed control of the imperial war college and the trade and
- commercial schools at Canton, China.
-
- The battleship _Ohio_, flagship of the American fleet at the
- Asiatic station, has sailed for Hong Kong, where it will dock
- and make repairs, so as to be ready for possible emergencies.
-
- A telegram from Odessa states that in the village of Ivanislaw,
- in the Province of Kherson, 50 Cossacks and 70 gunners appeared
- a few days ago under orders from a police official and knouted
- 13 peasants. One of these peasants went mad and others are
- dying. A schoolmaster became insane after witnessing the scene.
- The sole offense chargeable against the villagers was their
- re-election of communal representatives which was in conformity
- with the ukase of Dec. 24 last.
-
-March 1.—The reactionary policy of Interior Minister Durnovo received a
-setback yesterday when the action of the St. Petersburg police in closing
-the central bureau of the Constitutional Democracy was disowned by the
-Government. Permission was given for the reopening of the bureau.
-
- A dispatch from St. Petersburg says that the financial
- embarrassments of Russia are increased by the necessity of
- paying Japan for the maintenance of Russian prisoners.
-
- The new general tariff and conventional tariffs between Russia
- and Germany, France, and Austria-Hungary go into effect today.
-
-March 2.—It is reported from Shanghai that the Chinese Government has
-decided to instruct its ministers abroad to assure the Powers that there
-is no cause for uneasiness in the present situation in China and that
-there are no signs of an anti-foreign movement.
-
-March 3.—As the result of a series of special councils composed of forty
-high dignitaries presided over by the Czar, the main guarantees of
-liberty have been granted to the Russian people and a manifesto is to be
-coded and incorporated in the laws of the empire.
-
-March 4.—A terrific cyclone swept over the Society and Cook’s Islands
-in the Pacific Ocean on February 7 and 8. It is said 10,000 persons
-perished. The damage to property is estimated at a million dollars.
-
-March 5.—At Tokio a bill was introduced in the Diet providing for the
-nationalization of the railways, and authorizing the government to compel
-companies to sell out to it at a price based on the cost of building plus
-twenty times the average profits for the last three years.
-
-March 6.—It is reported that the Germans have refused any concessions at
-the Moroccan conference at Algeciras. Russia proposed that France and
-Spain control the policing of Morocco. France was willing to accept the
-proposition, which was indorsed by Spain, Portugal and England. Herr von
-Radowitz, chief German delegate, opposed the proposal.
-
- The editor of a Barcelona (Spain) daily paper was sentenced to
- eight years’ imprisonment for printing an insulting dispatch
- concerning King Alfonso.
-
-March 7.—An imperial manifesto has been published setting forth the
-decisions of the imperial council with regard to the execution of the
-Czar’s manifesto of last October. The manifesto reveals the purpose of
-the government to keep a firm check on the Duma. The imperial veto is
-absolute. The Czar controls the upper house; and the ministers have power
-to legislate when the parliament is not sitting.
-
- The Rouvier Ministry of France is defeated in the Chamber
- of Deputies by a combination against the Anti-Clericals and
- immediately resigns.
-
-March 8.—Reported from Berlin, intense indignation and mortification are
-shown at Russia’s action in throwing off her reserve and standing by
-France in the proposition that the control of the police of Morocco shall
-be entrusted to France and Spain. It is said that no more concessions can
-be obtained and that Germany must now show her hand and back down; that
-Von Radowitz, representing Germany at Morocco, will be sacrificed. There
-is also talk of Von Buelow’s resignation.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _Along The Firing Line_
-
-_BY The Circulation Manager_]
-
-
-January was our best month for subscriptions at the time I wrote for the
-March number, but I guessed that February would be better still—and I
-guessed correctly. Although January had 27 business days, as against 22
-in February (Lincoln’s and Washington’s birthdays cut in on the little,
-short month), yet we received nearly fifty-one per cent more renewals
-and new subscriptions in the latter month. And if we may judge the March
-business by the first three days (I write this March 4), the stormy
-month will bring more subscriptions than January and February combined.
-It may possibly be a case of “coming in like a lion and going out like
-a lamb”—but I do not think so. Our subscribers, agents, and clubbing
-newspapers are showing a much greater interest than formerly—and as the
-list grows our field of opportunity broadens.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One would naturally suppose that every subscription received would
-narrow our field—but it doesn’t. On the contrary. I can imagine a state
-of affairs—a list so large—that every subscriber secured would make it
-harder to get another, for we can’t expect every man, woman and child to
-take any one publication. But no magazine ever reached that dizzy height.
-Practically every subscriber we get is a missionary who brings in at
-least one convert within the year, and many of them send in dozens of
-new subscriptions. I need hardly use space in saying that we thoroughly
-appreciate these kindnesses and endeavor to show our appreciation by
-making WATSON’S MAGAZINE better and better each month. That’s a foregone
-conclusion.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Temporarily, however, we are embarrassed by the great influx of
-subscriptions, and for a little while we ask the kind indulgence of our
-friends. Everything shall be taken care of, but for a few weeks there may
-be some delays. It takes time to train new subscription clerks.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Our one weakness heretofore has been lack of proper organization to keep
-in touch with and look after the interests of the news-dealers. This has
-been remedied by placing a thoroughly competent man in charge of the
-news-dealer circulation. A complete roster of the news-dealers is being
-made and every effort will be put forth to increase news-stand sales.
-The tens of thousands of booksellers and news-dealers throughout the
-United States, supplied by the American News Company and its branches,
-constitute an army of distribution which has taken many years and an
-immense sum of money to raise and equip. We want to make use of that army
-to the best advantage of our patrons, the dealers and ourselves. Probably
-more than one-half of the reading public buys regularly of news-dealers,
-and a much larger percentage buys occasionally. Wherever our friends
-prefer to buy of the dealer, we earnestly wish them to do so; and if at
-any time there is any difficulty in securing Watson’s at the news stands,
-write us about it. We are now equipped to take care of all complaints of
-this character promptly.
-
-There is, however, an immense reading public receiving mail on R. F.
-D. routes—yet it is only thirteen years ago that Mr. Watson, after a
-hard fight, secured a small appropriation in Congress to be used in
-experiments with rural free delivery of mail—real “rural” delivery, not
-the kind Mr. Wanamaker had tried in the small towns previously. But even
-after Mr. Watson got the appropriation, Cleveland’s Postmaster-General
-refused to use it. “Scandalous use of the people’s money,” he doubtless
-argued, “and, besides, it might develop into something which would hurt
-the express companies.” To Mr. Watson is due the credit for securing
-the first appropriation for rural free delivery. He is the father. But
-we must give the devil his due—the Republican Party built up the system
-Mr. Watson originated. Well, that party never was afraid to spend the
-people’s money.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now, these R. F. D. patrons get mail at their respective doors every
-weekday. They need not, and do not, go often to the nearest village or
-town. Hence, they cannot so well depend upon news-dealers for WATSON’S.
-They are best served by subscribing and having Uncle Sam’s mail-carrier
-bring it to the door.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The news-stand buyer pays thirty cents a year more for WATSON’S than does
-his rural brother—but he invests a much smaller amount each time, so the
-two sacrifices (but it isn’t exactly correct to call buying WATSON’S
-a “sacrifice”) are about equal. This calls to mind a suggestion, that
-has been made several times, to allow taxes to be paid in instalments.
-Cold-blooded figures say that it is exactly the same whether one pays a
-$24 tax in one payment, or in four of $6 each, or in 12 of $2 each; but
-actual experience says, No; there is a difference.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Funny, isn’t it, how the Republican Party denounces some proposition as
-a Populistic vagary—and then turns ’round and does the very thing it
-has denounced! In 1896 we were told that the people would have none
-of silver—those “fifty-cent dollars”; yet between 1897 and 1903 the
-Republican Party coined more silver than in any other seven years of the
-country’s history. Not “free coinage,” of course, but that Sherman silver
-which was stacked up in vaults, and which no one wanted.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Public ownership was denounced as “confiscation,” anarchy, socialism,
-paternalism, and so on. But Teddy and Uncle Sam went into the railroad
-business down in Panama, and only recently that fat boy, Taft, bought
-300 acres of coal lands at Batan, Philippine Islands, for $50,000,
-money voted by Congress for the purpose, and it is given out flatly
-that “it is the intention of the Government not to relinquish title to
-the mines.” They will be leased to competitive bidders. The Secretary
-of War is drawing a bill to provide for this leasing, and says, oh, ye
-gods, listen: That the Government will regulate the price of coal in the
-Philippines!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Didn’t we hear something about the impossibility of doing such a stunt
-as “regulating prices” away back in 1896 and later? Couldn’t regulate
-the price of silver by letting it into the mints at $1.39 plus an ounce.
-Oh, no! Seems to me we ought to have an “International agreement” on
-the price of coal. Otherwise, what’s to prevent those disreputable
-“furriners” from dumping their pauper-mined coal into the Philippines,
-and carrying away every ounce of our gold?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Who said the People’s Party is dead? Out in Coal City, Ill., the
-Populists recently nominated the following village ticket:
-
- The People’s Party met in Borella’s Hall and made the following
- nominations: For trustees, two years, John McNamara, Peter
- Bono, and Axtel Anderson. For village clerk, Edward Fulton. For
- police magistrate, Frank Francis. For library directors, James
- Leish and Walter Palmer.
-
-Some call it the decadence of party spirit, but others believe it a
-recovery from partisan insanity—this independent attitude of men who
-formerly wore a party collar with meekness, if not with actual pride. A
-year or more ago Dr. Engelhard, of Rising City, Neb., expressed it in the
-picturesque language of the West, thus: “I am now a political maverick.”
-At a recent dinner of the Wisconsin Society of New York, Representative
-Henry C. Adams, of the Badger State, pleading for the “insurgents”
-who are in rebellion, not “against good government but against bad
-government,” graphically described the political situation of today as
-follows:
-
- “Party feeling has run to the lowest ebb ever known in
- American politics. It is hard work to tell a Democrat from
- a Republican. The South is swinging toward protection. New
- England is flirting with free trade. Pittsburg goes Democratic.
- New York City barely escapes the rule of a Socialist.
- Missouri sends Republicans to Congress. Folk is cheered by
- Republicans. La Follette is voted for by Democrats. The House
- of Representatives votes almost unanimously for the President’s
- rate bill, and a Republican committee gives it in charge of a
- Senator from South Carolina to report to the Senate.”
-
-In Mr. Edgerton’s excellent article on “Farmers’ Organizations” (February
-number) he failed to mention a very strong one in the grain belt—the
-American Society of Equity, with headquarters at Indianapolis. It claims
-a membership of over 200,000 farmers, and its president, J. A. Everitt,
-asserts that its members will hold their wheat for $1.00 and other
-cereals correspondingly—and that they expect to win. Let’s hope they may.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But let’s think a little. That won’t cut down railroad dividends, or
-make kerosene and rent any cheaper; and it _will_ make bread higher. So
-suppose the Farmers’ Union, down South, pushes cotton up to 15 cents;
-and the American Society of Equity pushes wheat up to a dollar; and the
-“Big 6” here wins its fight for an 8-hour day at 9 hours’ pay—won’t all
-these wealth-producers, after matters get readjusted, be about where they
-were before? I’m not throwing cold water on the efforts of any of these
-organizations, for I glory in their fighting proclivities—but I can’t see
-any permanent advantage accruing to any of them so long as the railroads
-and the banks are armed with letters of marque and reprisal, and legally
-empowered to rob every actual producer and every consumer. Each of these
-organizations carefully avoids politics. Is that wise? Possibly; but I
-can’t see it that way.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“How shall I remit for subscriptions?” ask a number of agents. Well, most
-anything that will bring the money will do, but we have this preference:
-A United States Post Office Money Order, made out to TOM WATSON’S
-MAGAZINE. That will give us your name on the order, making it easy to
-trace errors—and our bank charges no exchange for handling. But we never
-refuse cheques, drafts, express orders, currency, or postage stamps, if
-sent us in good condition.
-
-“But,” I hear a chorus of voices saying, “we thought you’d changed the
-name, and just now you said ‘Tom Watson’s Magazine.’” Just so, I did.
-That is the name of the corporation which publishes WATSON’S MAGAZINE.
-The corporation known as Tom Watson’s Magazine has not changed its name.
-It has five offices: President, vice-president, secretary, treasurer and
-cashier. These offices are held by three Populists, as follows:
-
-_President_, Thomas E. Watson.
-
-_Vice-President and Treasurer_, H. C. S. Stimpson.
-
-_Secretary and Cashier_, C. Q. de France.
-
-I need not introduce Mr. Watson. Mr. Stimpson is secretary of the
-People’s Party in New York State; and I am secretary of the National
-Committee.
-
-Don’t make your remittance payable to any of the officers, but simply to
-the company, Tom Watson’s Magazine, and address your communications to
-the Magazine—not to individuals.
-
-[Illustration: _C. Q. de France_]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of Vital Importance to Patriotic Citizens
-
-National Documents
-
-a collection of notable state papers chronologically arranged to form a
-documentary history of this country. It opens with the first Virginia
-Charter of 1606 and closes with the Panama Canal Act of 1904, and
-comprises all the important diplomatic treaties, official proclamations
-and legislative acts in American history.
-
-Settle All Disputes Intelligently
-
-You can trace from the original sources the development of this country
-as an independent power. Never before have these sources been brought
-together for your benefit. The volume contains 504 pages and a complete
-index enabling the reader to turn readily to any subject in which he may
-be interested. Bound in an artistic green crash cloth, stamped in gold.
-Printed in a plain, readable type on an opaque featherweight paper.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_As a Special Offer to the readers of WATSON’S MAGAZINE, we will send
-this book postpaid and the Magazine for one year for $2.20._ Your order
-and remittance should be sent direct to =TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE, 121 W.
-42d St. N. Y.=
-
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-and durable, and costs as much as the sole of any $6.00 shoe. Every
-piece of leather in every Reliance shoe is up to the same high standard.
-The workmanship is the product of the most skilled shoemakers. Reliance
-shoes are made on custom lasts and handsomely finished. In wear and
-shape-retaining qualities, foot comfort and style, we guarantee the
-Reliance at $3.50 equal to any $6.00 shoe made. The graceful curve of
-the heel prevents slipping up and down, and the narrow shank properly
-supports the weight and gives the foot absolute comfort. If you’ll
-investigate Reliance shoes, you’ll wear no other make. Be fair to
-yourself and do it now. We fully satisfy you in every way or return your
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-
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-attending the use of powder. That you may know by experience its value we
-will send you free a sample tube of Dentacura and our booklet, “Taking
-Care of the Teeth.” Write at once. Offer expires May 15th, ’06.
-
-Dentacura may be had at most toilet counters. Price 25c. If your dealer
-does not have it we will send it on receipt of price.
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-uniformity have won for it universal esteem. In the nursery it is
-supreme, unequalled for =chafing=, =nettle-rash=, =chapped hands=, etc.,
-it is soothing, sanitary and healing. MENNEN’S face on every box—see that
-you get the genuine. _For sale everywhere or by mail, 25c. Sample free._
-MENNEN’S VIOLET (Borated) TALCUM has the scent of fresh cut violets.
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-GERHARD MENNEN CO.—NEWARK, N.J.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WATSON'S MAGAZINE, VOL. IV, NO.
-2, APRIL, 1906 ***
-
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- The Project Gutenberg eBook of Watson’s Magazine, Vol. IV, No. 2, April, 1906, by Various.
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-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Watson's Magazine, Vol. IV, No. 2, April, 1906, by Various</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Watson's Magazine, Vol. IV, No. 2, April, 1906</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Authors: Various</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em;'>Thomas E. Watson</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 7, 2022 [eBook #67797]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: hekula03 and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WATSON'S MAGAZINE, VOL. IV, NO. 2, APRIL, 1906 ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-
-<img src="images/ad-lincoln.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-
-<p class="center larger">ABRAHAM LINCOLN</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">was the radical of his day. Many of the views expressed in his letters and
-speeches would strike a “good Republican” of today as extremely radical.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">ARE YOU ACQUAINTED</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">with the great commoner’s views on political and religious liberty, on alien immigration,
-on the relation of labor and capital, on the
-colonization of negroes, on free labor, on lynch law,
-on the doctrine that all men are created equal, on
-the importance of young men in politics, on popular
-sovereignty, on woman suffrage?</p>
-
-<p>All of his views are to be found in this edition
-of “LINCOLN’S LETTERS AND ADDRESSES,”
-the first complete collection to be published
-in a single volume. Bound in an artistic green
-crash cloth, stamped in gold. Printed in a plain,
-readable type, on an opaque featherweight paper.</p>
-
-<p>For $1.95, sent direct to this office, we will enter
-a year’s subscription to WATSON’S
-MAGAZINE and mail a copy of LINCOLN’S
-LETTERS AND ADDRESSES, postage prepaid.
-This handsome book and Watson’s
-Magazine—both for only $1.95. Send today.
-Do it now.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><b>TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE<br />
-121 West 42d St., New York City</b></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1>WATSON’S MAGAZINE</h1>
-
-<p class="center">THE MAGAZINE WITH A PURPOSE BACK OF IT</p>
-
-<table summary="The staff of Watson’s Magazine">
- <tr>
- <td><i>THOMAS E. WATSON</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Editor</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>JOHN DURHAM WATSON</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Associate Editor</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>RICHARD DUFFY</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Managing Editor</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>ARTHUR S. HOFFMAN</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Assistant Editor</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>C. Q. DE FRANCE</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Circulation Manager</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>TED FLAACKE</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Advertising Manager</i></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center larger">April, 1906</p>
-
-<table class="contents" summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#Frontispiece"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>W. Gordon Nye</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Editorials</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Thomas E. Watson</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Editorials"><i>161</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="ed"><i>Sam Spencer</i>—<i>The Ungrateful Negro</i>—<i>An
- Indignant Wisconsin</i> <i>Editor</i>—<i>The Man and The Land</i>—<i>Random
- Comment</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Machine Rule and Its Termination</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>George H. Shibley</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Machine_Rule_and_its_Termination"><i>193</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>A Basket and a Fortune</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Louise Forsslund</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#A_Basket_And_A_Fortune"><i>201</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Control or Ownership</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Charles Q. De France</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Control_or_Ownership"><i>209</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>The Sacrifice</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Jack B. Norman</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#THE_SACRIFICE"><i>212</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Our Civilization</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Count Lyof Tolstoy</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Our_Civilization"><i>218</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>A Coal Miner’s Story</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Charles S. Moody, M. D.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#A_Coal_Miners_Story"><i>219</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>The Pessimist; His View-Point</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Pessimist_His_View-Point"><i>227</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Those That Are Joined Together</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Charles Fort</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#THOSE_THAT_ARE_JOINED_TOGETHER"><i>228</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>The Money Power</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>L. H. B.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Money_Power"><i>240</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>The Russian Apostle of Populism</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Thomas C. Hutton</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Russian_Apostle_of_Populism"><i>241</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Lucianna’s Keep</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Elliot Walker</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#LUCIANNAS_KEEP"><i>244</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Who Pays the Taxes?</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>William H. Tilton</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Who_Pays_the_Taxes"><i>253</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Letters from the People</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Letters_From_The_People"><i>258</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Educational Department</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Thomas E. Watson</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Educational_Department"><i>275</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Home</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Louise H. Miller</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#HOME"><i>277</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Books</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Thomas E. Watson</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#BOOKS"><i>290</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>The Easter Hope</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Cora A. Matson Dolson</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Easter_Hope"><i>300</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>The Say of Other Editors</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Say_of_Other_Editors"><i>301</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>News Record</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#News_Record"><i>306</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Along the Firing Line</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Circulation Manager</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Along_The_Firing_Line"><i>318</i></a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center smaller">Application made for Entry as Second-Class Matter, February 17, 1906, at the Post Office at New York, N. Y.,
-under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.</p>
-
-<p class="center smaller">Copyright, 1906, in U. S. and Great Britain. Published by <span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine, 121 West 42d Street, N. Y.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center smaller">TERMS: $1.50 A YEAR; 15 CENTS A NUMBER</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 525px;" id="Frontispiece">
-<img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" width="525" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">The Mockers of the Law and Despoilers of
-the People Have in Their Pay Vast Numbers to Vent Spleen and Venom on the Man
-that Dares to Speak Truth.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="smcap"><i>Watson’s Magazine</i></span></h2>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Vol. IV</span> <span class="spacer">APRIL,
-1906</span> <span class="smcap">No. 2</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Editorials"><i>Editorials</i><br />
-<span class="smaller">BY THOMAS E. WATSON</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><i>Sam Spencer</i></h3>
-
-<p>Not long ago the Voting Trustees
-of the Southern Railway Company
-wrote to Samuel Spencer,
-President of that robber combine, in
-the following terms:</p>
-
-<p>“We congratulate you upon the success
-achieved in the extension and operation
-of the property which have resulted
-in nearly doubling the extent of its lines,
-trebling its gross earnings, and increasing
-its net earnings above fixed charges,
-<i>over five hundred and twenty-five per cent.</i>
-in the period of eleven years which have
-elapsed since its formation.”</p>
-
-<p>Bully for Sam!</p>
-
-<p>He set out to please the men who
-bought him, and he has done it.</p>
-
-<p>The Wall Street rascals who grabbed
-up the railroads in the Southern States
-knew very well that they themselves
-could not do the work which was required
-for the success of their schemes.
-The Belmonts and the Morgans could
-not in person approach the editors,
-the politicians, the legislators and the
-federal judges.</p>
-
-<p>Strategy requires that local men be
-used in the looting of any given state or
-section. One traitor inside the citadel
-is worth ten thousand soldiers on the
-outside, when the object is to take the
-citadel. To bribe somebody from within
-to open the gates is far more effective,
-vastly more to be desired, than to attempt
-to breach the walls or batter
-down the gates.</p>
-
-<p>Consequently when Western states
-are to be plundered, the Wall Street
-corporations use Western men as their
-tools. Local Western corruptionists sell
-out to Wall Street, and do in Western
-states the dirty work of their Wall
-Street masters.</p>
-
-<p>So in the South, the Wall Street
-robber-gangs do not operate in person;
-they act through Southern agents.</p>
-
-<p>In pursuance of this subtle policy,
-the Wall Street corporations, who gobbled
-up the various lines which now
-compose the Southern Railway System,
-put at the head of it a Southern man,
-a Georgian, of the name of Samuel
-Spencer.</p>
-
-<p>They chose wisely. They generally
-choose wisely. The expert workman
-does not better know how to select his
-tools than such men as Belmont, Morgan,
-Ryan, Rogers and Rockefeller
-know how to pick out the men who can
-do what Wall Street expects.</p>
-
-<p>The Wall Street rascals had faith in
-Sam Spencer, and Sam has justified
-that confidence.</p>
-
-<p>Never did any robber-chief have an
-abler lieutenant than Belmont, the
-Rothschild agent, has had in Sam.</p>
-
-<p>The task to which they set him was
-hard. It demanded that he freeze his
-heart and stifle his conscience. It demanded
-that he shut out from his view
-of life every other purpose whatsoever,
-save the heaping up of dividends for a
-ravenous gang of Wall Street rascals.</p>
-
-<p>To make his work seem good in the
-sight of the men who had bought him
-it was necessary that he combine railroads
-which the law said should not be
-combined, that he destroy competition<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-where the law said
-it should live, that
-he charge excessive
-rates to shippers
-and passengers when
-the law said the
-rates should be reasonable.</p>
-
-<p>He has done this
-in spite of the law,
-in spite of the people.</p>
-
-<p>How?</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<img src="images/illus1.jpg" width="400" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“One traitor inside the citadel is worth
-ten thousand soldiers on the outside.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Editors have been
-bribed into collusion
-or silence; politicians
-have been softened
-with boodle;
-lobbyists have been
-kept in clover; legislators
-have been
-duped or corrupted.
-Railroad Commissions
-have been seduced
-or defied, federal judges have
-been mellowed with favors, blandishments,
-indirect temptings which poor
-human nature can seldom resist.</p>
-
-<p>Bully for Sam!</p>
-
-<p>He is victorious all along the line.
-From Washington City he rules the
-South. In his native State of Georgia
-he is monarch of all he surveys. He
-made Terrell governor, and he means
-to make Howell governor. He controlled
-nearly all the daily papers, but
-he wanted another—so he had Jim
-English to cut the ground from under
-the feet of John Temple Graves and
-scoop the <i>Atlanta News</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Hamp McWhorter is his hireling,
-and Hamp keeps the mechanism of
-corruption oiled. Hamp keeps the
-Legislature in pliant mood. Hamp
-jollies and greases the local politician.
-Hamp peddles the free passes. Hamp
-picks and chooses the “local attorneys.”
-Hamp “sees” the editor who appears
-to require “seeing.”</p>
-
-<p>But the Brain and Will of the whole
-plot are those of Sam Spencer.</p>
-
-<p>For eleven years that God-given
-brain and will have been concentrated
-upon one purpose, only one—to
-heap up riches for Wall Street rascals!
-Great has been
-the result. Sam
-Spencer’s masters
-are so highly pleased
-with his work that
-<span class="smcap">they</span> congratulate
-<span class="smcap">him</span>!</p>
-
-<p>How interesting!
-It seems to me that
-<i>they</i> are the fellows
-to be congratulated.
-Sam has doubled the
-amount of their property,
-he has trebled
-the gross income
-from that property,
-and has increased
-their <i>net</i> revenues
-<i>over 525 per cent</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Colossal profits
-these. <i>How were
-they made?</i></p>
-
-<p>By such a system
-of dishonesty, extortion,
-law-breaking, and reckless disregard
-of human life as has rarely been
-known, even in the history of modern
-commercialism.</p>
-
-<p>The merchants and farmers throughout
-the Southern States have been
-ruthlessly robbed. The melon growers,
-the fruit men, the truck gardeners have,
-in thousands of cases, been so hounded
-and harried and victimized by excessive
-charges, secret rebates and discriminations
-in favor of other shippers, that
-they have been literally driven out of
-the field, broken and despairing.</p>
-
-<p>Roadbeds, bridges, safety appliances,
-have been so wantonly neglected that
-almost every mile of the Southern Railway
-System from Washington southward
-has known its tragedy, where
-men, women and children were dashed
-to sudden, horrible death.</p>
-
-<p>It was not the hard necessity of poverty
-that drove Sam Spencer to a policy
-so heartless as this. He had the means
-wherewith to put his roads in first-class
-order, had he wished to spend the funds
-in that way. It was not necessary for
-him to rob the men who were obliged
-to patronize his roads. If a fair, legitimate
-profit upon actual investment
-was all that he sought, he could have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-got it without doing the slightest injustice
-to any human being.</p>
-
-<p>But he wanted more than that. A
-reasonable return upon the actual investment
-was not enough. So, he neglected
-the bridge until it fell, with its
-sickening horror, its shrieking mass of
-passengers doomed to frightful death.
-He neglected the safety appliances, and
-the full force of workmen, until some rotten
-crosstie, or defective rail, or open
-switch, or telegram which the dulled
-brain of an overworked engineer failed
-to comprehend, brought about derailments
-and collisions, with the heartrending
-consequence of crushed and
-burning cars, of crushed and burning
-men, women and children.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus2.jpg" width="700" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“The merchants and farmers throughout the Southern states have been ruthlessly robbed.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Had the same proportion of the earnings
-been used to improve the property,
-as is the universal custom in Europe,
-there would have been the same security
-to the passenger that there is in
-Europe.</p>
-
-<p>But the net profit to Wall Street
-would have been only a fair return upon
-the money actually invested—as it is
-in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Wall Street demands more than that.
-Sam Spencer’s task was to get what
-Wall Street wanted.</p>
-
-<p>Have I not already said that Wall
-Street knows how to pick out its man?</p>
-
-<p>It never chose a better tool for its
-purpose than Sam Spencer.</p>
-
-<p>He has doubled the <i>amount</i> of their
-property.</p>
-
-<p>That is good.</p>
-
-<p>But he has done better than that.</p>
-
-<p>He has trebled the gross earnings.</p>
-
-<p>And that is good, too.</p>
-
-<p>But he has done still better than that.</p>
-
-<p>He has increased the <span class="smcap">net</span> earnings
-more than <span class="smcap">five hundred and twenty-five
-per cent</span>!</p>
-
-<p>Good, <i>better</i>, <span class="smcap">best</span>.</p>
-
-<p>That enormous profit had to be made
-out of somebody.</p>
-
-<p>Freight rates and passenger rates are
-taxes which the transportation companies
-levy upon freight and passengers.
-When Sam Spencer added 525
-per cent. to the net revenue of his masters,
-he had to tax it out of the people
-who patronized the Southern Railroad.</p>
-
-<p>Who were these people? Mostly,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
-Southern people. The tax was levied
-upon the South, and paid by the South.</p>
-
-<p>Sam Spencer is a Southern man?</p>
-
-<p>Bless you, yes!</p>
-
-<p>Wall Street hired him to systematize
-the robbery of his own people,
-and he has done it.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus3.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“We lost fewer lives to the invading host
-of Sherman than we have lost to the railroads
-under Sam Spencer.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>During the eleven years of his
-rule he has plundered his own
-people of more money than they
-lost by Sherman’s “Marching through
-Georgia.”</p>
-
-<p>The people of the South have lost
-more to the Wall Street railway corporations
-than they lost to the whole
-of Sherman’s army.</p>
-
-<p>The battles of the Civil War were
-bloody, for it was Greek meet Greek,
-and it was, in truth, the tug of war.
-Especially were the battles bloody
-when Sherman came down against us,
-for he brought Western troops—the
-best that the Union had.</p>
-
-<p>But we lost fewer lives to the invading
-host of Sherman than we have lost
-to the railroads during the eleven
-years that Sam Spencer has been one
-of their most relentless and unscrupulous
-lieutenants.</p>
-
-<p>He and his allies in plunder and
-crime killed and wounded, last year,
-the staggering total of 92,000 human
-beings.</p>
-
-<p>The ghastly record grows bloodier
-every year.</p>
-
-<p>Human life is nothing; dividends
-are everything.</p>
-
-<p><i>Five hundred and twenty-five per cent!</i></p>
-
-<p>And Sam Spencer’s bosses pat <i>him</i>
-on the back and congratulate <i>him</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Ah, yes; they were feeling good.
-They expanded. They bubbled over.</p>
-
-<p>As who should say: “Sam, you are
-a trump. When we bought you, we
-believed we had bought a good thing;
-now we know it. You have been tried,
-and you have proven true. We set you
-to the task of plundering your own people,
-and you have not flinched from the
-job. You have skinned them to the
-queen’s taste. You have doubled our
-estate, trebled the earnings, and so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>
-squeezed the train-crews, the section
-hands, the roadbed, the shipper and
-the passenger, that you have swelled
-our profits more than 525 per cent.
-We congratulate <i>you</i>—and, <span class="smcap">we</span> pocket
-the money.”</p>
-
-<h3><i>The Ungrateful Negro</i></h3>
-
-<p class="center"><i>From a Newspaper</i></p>
-
-<p class="center smaller">THE AMERICAN FLAG INSULTED BY NEGRO BISHOP IN MACON.</p>
-
-<p class="center smaller">DENOUNCED GLORIOUS EMBLEM AS A CONTEMPTIBLE RAG AT THE
-STATE NEGRO CONVENTION.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Macon, Ga.</span>, Feb. 16.—In an address before the five hundred delegates attending
-the convention of negroes in this city to discuss racial problems,
-Bishop H. M. Turner declared the American Flag to be a dirty and contemptible
-rag. He further said that hell was an improvement on the United
-States when the negro was involved.</p>
-
-<p>In closing he said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I have heard of both white and black men perpetrating rape upon innocent,
-angelic women, but no negro in this country has been tried by the
-courts and found guilty of the heinous crime of rape in fifteen years.</p>
-
-<p>“I know that bloody-handed and drunken mobs have said so, but what
-Christian people would accept what they say? Yet there are millions of
-men who pretend to be moral and claim to be sensible in this country, who go
-to these drunken mobs to get information relative to the conduct of colored men.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>How it came to pass is a question
-which human wisdom may not solve,
-but in the earliest dawn of history we
-find the races of men separated by color
-and by characteristics, very much as
-they are at this time.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of all the comings and goings,
-the migrations and conquests, the discoveries
-and colonizations, the world is
-pretty nearly the same old world, so far
-as the distinct races of men are concerned.
-The Jew is still the Jew, the
-Gentile still the Gentile. All the currents
-of the ages have not washed the
-yellow man white, nor turned the red
-man yellow, nor the black man red.
-The hot sun of the tropics pours down
-upon the heads of the sons of men as
-fervidly as in the days of Abraham,
-Isaac and Jacob, but it has not been
-able to kink the hair, flatten the nose,
-blubber the lips or blacken the hide of a
-single man, woman or child of the
-Aryan race. The Chinaman, racially,
-is what he was in the time of Confucius;
-the Hindoo is yet the dark man whom
-Khrishna sought to lead to the higher
-life.</p>
-
-<p>In Africa, the home of the negro,
-there has been a monotonous repetition
-of the same old facts which historians
-learned from monumental inscriptions
-and indestructible tablets thousands
-upon thousands of years old.</p>
-
-<p>The African negro has always been a
-distinct type, an inferior type, a savage
-type, a non-progressive type. Left to
-himself, he wore no clothing, built no
-houses, had no commerce, systematized
-no production of any sort and
-never had the faintest conception of
-doing anything to improve himself or
-his condition. He killed for the day
-the game he needed for the day. For
-the future, he made as little provision
-as the Indian and the Esquimau.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the herding of cattle he had
-no instinct for accumulation. His
-normal state was that of warfare
-against some other black tribe. His
-religion was the grossest superstition.
-He offered up to his heathen gods
-the sacrifice of the negro child; and
-when his appetite for four-legged animals
-was sated, he changed his diet by
-cooking and eating another negro.</p>
-
-<p>Where the sexual relations of the
-men and women were not promiscuous,
-they were polygamous. Strictly speaking,
-there was no such thing as morals<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-known among them. Property rights
-which certain men had, or claimed, in
-certain women might be respected, but
-the conception of virtue was not reached.</p>
-
-<p>They never evolved an alphabet.
-They never advanced beyond the crudest,
-rudest, most brutal tribe-life.</p>
-
-<p>They had chiefs, or kings; and these
-kings exercised, despotically, the power
-of life and death over their ignorant
-subjects.</p>
-
-<p>They had conjurers and witch doctors,
-and it was one of the time-honored
-customs that the witch doctors should
-“smell out,” for death, the wretched
-creatures whom the king wanted to
-kill, or whom the witch doctors themselves
-wished to put out of the way.</p>
-
-<p>Thousands upon thousands of years
-ago, negro warriors sold their negro
-captives into slavery. Negro husbands
-would offer their wives and
-daughters to foreign travelers. Negro
-fathers would sell their children. In
-some of the oldest monumental inscriptions
-of the human race, the negro
-appears as the chained slave of
-foreign masters.</p>
-
-<p>Anybody on
-earth who wanted
-to buy him could
-do it. His king was
-ready to sell him;
-his father was ready
-to sell him. The
-Egyptian, the
-Greek, the Roman
-owned black slaves
-as far back as the
-records go; and the
-historian Gibbon
-did no more than
-express the universal
-experience and
-opinion of the ages
-when he wrote that
-the negro was a
-distinctly inferior
-race.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/illus4.jpg" width="350" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“His normal state was that of warfare
-against some other black tribe.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of all the negroes
-that have ever lived
-Tchaka was the
-greatest. He ruled
-in Africa, in the
-eighteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>He was a man of immense natural
-power. His ambition was boundless,
-his soul untroubled by fear or scruple.
-Absolute master of a strong tribe, he
-hurled it against other tribes, one after
-another, until he had conquered and
-devastated an imperial territory. In
-his march to dominion, it is estimated
-that he caused the slaughter of a million
-human beings, all of whom were
-his brothers in black. But he never
-built a city; never put a ship on the
-sea; never made two blades of grass
-grow where one had grown before. He
-founded no institutions of any kind.
-He was densely ignorant and superstitious
-himself, and he had no conception
-of anything higher or better.</p>
-
-<p>To kill, to conquer, to feast, to indulge
-bestial lust, to inspire terror, to
-exploit and mercilessly abuse the abject
-servility of the negroes over
-whom he ruled were his “pleasures
-of living.”</p>
-
-<p>It was believed that he caused the
-death of his own mother; it is <i>known</i>
-that when he buried her he buried
-fourteen young negro
-girls with her—<i>buried
-them alive</i>!</p>
-
-<p>It is <i>known</i> that,
-during the “period
-of mourning”
-which followed, he
-caused the death of
-some thousands of
-maddened and
-helpless negroes. It
-is also known that
-his sisters got his
-brothers to assassinate
-him. Then
-one of these brothers
-murdered the
-other, and so became
-king of that
-happy land.</p>
-
-<p>In Africa where
-the negro is still to
-be seen in his natural
-state, you can
-still buy negroes
-from negroes. Husbands
-will yet sell
-wives, fathers will<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
-yet barter daughters and sons. The
-buying and selling of negroes goes on
-now just as it did in the days of the
-Pharaohs. There is not so much of
-it as there used to be—to the regret,
-doubtless, of African chiefs who have
-negroes they would like to sell.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
-<img src="images/illus5.jpg" width="300" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">One of the San Domingo Nobility.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Not long ago there was a story
-which went the
-usual rounds. An
-English traveler was
-about to set out from
-a certain coast town
-of Africa upon a
-journey into the interior.
-He expected
-to be gone for several
-months. In fitting
-himself out with
-camp equipage, he
-bought a negro girl
-to carry along—to
-serve as his mistress.
-Her father sold her,
-and the only surprise
-that was caused by
-the transaction was
-the amount paid.
-The Englishman gave
-about one hundred
-dollars for the girl
-and it was generally
-considered an extravagant
-figure. As to
-the girl, she seemed
-proud to have been
-selected, and gratified
-at having been
-sold so high. When the Englishman
-had finished his trip, he probably sold
-her at a discount to some other white
-man who desired a complete camp outfit.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Excepting those portions of Africa
-wherein the white man has set his foot
-and impressed his will, the negro is at
-this day the same lustful, brutal, besotted
-cannibal and voodoo slave that
-he was thousands of years ago.</p>
-
-<p>In Jamaica, the white man has to
-steer for him, and control him.</p>
-
-<p>He did not even know what to do
-with bananas till Col. Baker, a white
-man, came along and taught him.</p>
-
-<p>In Liberia, he has gone back to
-heathenism and savagery, because the
-white man’s strong hand is not there to
-guide and control.</p>
-
-<p>In San Domingo, he had—as a starting
-point—one of the fairest civilizations
-the world has known. Aided by
-the yellow fever, the black man drove
-out the white; and now he has gone
-back into chaos,
-voodooism, cannibalism
-and imbecility.</p>
-
-<p>In the United
-States, negroes can
-run a bank, for they
-can see white men
-running banks all
-around them and
-they are quick at
-imitation.</p>
-
-<p>How is it in San
-Domingo, where the
-black man rules the
-white?</p>
-
-<p>Apparently there
-is not a bank in San
-Domingo. If there is,
-it cannot be trusted.
-Why do I say this?</p>
-
-<p>Because that portion
-of the San Domingan
-custom-house
-receipts which was
-to be paid to the
-creditors of the negro
-republic had to be
-deposited in a New
-York bank for safe-keeping.</p>
-
-<p>In the United States, the negroes can
-run colleges, manufacturing establishments,
-automobile street-car lines,
-newspapers and magazines. Why?
-Because they see how the whites run
-colleges, manufactories, and automobiles,
-newspapers and magazines.</p>
-
-<p>In San Domingo there is no Tuskeegee,
-Hampton or Howard. In San Domingo
-there are no flourishing manufactories
-created and operated by
-negroes; and no up-to-date automobile
-street-car lines, such as the negroes
-started in Nashville, Tennessee.</p>
-
-<p>The negroes of San Domingo ought
-to have a commerce—one of the most
-profitable in the world; but they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-haven’t. Their navy is a myth, and
-their army a joke. One revolution
-chases after another with such confusing
-rapidity that when our Senate
-meets to debate the ratification of the
-San Domingan treaty which Roosevelt
-had arranged, the “President” with
-whom Roosevelt had made the treaty
-is a fugitive, whose “Cabinet” has compelled
-him to take to the woods.</p>
-
-<p>There used to be an “Order of Nobility”
-in San Domingo, with its Marquis
-of Lemonade and its Duke of
-Marmalade; but as these eminent Noblemen
-have failed to show up in the
-later turmoils I fear their titles have
-become extinct, or that the “Order of
-Nobility” has been abolished.</p>
-
-<p>Which is a pity. It would have been
-something worth living for to have seen
-the Duke of Marmalade paying a visit
-to this country, receiving the adoring
-attentions which New York’s “Swell
-Set” pay to all “noblemen” whomsoever.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Nowhere else in the universe is the
-negro treated so well as in the United
-States.</p>
-
-<p>He was once a slave, but his own
-people sold him. Either he was a captive
-in war who would have been slain,
-broiled and eaten, if the English or
-Dutch sailor had not come along and
-offered to buy him; or he was in the
-power of his chief, his father or his
-brother, and was by them offered for a
-price.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the blacks who were brought
-to this country may have been kidnapped,
-but, as a rule, there was no need
-for kidnapping. Negroes could be
-bought for a song all along the Coast
-and all through the interior of Africa.
-The most successful “kidnapper” was
-New England rum.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, it is a literal historical fact that
-the negro was sold into slavery by his
-own people, just as Joseph was sold by
-his brethren.</p>
-
-<p>In the long run what was the consequence
-to the negro?</p>
-
-<p>He was changed from a savage into
-a semi-civilized man.</p>
-
-<p>In his native land he had been an
-ignorant serf whose life depended upon
-the temper of a despotic brute—his
-chief.</p>
-
-<p>He exchanged a slavery for a slavery;
-and the slavery to which he was brought
-lifted him from a brute into a man.</p>
-
-<p>We taught him how to work; we
-taught him how to read; we taught
-him how to think; we taught him how
-to live.</p>
-
-<p>To free him from the bondage into
-which his own brethren had sold him,
-a million white men rose in arms.
-There were four years of terrible, horrible
-strife; half a million white men fell
-in battle; six billions of dollars were
-devoured in the flames of Civil War;
-and over all that period of strife, and
-over the host which finally triumphed,
-waved the flag which the freed negro—freed
-at such frightful cost—now safely
-denounces as a dirty and contemptible
-rag!</p>
-
-<p>When the “Brothers’ War” was over
-and while the former owner of the slaves
-was prostrate, those who had fought
-that the black man might be free,
-clothed him in the garments of citizenship,
-giving him the ballot, giving him
-office, giving him power, at the same
-time that tens of thousands of white
-men were outlawed.</p>
-
-<p>“Show to the world that you are capable
-of government,” said the white
-philanthropist to the blacks; and the
-result was a hideous carnival of mismanagement,
-incompetency and gross
-rascality which at last made even the
-professional white philanthropist sick
-and ashamed.</p>
-
-<p>Taking out of the hands of the blacks
-the political power which he had shown
-himself unfit to wield, the whites have
-ever since occupied toward him the attitude
-of a guardian over a ward, manifesting
-for him a helpful sympathy,
-aiding his advancement with substantial
-contributions, leading him upward
-and onward by precept, example and
-wholesome control.</p>
-
-<p>Schools were established for him.
-Churches were built for him. White
-men and white women devoted their
-lives to lifting the black man, the black
-woman, the black child into the nobler,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-purer paths. White men taxed themselves
-to put an end to the negro’s
-ignorance and superstition. The white
-man opened his purse to endow colleges
-for the negro’s special benefit.
-The white man opened the door of opportunity
-to the black, and gave him a
-chance in every field of human endeavor.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus6.jpg" width="700" height="425" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“We taught him how to work; we taught him how to read; we taught him
-how to think; we taught him how to live.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Not for one month could the negro
-prosper in the United States, if the
-white man became his enemy.</p>
-
-<p>In one month, we could by concert
-of action, so smite the negro that his
-mushroom growth would wither like
-the severed gourd-vine. The maddest
-thing, the most suicidal thing that the
-black man could do would be to arouse
-the enmity of the whites.</p>
-
-<p>When that day comes, if it shall ever
-come, the white man will not any more
-stop to count the cost of annihilating,
-or of driving out the blacks, than Spain
-halted to count the cost of smiting and
-driving out the Moor.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>In the United States the negro is
-seen at his best, because of the constant
-example, guidance and control of the
-whites.</p>
-
-<p>Nowhere else on the planet has
-the negro the religious establishment
-which he has copied from us, with our
-earnest help.</p>
-
-<p>Nowhere else has he the educational
-system which he has patterned after
-ours, aided at every step by us.</p>
-
-<p>Nowhere else has he the banks, manufactures,
-newspapers, magazines, modernized
-farms, elegant professional offices
-which he has fashioned upon our
-models, amid our plaudits of approval
-and encouragement.</p>
-
-<p>By the hundreds, by the thousands,
-the negro has been admitted to positions
-of honor and trust. He has been
-in the Senate; he has been in the House
-of Representatives; he has been in the
-State Legislatures; he has served on
-juries; he is in the army; he is on the
-police force.</p>
-
-<p>In the proud, aristocratic city of
-Charleston doth not the redoubtable
-Dr. Crum, a negro, sit at the Receipt<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-of Customs, drawing a fatter salary
-than was ever enjoyed by Matthew, the
-Apostle of Christ?</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus7.jpg" width="700" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“To free him from bondage half a million white men fell in battle.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>There are no Dr. Crums in Africa or
-Liberia. And in San Domingo it is the
-white man who sits at the receipt of
-customs—nobody being willing to trust
-the negro with his own money.</p>
-
-<p>Hath not our Roosevelt declared
-that when Judson Lyons, Register of
-the Treasury, goes out, another negro
-shall take his place? <i>Thus it shall
-continue to happen that Uncle Sam’s
-paper money will not be good in law
-until a negro has set his name to it.</i></p>
-
-<p>Once upon a time, a white man, in
-the United States, gave a negro school
-a million dollars in a lump. Doctor
-Booker Washington got the money.
-I wonder how long the learned Doctor
-would have to live in Africa, Liberia,
-or San Domingo before he could get
-a million dollars with which to operate
-a school.</p>
-
-<p>Really, it sometimes occurs to me
-that if such negroes as Bishop Turner
-are honest in their denunciations of the
-United States, they would pack up
-their belongings and go right back to
-dear old Africa, the home of the race.
-Nothing on earth prevents their doing
-so.</p>
-
-<p>Rather than go to hell <i>I</i> would go to
-Africa; and if I believed I was living in
-a land which was worse than hell, I
-would even try San Domingo, for a
-change.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>What <i>bosh</i>, nonsense and self-assertive
-insolence is embodied in Bishop
-Turner’s denunciation of the Flag and
-of the Government!</p>
-
-<p>Poor, down-trodden negro!</p>
-
-<p>What a doleful howl he sets up when
-he is asked to ride in a separate car;
-and when he is told that separate
-churches, separate schools, separate
-hotels, and separate social life is best
-for both races. How he raves and
-froths at the mouth when we tell
-him that for his own sake, as well as
-ours, we who have, with desperate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-difficulty and hardship and sacrifice,
-built up our civilization, cannot afford
-to allow it to fall into the power of the
-inferior race. We have seen what
-they did with this same Civilization
-in San Domingo when the French
-Revolution, most unwisely, entrusted
-it to the blacks.</p>
-
-<p>Reconstruction days taught us that
-the San Domingan experience would
-be repeated here, if the negro rule continued.
-To save ourselves from such
-a calamity, <i>and to save the negro from
-himself</i>, we put back into the hands of
-the whites that civilization which had
-been the outcome of centuries of effort
-on the part of the whites.</p>
-
-<p>And when the Negro Convention
-of today has not met to howl but to
-brag, what a beautiful, brilliant picture
-their orators can paint, as they proclaim
-the progress and prosperity of
-the negro. What wonderful statistics
-they use to prove that the negro
-has advanced in knowledge more
-rapidly than the whites of Russia, of
-Hungary, of Italy and of Spain!
-What a glittering array of accumulated
-millions do they claim, in lands,
-chattels and hereditaments! With
-what vociferous gusto do they “point
-with pride” to their farms, their stores,
-their banks, their newspapers, their
-magazines! To listen to them when
-they have assembled to jubilate instead
-of to howl, you would suppose that, so
-far as the negro was concerned, the
-horn of plenty was full, the land flowing
-with milk and honey. Even Bishop
-Turner, with an amazingly unconscious
-inconsistency, fills his letter of so-called
-denial with boastings of the
-handsome homes in which the negroes
-live, the furniture which the white man
-just ought to go and see, the “library”
-which would delight the scholar, the
-piano music and the organ melodies
-which, in negro homes, soothe the ear
-and charm the sense.</p>
-
-<p>Let us admit that every bit of this
-bragging and boasting is founded upon
-solid fact. Then, in the name of
-common sense, let me inquire: “<i>Where,
-oh, where, is the negro race doing all
-these marvelous things?</i>”</p>
-
-<p>In what country, under what flag, is
-he piling up these millions of money?
-Under what government is he outstripping
-the Russian, the Spaniard,
-the Austrian? Where is it that he has
-bought so many farms, established so
-many banks, built such fine houses,
-secured such attractive furniture, and
-gotten an organ for ’Liza Jane and a
-piano for Susan Ann?</p>
-
-<p>Is it in Africa? No. In Liberia?
-<i>No.</i> In San Domingo? No.</p>
-
-<p>The negro is doing the splendid
-things to which he “points with pride”
-<i>in that country whose flag is a dirty rag,
-in that land which is worse than
-hell</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Poor, down-trodden negro!</p>
-
-<p>He makes an idle wager in Baltimore
-that he will kiss a white girl, in a white
-hotel; and he walks up to her in the
-public dining room, puts his hands
-upon her and kisses her!</p>
-
-<p>In Chicago, he sits down in a white
-restaurant, and beckons a white woman
-waitress to come and wait upon him;
-and when she refuses, he goes straight
-to a magistrate, swears out a warrant,
-has the girl arrested, and sends her to
-prison!</p>
-
-<p>Poor down-trodden negro! In New
-York City, and perhaps in other cities,
-negro men hold white women in a state
-of slavery, <i>to minister to their lusts</i>;
-and the political power of these
-negroes is so great that the lawful
-authorities have been utterly unable
-to free these white slaves from the
-bestial degradation in which they are
-held by their black masters.</p>
-
-<p>In Washington City—but that would
-require a chapter to itself. If there is
-a Paradise on this earth, a Garden of
-Eden filled with ceaseless joy for the
-non-producing, insolent, self-assertive
-blacks, it is our Capital City of Washington,
-where more than two thousand
-negro men and women draw Government
-pay in federal offices.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, that Bishop Turner had described
-to the Macon Convention one of those
-“Receptions” at the mansion of Judson
-Lyons, Register of the Treasury—such
-as Judson often held. Oh,
-that the Bishop had told the Convention<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>
-how many of Judson’s colored
-guests came in automobiles, which
-were left lining the sidewalk and obstructing
-the street. Oh, that the
-Bishop had described to the Convention
-the similarity between the negro
-“Reception” at the mansion of the
-Register of the Treasury and the white
-reception of the President of the
-United States!</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<img src="images/illus8.jpg" width="400" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Poor down-trodden negro!... he
-is sometimes compelled to take dinner with
-John Wanamaker and lunch with Theodore
-Roosevelt.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Poor, down-trodden negro! In this
-land which is worse than hell, it actually
-happens that he is sometimes
-compelled to take dinner with John
-Wanamaker, and to lunch with Theodore
-Roosevelt!</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>The amazement within me grows as
-I dwell upon the black man’s woes, and
-I marvel that Doctor Washington, Judson
-Lyons, Bishop Turner “and others
-among ’em” do not pack right up and
-go straight back to dear old Africa.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>And to think that the man who declared
-this country to be worse than
-hell is a “negro preacher.” I had supposed
-that if there was any human being
-who found the United States an
-ideal abode, it was the “negro preacher.”
-He is the one incumbent whom I had
-been led to believe had a mighty rich
-thing in salary, and a still richer thing
-in “<i>perqueesits</i>.” If I had been asked
-to go out and find the man who could
-unreservedly indorse the proposition
-that life <i>is</i> worth living, I should have
-struck a bee line for the nearest negro
-preacher.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, if I had been unable to
-find <i>him</i>, my next choice would have
-been the negro school-teacher.</p>
-
-<p>The army of negro preachers is a
-shining host, waving palms of victory,
-and apparently happy; the army of
-negro school-teachers is another shining
-host, waving palms of victory, and
-apparently happy.</p>
-
-<p>The white man’s money, directly and
-indirectly, supplies the sinews of war to
-both these shining hosts—a fact which it
-did not suit the purpose of Bishop Turner
-to mention in the convention which
-had met to howl, and which, consequently,
-was bound to howl.</p>
-
-<p>In Africa, in Liberia, in San Domingo,
-negro preachers have not flourished,
-increased, or put their hands upon so
-many good things as they have done in
-poor, little, old North America. And
-the shining hosts of negro school-teachers,
-flush with the white man’s
-money, do not wave any palms of victory
-beyond the limits of the country
-which is worse than hell, the country
-whose flag is a dirty, contemptible rag
-“where the negro is involved.”</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Take out of your pocket a five-dollar
-or one-dollar treasury note, or certificate,
-and look at the name signed to
-give it validity.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Judson W. Lyons, Register of the
-Treasury.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Do you find it?</p>
-
-<p>Well, that name has been a legal
-necessity to every treasury note issued
-by the Federal Government during the
-last eight years.</p>
-
-<p>Judson W. Lyons is a negro.</p>
-
-<p>For the last eight years he has been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-holding the high, responsible and well-paid
-office of Register of the Treasury
-of the United States.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, this Judson W. Lyons
-went down to Macon, Georgia, to attend
-a convention of negroes, and in this
-convention he heard Bishop H. M.
-Turner, a negro, denounce the flag of
-his country as “<span class="smcap">a contemptible and
-dirty rag</span>;” and Judson did not open
-his mouth to protest.</p>
-
-<p>He also heard this ungrateful Bishop
-declare that—“<i>Hell is an improvement
-on the United States when the negro is
-involved</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Still, Judson W. Lyons sat there in
-apparent acquiescence—he an officer
-of the Government!</p>
-
-<p>Now when you are told that every
-blessed son and son-in-law of Bishop
-H. M. Turner was appointed to office
-under President Cleveland, and when
-you bear in mind that Judson Lyons
-has so long been in the enjoyment of a
-Federal office which pays him $8,000
-per year, you can form a fair idea of a
-radical defect in negro character. It
-is <i>Ingratitude</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Bishop Turner has been treated with
-the utmost consideration by the whites.
-He enjoys a larger income than he
-could hope to draw as witch doctor in
-Africa, or as voodoo man in San Domingo.
-He lives on the fat of the land,
-grows juicy himself, and yet runs no
-risk of being hot-potted by hungry
-brethren—as he would in his native
-land of Africa. He dresses in a manner
-which would have stunned King Tchaka;
-and to see him take his ecclesiastical
-ease in a Pullman car is a sight
-for the sore-eyed.</p>
-
-<p><i>What is the Bishop angry about?</i></p>
-
-<p>Apparently for the reason that
-“drunken mobs” in the North, South,
-East and West diabolically persist in
-accusing the negro of committing
-rape.</p>
-
-<p>The Bishop says that the negro is
-innocent. Being innocent, he is necessarily
-as innocent as a new-born babe.
-The Bishop declares that “no negro has
-been tried by the courts and found
-guilty of this crime of rape in fifteen
-years.”</p>
-
-<p>This statement makes the other twin
-for Booker Washington’s assertion that
-“not more than six” graduates of
-negro colleges have ever gone wrong.
-A more precious pair of Siamese-twin
-lies have not been put in type since the
-decease of the late lamented Baron
-Munchausen.</p>
-
-<p>My opinion is that Bishop Turner,
-if he continues to cultivate the evil
-spirit which broke loose in the Macon
-Convention, will some day know, by
-experience, whether hell IS an improvement
-over the United States;
-but, before that time comes, I would
-suggest that he step down to San Domingo
-and soak himself in the luxuries
-of that region for awhile, as a preparation
-for the other place.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus9.jpg" width="475" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“In New York a negro is at the head of the
-white slave traffic.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><i>Note.</i>—Public opinion expressed itself
-so hotly concerning his attack on the flag
-that Bishop Turner felt driven into a
-perfunctory and involved denial; but
-having read this so-called denial I am
-convinced that the bishop did use substantially
-the words reported, because of
-the significant fact that his so-called denial
-contains language quite as offensive, quite as
-insulting, as that which he surlily pretends to
-disclaim. Had this been the first time that
-Bishop Turner had denounced the Government
-that has done so much for his race,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>
-had it been the first time he had outrageously
-vilified the people among whom he lives,
-there might be room for doubt concerning
-the Macon speech. But Bishop Turner has
-for years been speaking and writing in precisely
-the vein which appears in the reports
-that went out from Macon. He has become
-conspicuous as a chronic assailant of the
-whites. Therefore I have not the slightest
-doubt that he used at Macon in substance, if
-not in the very words, the reports as telegraphed
-all over the country.</p>
-
-<h3><i>An Indignant Wisconsin Editor</i></h3>
-
-<p>Mr. John L. Sturtevant, whose card
-informs the interested universe that
-he, the said John L., is editor of <i>The
-Waupaca Post</i>, of Waupaca, Wis.,
-flew into a passion when he read the
-February number of this Magazine.</p>
-
-<p>The why and the wherefore of his
-sudden rage are best explained in a
-red-hot letter which I now give in full,
-just as it came sizzling from the frying
-pan:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">Feb. 17, 1906.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Thomas E. Watson, New York.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>: In the February number of
-your magazine, on page 400, under the caption
-“Best on Earth” you state: “The big
-Milwaukee First National Bank burst and
-the people lost $1,450,000.” The statement
-is absolutely false. F. G. Bigelow, president
-of the bank, appropriated that amount from
-the bank’s funds to his own use, but the
-bank did not burst nor did the “people,”
-in the sense in which you use the word, lose
-one cent. The loss fell upon the stockholders
-and was fully paid from the surplus
-which the bank had accumulated during an
-honorable and successful career. Your
-magazine is full of just such reckless and
-libelous statements as this, which make
-thoughtful readers look with distrust upon
-the few truths it contains. Intentionally,
-or otherwise, you constantly do grave injury
-to many people and the pity of it is your
-readers who do not think or reason are led
-along the paths of populism, socialism and
-anarchy.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Sincerely yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. L. Sturtevant</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Touching the falsehood to which the
-furious John L. refers, I have this to
-say: My article was based upon a
-“special” sent out from Chicago
-which went the rounds of the Press,
-and which was not contradicted.</p>
-
-<p>The “special” from which I took the
-facts, appeared, on December 19, 1905,
-in the <i>Augusta Herald</i>, one of the most
-reliable and conservative Democratic
-daily papers in the United States.</p>
-
-<p>The indignant Sturtevant does not
-deny that the bank was looted of the
-sum stated by me, but because I said
-that “the people” lost the money he
-charges me with having made a statement
-that was “absolutely false.”
-Sturtevant alleges that the money was
-not stolen from “the people” but from
-“the stockholders!”</p>
-
-<p>He is equally indignant because I
-said that the bank “burst.” He alleges
-that the stockholders were able
-to stand the theft of nearly a million
-and a half dollars, and that the bank
-didn’t burst.</p>
-
-<p>An Editor of a Magazine is at a disadvantage
-when compared to the
-Editor of <i>The Waupaca Post</i>, of Waupaca,
-Wisconsin. Sturtevant evidently
-stands at the head-waters of information,
-and gets his news fresh from
-the spring. That’s one of the luxuries
-of living and editing at Waupaca.</p>
-
-<p>A poor devil of a Georgia editor, like
-me, has to take his information second-hand.
-In spite of all that I can do, it
-is impossible for me to be there, all
-over the world, when things are happening.</p>
-
-<p>Sturtevant was close to Milwaukee
-when Bigelow looted his bank, and
-therefore, knew at first hand what the
-facts were. On the contrary, I was
-thousands of miles off, and had to rely
-upon telegraphic despatches, published
-in reputable newspapers.</p>
-
-<p>In the “special” from Chicago which
-appeared in the <i>Herald</i>, of Augusta,
-Ga., December 19, 1905, this language
-appears:</p>
-
-<p>“The three big bank <span class="smcap">wrecks</span> which
-are still fresh in the public mind on
-account of their size and recent date
-are: the Enterprise National Bank
-of Allegheny, Penn.; The First<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-National Bank of Topeka, Kans.; the
-<span class="smcap">First National Bank of Milwaukee,
-Wis.</span>!”</p>
-
-<p>Then in a tabulated statement, the
-“special” gave sums which were classified
-as “losses.”</p>
-
-<p>In this separate list of “losses” occasioned
-by “<span class="smcap">the bank wrecks</span>,” the
-First National Bank of Milwaukee,
-heads the table with $1,450,000.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, instead of my statement
-in the Magazine being reckless and
-false, it was carefully based upon
-a “special” sent out from Chicago
-in December, which at the time my
-paragraphs were written had gone
-unchallenged for more than a
-month.</p>
-
-<p>Even when corrected by Mr. Sturtevant,
-how much good is done to the
-National Banking system whose claim
-to be “the best on earth” I was ridiculing?
-My point was that the lootings of
-this boasted “best system on earth” were
-so frequent and so colossal that it was
-absurd to claim that the system was
-“the best on earth.” How does the
-Waupaca Champion of looted banks
-improve matters by explaining that
-the president of the bank merely stole
-a million and a half from <i>the stockholders</i>?</p>
-
-<p>How does he weaken my attack by
-saying that the bank was able to stand
-the huge robbery?</p>
-
-<p>Is bank rottenness saved from denunciation
-because the looted bank
-happened to be rich enough to survive
-the blow?</p>
-
-<p>Is bank gutting made respectable
-because the stockholders alone were
-gutted?</p>
-
-<p>Suppose the stockholders had not
-been rich enough to make good the
-loss; suppose the bank had not possessed
-“a surplus” of that immense
-size—wouldn’t “the loss” have fallen
-upon “the people,” and wouldn’t the
-bank have “burst”?</p>
-
-<p>Ah, Mr. Sturtevant! When you say
-that a National Bank has gained such
-tremendous profits out of the privilege
-of creating money and lending it to the
-people at high rates of interest that a
-robbery which runs up into the millions
-does not stagger it in the least,
-you simply convince the intelligent
-reader that National Banks reap far
-greater gains out of Special Privilege
-than their champions are in the habit
-of admitting.</p>
-
-<p>As to the “other” reckless and
-libelous statements which the Waupaca
-Editor says I have been making
-in the Magazine, I can only invite him
-to name them.</p>
-
-<p>The Magazine is here to stay, and
-it is not conscious of having made
-reckless and libelous statements.</p>
-
-<p>The columns are open to brother
-Sturtevant, and to all others, who wish
-to challenge any statements made
-therein.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever I am shown to be wrong,
-I will gladly make correction, and, if
-need be, apology.</p>
-
-<p>If, on the contrary, the other fellow
-happens to be wrong, I will endeavor,
-in a mild, conciliatory but earnest
-spirit to show him his error.</p>
-
-<p>Brother Sturtevant, of Waupaca,
-asserts that I am constantly doing
-grave injury to many people.</p>
-
-<p>I appeal to Sturtevant to furnish me
-a list—a partial one, at least—of the
-people whom I am constantly injuring
-so gravely.</p>
-
-<p>If he can establish the fact that in
-the 200,000 words or more, which I
-have written for the Magazine, a grave
-injury has been inflicted upon any
-man, woman or child, I stand ready
-to make the fullest amends.</p>
-
-<p><i>Make good, brother Sturtevant!</i></p>
-
-<h3>The Man and the Land</h3>
-
-<p>Certain good friends of mine were
-shocked, a few months ago, when they
-learned that I was one of those monsters
-who believe in the private ownership
-of land.</p>
-
-<p>Some of them deplored my ignorance,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-and urged me to go straightway
-and read “Progress and Poverty.”
-Well, I had read Henry George’s book
-soon after its publication, and had
-once had the precious advantage of
-serving a term in Congress with the
-great Tom Johnson; yet I never had
-been able to see the distinction, <i>in
-principle</i>, between the private ownership
-of a cow and the private ownership
-of a cow-lot.</p>
-
-<p>Some men are just that stupid, and
-when Ephraim gets “sot” on a thing
-of that kind, even Louis Post, of <i>The
-Public</i>, has to let him alone.</p>
-
-<p>Certain other friends made the point
-on me that I did not understand
-Count Tolstoy. That is possible. In
-his various ramblings into various
-speculative matters, Tolstoy, like our
-own Emerson, gets lost, sometimes,
-in mazes of his own making; and he
-uses language which may delight
-professional commentators, but which
-is sorely vexatious to an average citizen
-who really wants to know what
-the philosophers are driving at.</p>
-
-<p>Tolstoy is careful to avoid <i>History</i>.
-The flood of light which might be
-thrown upon the land question by the
-records of the human race is shut out
-altogether.</p>
-
-<p>And <i>this</i> is the weak spot in the armor
-of every champion who enters the
-list against the Private Ownership of
-Land. If History makes any one
-thing plain, it is that a Civilization
-was never able to develop itself on any
-other basis than that of Private
-Ownership.</p>
-
-<p>Like other champions of his theory,
-Tolstoy forgets the elemental traits of
-Human Nature. He forgets how <i>unequal</i>
-we are by Nature; how we differ,
-in character, capacity, taste and purpose;
-how few there are who will labor
-for the “good of all,” and how universal
-is the rule that each man labors,
-first of all, for <i>himself</i>.</p>
-
-<p>He forgets that every beast of the
-field has its prototype in some members
-of the human family; he forgets
-that the <i>man</i>-tiger is now more numerous
-than the four-footed sort; that the
-<i>man</i>-fox is more cunning than his
-wild brother; that the <i>man</i>-wolf hunts
-with every human herd; that the <i>man</i>-sloth
-is marked by nature with her
-own indelible brand; that some men
-are born timid as the deer are; that
-some are born without fear as the lion
-is; that the human hog grunts and
-gorges, and makes himself a nauseating
-nuisance, on the streets, in hotels,
-in the Pullman cars—in fact everywhere,
-but most of all where people
-have to eat and sleep.</p>
-
-<p>This is the fundamental error which
-doctrinaires are prone to make. <i>They
-forget what Human Nature actually is,
-always has been, and perhaps, always
-will be.</i></p>
-
-<p>They argue about ideal conditions,
-unmindful of the fact that ideal conditions
-require ideal men—and that we
-haven’t got the ideal men.</p>
-
-<p>Every society, every state, must
-from necessity be made up of the Good,
-the Bad, and the Indifferent and the
-law-makers of that society, that state,
-will from necessity be compelled to
-frame laws suited to <i>that</i> community.
-Hence, the laws will not be absolutely
-the best, considering the question as an
-abstract question, but they will be the
-best which <i>that</i> community is capable
-of receiving.</p>
-
-<p>All legislation, like all Society, is a
-compromise.</p>
-
-<p>In a state of Nature I would be
-absolutely free. But I would be alone.
-To protect myself in person, property
-or family, I would have to rely upon
-my individual arm. My absolute freedom
-would be an absolute isolation
-and a relative helplessness.</p>
-
-<p>I would find that I could not endure
-such a life. I would therefore seek
-companionship among other men who
-felt the same needs that I felt, and we
-would come together for the “good of
-all.” One hundred families coming
-together in this way form the nucleus
-of Society, of the State. Each man
-gives up a portion of his individual
-freedom when he enters this union of
-families which forms such a nucleus.</p>
-
-<p>Why does he surrender a portion of
-his wild, natural, individual freedom?
-Why does he agree to be bound by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-will of the Community instead of his
-<i>own</i> will? Why does he consent to be
-<i>governed</i> by the public when he had
-previously been his own ruler? He
-does it because it is to his interest to do
-it. He finds that, while he has surrendered
-much, he has gained more. <i>The
-Community</i> throws around him the
-protection of a hundred strong arms
-where previously he had but his own.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Community</i>, in a hundred ways,
-ministers to his wants, his weaknesses,
-his desires, his prosperity.</p>
-
-<p>In other words, the Community
-gives more than it took.</p>
-
-<p>Association which improves the Community
-tends to improve each member
-thus associated; and from this association
-come all those blessings which
-we call Civilization.</p>
-
-<p>Resolve the Association back into
-its elements; let each individual separate
-from the mass; let each one say,
-“I’m my own man,”—and what becomes
-of Civilization?</p>
-
-<p>It perishes, of course.</p>
-
-<p>Now where will Tolstoy find the basis
-of Society <i>in Nature</i>?</p>
-
-<p>In the human instinct for <i>getting-together</i>.
-And that instinct seems to
-grow out of our hopes, and our fears,
-our profound belief that we <i>need</i> our
-fellow-man, and that we are not strong
-enough to stand alone, <i>no matter how
-much we would like to do so</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Deep down in your heart you will find
-the primeval, natural craving for independence,
-individuality, separate living,
-separate doing. With the great common
-mass of humanity this tendency
-has been weakened by disuse until it is
-not an active principle. It is like a
-muscle which has lost its strength from
-inaction. Hence, the common man
-goes with the herd, just as a flock of
-sheep follows the bell-wether.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Society, then is a matter of convention:
-<i>Nature</i> did not frame it.</p>
-
-<p>Nor does <i>Nature</i> impose upon us the
-relation of Husband and Wife.</p>
-
-<p>Why do we adopt the present marriage
-system, which differs in so many
-respects from Nature, and from former
-practices of the human race?</p>
-
-<p>Simply because we believe it to be
-<i>an improvement</i>. We <i>know</i> it is better
-than the promiscuous intercourse of the
-sexes: we <i>believe</i> it to be better than
-Polygamy; we <i>hope</i> that it will some
-day be a more radiant success than the
-Divorce Courts would seem to indicate.</p>
-
-<p>Now as to the land.</p>
-
-<p>Undoubtedly, the earth was given to
-the human family as a home for the
-family. Undoubtedly, Nature teaches
-that the earth belongs in common to
-the entire human race.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it was in the beginning. But,
-just as the wild horse became the property
-of the bold tribesman who caught
-it and tamed it; just as the natural
-fruit of the forest belonged to him who
-gathered it; just as the cave or hollow
-tree became the dwelling of the first
-occupant, so the well in the thirsty
-plain became the property of him that
-had dug down to the waters; and the
-pasturage which one had taken up
-might not be taken away from him by
-another.</p>
-
-<p>Mine was the bark hut which my
-labor had built; mine the canoe which
-my hands had hollowed out; mine the
-bow and arrows which I had fashioned;
-mine the herds and flocks, the goats
-and asses which I had tamed and reared
-and cared for till they had multiplied.</p>
-
-<p>Should the idler, or the thief of the
-tribe, take from me that which my labor
-had produced? Must <i>my</i> canoe belong
-to the whole tribe? Must my garment
-which I had made out of the skins of
-the wild beast belong to the sloth who
-loafed in the tent while I risked my life
-in the woods?</p>
-
-<p><i>Nature said</i>, <span class="smcap">no</span>!</p>
-
-<p>Nature, speaking through elemental
-instinct said: “That which <i>your</i> labor
-made is <i>yours</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Yours the hut, yours the canoe, yours
-the garment of skins, yours the bow
-and arrows—and that was the beginning
-of <i>Private Property in Personalty</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>But look again at the ways of Nature
-and of the tribe.</p>
-
-<p>Pasturage failed after awhile; natural
-fruits were no longer sufficient to sustain
-life; game disappeared from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>
-forest; fish grew scarce in the streams.
-Something had to be done to make good
-the shortage. The soil was there, suggesting
-cultivation. The products of
-Nature must be supplemented by human
-industry. But before the soil
-could be cultivated, the trees had to be
-cut away; cattle and wild beasts had to
-be fenced out; the virgin earth had to be
-made the bride of toil before the fruitful
-seed would bring forth harvests.</p>
-
-<p>Now <i>who was to do the work</i>?</p>
-
-<p>The Idler wouldn’t; the Feeble
-couldn’t; the Hunter didn’t; <i>the strong,
-clear-headed Laborer made the farm</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Those who assail private ownership
-of land say that “the man who makes
-a farm doesn’t make it in the sense that
-one makes a basket or a chair.” They
-see clearly that, if they admit that <i>the
-pioneer who goes into the wilderness or
-the swamps and creates a farm, is to be
-put on the same footing as the man who
-goes into the woods, gets material and
-makes a canoe, or a chair or a basket</i>, it is
-“farewell world” to their theory about
-the land. Therefore they say that <span class="smcap">the
-farm was already there</span>, waiting for
-the farmer. All the farmer had to do
-was to go there and tickle the soil with
-a hoe, and it laughed with the harvest.</p>
-
-<p>How very absurd! You might just
-as well say that the willows that bent
-over the waters of the brook <i>were baskets
-waiting for the tardy basketmaker to come
-and get them</i>. You might just as well
-say that the hide on the cow’s back was
-a pair of ladies’ shoes waiting for the
-lady to come and fit them to her dainty
-feet.</p>
-
-<p>Must we get rid of our common sense,
-our practical knowledge, before we can
-argue a case of this sort? Do not
-these doctrinaires know that they are
-denying physical facts, plain everyday
-experience, when they say that a piece
-of wild land in the desert, in the swamps,
-on the mountain side, or in the woody
-wilderness <i>is a farm waiting for the
-farmer</i>? Sheer nonsense never went
-further. But they are compelled to
-this extent because of the necessities of
-their case. They see at once that if
-ever they admit my position that <i>the
-laborer takes raw materials with which
-nature supplies him, and out of those raw
-materials creates something that did not
-exist before</i>, then the laborer is entitled
-to that which his labor creates.</p>
-
-<p>Now, do you mean to tell me, that
-for thousands of years there were farms
-waiting the pioneers here in North
-America? Consider for a moment what
-the New England, or the Southern, or
-the Western farmer had to do before he
-had <i>made a farm</i>. He had to go into
-the woods with an axe in one hand and
-a rifle in the other. Very frequently he
-was shot down before he could make
-his farm, just as Abraham Lincoln’s
-grandfather was killed. Very frequently
-he died from the fever engendered in
-the woods before he had made his farm,
-just as Andrew Jackson’s father did, in
-the effort <i>to make a farm</i> in the wilderness
-of North Carolina. Supposing
-the farmer was able to snatch up his gun
-quick enough to shoot the Indian who
-was trying to shoot him, and supposing
-that his constitution was strong enough
-to resist the malarial atmosphere in
-which he had to labor while creating
-that farm, what was the process
-through which he went <i>in making that
-farm</i>? He had to cut off an enormous
-growth of timber. He had to grub up
-stumps and roots. He had to plow and
-cross-plow the soil until it had become
-a seed bed. He had to inclose
-the farm to keep out the wild animals
-which would have devoured his crop.
-If in a rocky section, he had to remove
-the stones which encumbered the
-ground. If in a damp, swampy section,
-he had to exercise skill, as well as labor,
-in draining the soil. After four or five
-years, the laborer <i>had made a farm</i>—something
-<i>as different from the wild land
-which he found in the woods as the pine
-tree is from the lumber which lies upon
-the lumber-yard</i>; as different as the wool
-on the sheep’s back is from the coat
-which you wear; something as different
-as the willow and the bamboo are from
-the chairs and the baskets which
-are made from them.</p>
-
-<p>Now, the doctrinaires say that it
-would be a sufficient reward to that laborer
-<i>to give him the crop that he made on
-the land</i>. Would it? For what length<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-of time will you give him those crops?
-If you ask the laborer, he will say, “<i>I
-made this farm</i>; I risked my life in the
-work: I shortened my days by the labor,
-the exposure, the drudgery of making
-this farm. I never would have gone to
-this amount of toil if I had not believed
-that society would secure me in the
-possession of the farm after I made it.”</p>
-
-<p>Having established him in his security
-of possession, which I say is
-tantamount to title, suppose that
-laborer wants to change his farm for
-a stock of manufactured goods, or
-for silver and gold, or for horses, or
-for another piece of land, do you
-mean to say he shall not have the right
-to do it? If so, you limit his title, and
-you have not the right to do so. <i>That
-which he made he ought to have the right
-to dispose of on such terms as please him.</i>
-His title having originated in the sacred
-rights of labor, you should not limit his
-enjoyment or his disposition of that
-which his labor created. If you recognize
-his right to exchange one product
-of his labor for another, you recognize
-his right to exchange all products of his
-labor for others. In other words, by
-plain course of reasoning, you arrive at
-the principle that the bargain and sale
-of lands is founded upon the right of the
-laborer to exchange the product of his
-labor with those who may have product
-of labor which he could use to better
-advantage than he can use his own.</p>
-
-<p>Now, let us see. The laborer who
-made the farm dies. What shall become
-of it? Away back in the origin of
-property, <span class="smcap">occupancy</span> was the first title
-recognized. As long as one individual,
-or one tribe, occupied a certain spot
-their right to use it was recognized, but
-no longer. When possession was abandoned,
-the next individual, or the
-next tribe who occupied that spot, had
-the right of possession. When tribes
-ceased to wander about, the occupancy
-of the spot which the tribe had taken
-possession of became permanent.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, the title to that spot grew
-up in the tribe along with permanent
-possession. <i>No civilization was ever
-created by wandering tribes.</i> It is only
-when the tribe fixes its permanent residence
-in some particular spot, recognized
-as exclusively its own, that there
-is any such thing as law and order and
-civilization. It is clear enough when
-we consider one tribe in its relations
-to other tribes. Let us consider the
-tribe in its relations to its members.
-Each individual in the beginning
-had a title <i>by occupancy</i> to the spot
-which he cultivated, and this security
-of possession lasted so long as the
-occupancy lasted. If the tribesman
-abandoned his spot of land, with the
-intent to surrender the same, then
-the next fortunate tribesman who
-came along could take possession of it
-and hold it. But, in the course of
-time, this created great inconvenience,
-because, as favored spots became more
-desirable, the competition to get them
-was fiercer. Hence, there were feuds,
-bloody struggles, disorders in the tribe.
-Consequently, by natural evolution
-society was forced, first, to recognize
-the right of the individual as long as he
-wished to occupy the spot which he
-had taken possession of; second <i>to provide
-for the succession to that title when
-the spot became vacant</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The learned men tell us that, at the
-death of the occupant, his own family,
-<i>his own children</i>, being naturally the
-first who would know that he was dead,
-<i>were naturally the first who would take
-possession after his death</i>. Therefore,
-the sons of the deceased tenant always
-became the first occupants of the vacant
-land which had been left vacant
-by the death of their father. This
-succession of the sons to the fathers
-becoming universal, was finally recognized
-by the law of the tribe; and in
-the course of time it was recognized
-further in the law which allowed the
-tenant to make a will and to say who
-should take his property after his death.</p>
-
-<p>Thus by slow and almost imperceptible
-degrees, the tribe recognized, first,
-the right of the man who had made a farm
-to hold it as long as he lived; second, the
-right of his children to follow in his
-footsteps and to receive the benefit of
-that which their father had created by
-his labor; third, and last, came the law
-of wills and testaments which allowed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-the tribesman to say what should go
-with his property after his death.</p>
-
-<p>If the occupant died without heirs
-and without having made a will, the
-land went back to the tribe, or the
-state, to be disposed of as public property.
-This principle is recognized to
-this day in the doctrine of escheats.</p>
-
-<p>Property in land differs in nowise
-from property in horses and cows.
-The law of property is the same naturally
-in real estate as in personal estate,
-and I can conceive of no revenue in
-any community which is so just as that
-which lays itself with an equal burden
-upon all kinds of property in proportion
-to the amount thereof. In the
-beginning, one tribesman, like Abraham
-or Lot, might have his cattle
-browsing upon a thousand hills, while
-another tribesman might have made a
-little farm in some secluded valley, or
-upon some thirsty, rocky mountain-side
-where vines were planted, or where
-olive trees bore their fruit to the
-industrious citizen who had year in
-and year out watched and tended
-their growth. Would there be any
-justice in compelling those little farmers
-to supply the revenue for the
-common purpose of the tribe, and not
-compel a contribution <i>pro rata</i> from
-the men who owned “exceeding many
-flocks and herds”?</p>
-
-<p>The trouble about these doctrinaires
-is that they start at the present day
-and reason backward, while I start at
-the fountain head and reason down.
-I take things as history shows them to
-have been; they take things as they
-think they ought to have been.</p>
-
-<p>The doctrinaire further says that if
-the tribesman who made a farm had
-been satisfied to fence in his farm, only,
-<i>the common</i> would have remained after
-all had been supplied. In this country,
-we have millions of acres of “commons”
-now waiting any one “member
-of the tribe” who wants to go and
-take his share. The truth of it is,
-the doctrinaire doesn’t want to go out
-into the wild land and <i>make a farm</i>.
-He wants to stay where he is, and <i>take
-one that some other fellow has made</i>.
-Especially doth he crave a slice of the
-Astor estate, which doctrinaires have
-talked of so much that they can almost
-identify their shares therein.</p>
-
-<p>One of the doctrinaires quotes the following
-from “Progress and Poverty”:
-“If a fair distribution of land were
-made among the whole population,
-giving to each his equal share, and laws
-enacted which would impose a barrier
-to the tendency to concentration, by
-forbidding the holding by anyone of
-more than a fixed amount, what would
-become of the increased population?”</p>
-
-<p>I do not consider it any part of my
-task to assail the position taken in
-“Progress and Poverty,” but I think
-it a satisfactory answer to the foregoing
-question to say that in the very
-nature of things posterity must be the
-heirs-at-law of the conditions of those
-who went before. To say that we can
-so frame a social fabric as flexibly and
-automatically to give an equal share
-of everything to every child born into
-the world hereafter, regardless of
-whether that child’s parents were
-thrifty, industrious, virtuous people,
-or, on the other hand, were thriftless,
-indolent, vicious people, seems to me
-to be one of the wildest dreams that
-ever entered the human mind. No
-matter how equal material conditions
-might be made today by legislation,
-the inherent inequality in the capacities
-of men, physically, mentally, spiritually,
-would evolve differences tomorrow.
-There is no such thing as
-equality among men, and no law will
-ever give it to them. What the father
-gains the children lose; and the grandchildren
-may regain. While one man
-runs the race of life and wins it; another
-man, equally tall and strong
-will run the race and lose it. Just
-why, it is, in some cases, difficult to
-tell.</p>
-
-<p>Some men naturally lead; some naturally
-follow; some naturally command;
-others naturally obey: some are
-naturally strong; others are naturally
-weak. The law of life to some
-is activity; others say that they
-were born tired; and there is a certain
-pathos in their excuse for indolence,
-for they <i>were</i> born tired. One man<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-is naturally brave—physically, morally—and
-he will venture. Another
-man is naturally a coward—physically
-or morally—and he will not venture.
-A dozen different traits, or combination
-of traits, make failure or success
-in life, and to say that success
-or failure, vice and virtue, good
-and bad, are the results of environment
-and social conditions, is as
-misleading, <i>as a general statement of
-fundamental facts</i>, as to say that the
-dove and the hawk, the tiger and the
-sheep, the rattlesnake and the harmless
-“black runner” are the results of
-environment. Nature in its act of
-creation made the difference between
-the fowls of the air, the beasts of the
-field, the fish of the sea, the men and
-women who inhabit the earth. From
-the remotest ages, of which we have
-record, human nature has been the
-same that it is today. Paganism
-presented precisely the same types of
-man in its savagery and its civilization
-that Christianity now presents in its
-savagery and civilization. “There is
-nothing new under the sun,” and the
-very theories which the doctrinaires
-now think are matters of modern discovery,
-unknown to our ancestors,
-and which would have been adopted
-had our ancestors been as wise as we,
-were discussed in the days of Aristotle
-and had the very best thought of the
-sages of antiquity.</p>
-
-<p>Let it be remembered, however, that
-I have always qualified the Private Ownership
-of Land by acknowledging the
-supremacy of the State. The tribe, the
-community, the State, the Government
-holds supreme power over the life and
-liberty of citizens, and over the ownership
-of the soil. The State calls for me
-to give up my individual pursuits, my
-individual liberty, my individual preference,
-and to take my place as a soldier
-in the ranks of the army. I am
-compelled to obey; that is an obligation
-which rests upon me as a member of
-society. Thus the State can demand
-my life of me whenever the State
-declares that it is necessary for
-the defence of the State. In like
-manner, the State can restrain me of
-my liberty. For instance, in times of
-epidemics, we have shotgun quarantine
-which destroys my liberty of movement.
-I would be shot down like a dog
-if I sought to break through the lines of
-quarantine, although to make such an
-escape might mean my individual salvation,
-whereas obedience to law
-amounts to sentence of death. In this
-case, as in the other, the State practically
-demands my life as an individual
-as a sacrifice for the good of the greater
-number of citizens. So, as to property,
-no man holds an absolute title to land
-as against the State. The Government,
-acting for all the tribe, for all the people,
-can tear down or burn my house to stop
-the spread of fire. It can confiscate my
-property for public purposes, when the
-public need requires it. It can take
-my land for public buildings, for canals,
-for railroads, or for new dirt roads
-through the country. My rights in the
-premises would be recognized in the
-payment to me of damages. My individual
-rights would be assessed in so
-many dollars and cents. Thus my home,
-which might be almost as dear to me as
-my life, would be coldly valued
-in money, and although I left it
-with bitter regrets, even with bitter
-tears and a bitter sense of wrong, I
-would have to surrender my individual
-preference to what is supposed to be by
-constituted authorities the necessity of
-the State. This right of the public to
-take away any portion of the soil from
-the individual, and to dedicate it to the
-use of the public, is called the right of
-Eminent Domain, and is a remnant of
-the old system which recognized that
-the title to all the lands was in the
-King. Of course the King stood for
-the State. Centered in the personal
-sovereign were those sovereign rights
-which belong to the people as a whole,
-and the people as a whole, represented
-by the King, were admitted to be the
-owners of the ultimate fee in the land,
-and could compel any individual to
-surrender his individual holdings for the
-benefit of the entire people, just compensation
-having first been paid to the
-individual. It is in that sense that I
-say private ownership of land is just as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>
-holy a principle, just as equitable,
-as private ownership in the basket
-which I made from the rushes I
-gathered along the stream, or from
-the splints which I rived out from
-the white oak; just as sacred as my
-right to the boat which I hollowed
-out from the forest tree, or the bark
-hut, or the hut of skins, which my labor
-erected to shelter me and my family.</p>
-
-<p>The doctrinaire asks: “Could he not
-be as secure in his possession if the land
-were owned and exaction made by all
-the people?” Certainly. That is my
-contention. The whole tribe <i>did</i> exercise
-dominion over the land, but to encourage
-the individual member of the
-tribe to improve a particular portion of
-the wild land, the tribe agreed to protect
-the individual in that which his labor
-had created, namely a <i>farm</i>. My
-contention now is that the ultimate
-ownership of the land is in all the people;
-but society had a perfect right to
-divide it on such terms as were thought
-best and to guarantee to each individual
-“security of possession,” or <i>title</i>, to
-that which he had produced. The
-great trouble with Mr. Doctrinaire is
-that he does not begin at the beginning.
-If he would study the condition
-of the human race as it gradually
-evolved from the patriarchal state, the
-tribal state, the nomad state, into that
-fixed and complex status which we
-now call “Christian Civilization,” he
-would readily understand how private
-ownership of land was the axis upon
-which the improvement of the conditions
-of the individual and of the State
-turned. As long as tribes wandered
-about from province to province, with
-their herds of goats, or sheep, or cattle,
-nibbling the grass which nature put up,
-and moving onward to another pasture
-as fast as one was exhausted, there
-could be nothing but tent life, nothing
-but personal property. The house had
-to move every time the family moved.
-Therefore, when the herds devoured the
-grass in one place, and the tribe had to
-move to another, tents were struck, the
-few household goods were packed on
-the backs of the wives, or on the backs of
-other beasts of burden, and the family
-moved. When man and beast multiplied
-to such an extent that nature no
-longer supplied a sufficiency of food, it
-became necessary for the tribe to settle
-down, and to divide the territory upon
-which they settled among the various
-members of the tribe. That was done
-in Germany, as well as in various other
-countries, but I take Germany because
-the German tribes were our own ancestors.
-They divided the lands every
-year. It was seldom the case that the
-same tribesman occupied the same
-home for more than one year. Like
-the Methodist preachers of today, their
-homes were always on the go. The
-farmer’s home in those days was precisely
-like the Methodist preachers’
-homes today—a matter to be fixed at
-the annual conference. The Methodist
-preacher who today is preaching in the
-town may next year be sent into the remote
-rural precincts: the mountain parson
-may next year be sent to the seaboard.
-The church is fixed and the parsonage
-is stationary, but the preacher
-and his wife and his children are forever
-moving. Now in precisely the
-same manner the tribesmen of the German
-tribes used to be going from farm
-to farm, and there were no considerable
-improvements made while that state of
-affairs existed. Why? Because we
-are just so constituted that we do not
-care to build houses for other people to
-live in, if we know it. When we start
-out to beautify a home, we may never
-enjoy it, but we expect to do so at the
-time, and without that expectation
-there would be no beautiful homes.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Doctrinaire thinks because each
-tribesman would try to grab the best
-piece of land, there was original injustice
-in allowing private ownership. If
-he will think for a moment, he will realize
-that the native selfishness of man
-does not make against the private ownership
-of land to any further extent
-than it does to the private ownership of
-personal property. When the tribesmen
-went out to hunt, each hunter
-sought to bring down the finest stag.
-Each hunter naturally wanted to hunt
-where the best game was to be found.
-Hence those eternal wars between the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-Indian tribes which brought down the
-population on the American continent.
-Hence also those feuds and tribal wars
-which desolated the East in the times
-of nomad life.</p>
-
-<p>We find Abraham and Lot in a bitter
-dispute over a certain pasture; but as to
-the well which Abraham “had digged”
-there was no resisting his claim, that
-<i>well was his property</i>. Why? Because
-in the quaint language of the Bible,
-“He had digged that well.” In other
-words, while nature put the water
-in under the soil, and while nature
-made the soil itself, it was Abraham’s
-judgment which selected the place
-where he could find the water, and it
-was Abraham’s labor that removed the
-earth which covered the water. In
-other words, Abraham <i>made the well</i>, in
-precisely the same sense that the
-pioneer in the wilderness <i>makes
-a farm</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But, as I said, the competitive principle,
-each one wanting to get what is
-best, reveals itself in all directions.
-Every fisherman has always wanted the
-best fishing grounds. Nations have
-been brought to war by this cause, to
-say nothing of tribal disputes and individual
-contests.</p>
-
-<p>Nowhere have I contended that it
-was private ownership of land that
-made it possible for the laborer to
-claim and retain the product of his
-labor. I could not have said that
-because I know quite well that personal
-property preceded property in
-land. In other words, the laborers
-acquired a full title to the rude garments
-in which they clothed themselves,
-the rude implements which
-they used in the chase, their weapons,
-canoes, etc., long before they ever
-made farms. This has been explained
-fully elsewhere and does not at all
-antagonize the statement that <i>after</i> a
-tribesman has acquired by his labor
-an interest in the land, <i>the government
-of the tribe may be so arranged that the
-produce of the land will be taken away
-from the land-owner as fast as he produces
-it</i>. Instead of robbery by taxation
-in land—products preceding private
-ownership in land—the reverse is
-the case. To fleece the laborer of
-what he produces on his farm was the
-after-thought of those who governed
-the tribe.</p>
-
-<p>This is shown by the wretchedness
-of the peasant class in Russia today.
-Historians tell us that the Russian
-peasant formerly owned a very considerable
-portion of the land, just as the
-French peasants did, and in addition
-to the individual ownership which was
-in the Russian peasantry, there was a
-large quantity of communal land which
-belonged to each community of peasants
-as a whole. In the process of
-time, the ruling class in Russia put
-such burdens upon the peasant proprietor
-that he gradually lost his land
-and became a serf. Of course, Mr.
-Doctrinaire recalls that in 1860 the
-serfs of Russia were freed, and they
-were given a large portion of the land
-which had been taken away from them
-by the Russian nobles. They also
-held the communal lands. What has
-been the result? The ruling classes
-have put such heavy burdens in the
-way of dues and taxes upon the peasants
-that their ownership of the land,
-communal and individual, has brought
-them none of the blessings which they
-anticipated. Thus we have a striking
-and contemporaneous illustration of
-the great truth which I have sought to
-emphasize, namely, that the mere
-ownership of land does not emancipate
-the people.</p>
-
-<p>Arthur Young, the famous “Suffolk
-Squire,” rode horseback over the rural
-districts of France, just before the
-Revolution broke out. He found that
-the French peasants owned their own
-farms. He made a close and sympathetic
-study of their condition.</p>
-
-<p>And what was that condition?</p>
-
-<p>Wretched to the very limit of human
-endurance. The king, the noble,
-and the priest were literally devouring
-the Common People. Privilege, Titles,
-Taxes, Feudal dues were driving the
-masses to despair, to desperation.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the French peasant had “access
-to the land.”</p>
-
-<p>In England, at that time, the peasants
-did not own land, and yet their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-condition was incomparably better
-than that of the French.</p>
-
-<p>Why? Because they were <i>not</i> ground
-down by Taxes and Feudal dues.</p>
-
-<p>Could you ask a more convincing
-illustration?</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Doctrinaire makes the point
-that when one member of the tribe
-decided to undertake the arduous
-task of making a farm out of a few
-acres of the millions which belonged
-to the tribe, this industrious member
-of the community “robbed” all the
-others when he claimed as his own
-that which his hands had made. I can
-see no more “robbery” in this case
-than in that of another tribesman who
-went and cut down one of the millions
-of forest trees which belonged to the
-tribe, and with painful labor hollowed
-out this tree and created a canoe. At
-the time the one tribesman made the
-canoe, every other tribesman had
-the same chance to do the same thing.
-At the time the one tribesman went
-into the woods and made a farm every
-other tribesman had the same right.
-If Mr. Doctrinaire thinks that the
-first occupant of any particular
-spot did not have the right to locate
-a farm, he might as well say that the
-first finder of the cavern, or the hollow
-tree, did not have the right to occupy
-that which he had first found, and yet
-he knows perfectly well that this right
-of discovery and occupancy was always
-recognized from the beginning of time
-and that from the very nature of things
-it had to be recognized to prevent the
-bloodiest feuds in every tribe. (A
-curious survival of this Right of Discovery
-is to be seen even now in the
-claim to the “Bee Tree” by the first
-to find it.)</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Doctrinaire says, impliedly, that
-if the tribesman had fenced in no more
-than the spot out of which he had
-made a farm, injustice would not have
-been done to the tribe: but he says the
-tribesman went further and fenced in
-a great deal more—“vast areas,”
-which he could not use, and also
-“claimed” these as his own. How
-does Mr. Doctrinaire know that? I
-did not state anything of the sort.
-Nor does the historian state anything
-of the sort. I was tracing title to land
-to its origin, and I contended that the
-origin of title to land was labor. Consequently,
-my contention was that the
-tribesman fenced in that which his
-labor had redeemed from the wilderness—his
-original purpose in fencing
-it in being <i>partly</i> to identify what was
-his own, <i>partly</i> to assert his exclusive
-possession, <i>but chiefly</i> to protect his
-crop from the ravages of the wild animals
-that were still roaming at large in
-the forest. Mr. Doctrinaire must remember
-that the fencing of the farm
-was one of the most tremendous
-difficulties that the pioneer met with.
-<i>He</i> had no barbed wire; <i>he</i> had no
-woven wire, <i>he</i> had no convenient sawmill
-from which he could haul plank.
-No; <i>he</i> had to cut down enormous
-trees, and by the hardest labor known
-to physical manhood, he had to split
-those trees into rails, and with these
-rails fence in that little dominion
-which he rescued from “the wild,”
-that little oasis in a great desert of
-savagery.</p>
-
-<p>To put up the fence was heroic work.
-To keep it up was just as heroic, for
-forest fires destroyed it from time to
-time, and the pioneer had to replace
-the barrier against the encroachment
-of animal life and the inroads of savagery
-with as great a tenacity and as
-sublime a courage as that of the people
-of Holland, who tore their country
-from the clutches of the ocean and
-barred out the sea with dikes. Tell
-me, that after the pioneer had created
-this little paradise of his—rude though
-it might have been—amidst the terrors
-and the toils and sacrifices of that life
-in the wilderness, <i>it should be taken
-from him by the first man who coveted it,
-and who said, “<span class="smcap">here, take your crop,
-that is all you are entitled to:
-take your crop and give me your
-farm!</span>”</i> Would that have been <i>right</i>,
-at the time private property was first
-recognized by our people in Germany?
-Would that have been right at the
-time our pioneer farmers in New
-England and Virginia created their
-farms, endured difficulties and dangers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>
-which make them stand out in heroic
-outline on the canvas of history? No,
-by the splendor of God! It would
-have been robbery and nothing less
-than robbery for the tribe to have
-confiscated the farm which the pioneer
-of America had made—partly with his
-rifle, partly with his axe, partly with
-his spade—and throw it into the common
-lot where the idler and the criminal
-would have just as much benefit from
-it as the pioneer <i>who had made the farm</i>.</p>
-
-<p>As to <i>the abuse of land ownership</i>,
-that is an entirely different question.
-I agree that there should be no monopoly
-of land for speculative purposes.
-The platform of the People’s Party has
-constantly kept that declaration as a
-part of its creed. The abuse of land
-ownership is quite a different thing
-from land ownership itself. I am
-not defending any of its abuses. I
-am simply saying that <i>the principle</i> is
-sound. All those things which belong
-to the class of <i>private utilities</i> should be
-left to private ownership, because I believe
-in individualism; but all those
-things which partake of the nature of
-public utilities should belong to the
-public.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Doctrinaire says that railroads
-have their power based in the fixed
-principle of private ownership of land. I
-deny this utterly. It was always necessary
-for the civilized community to have
-public roads. Even the Indians had
-their great trails which were in the nature
-of public roads. A public road never
-of itself did anything injurious to a community.
-The taking of land for a public
-road confers a benefit upon the entire
-community. It is for that reason it is
-laid out. The amount of land which is
-taken for a road, whether you cover it
-with blocks of stone, as the Romans
-did, or whether you cover it with iron
-rails, as modern corporations do, can
-inflict no injury whatever upon the community
-<i>unless you go further</i>. For instance,
-if you erect toll gates on the
-public highways and vest in some corporation
-the right to charge toll on
-freight and passengers at those toll
-rates, then you have erected a tyranny
-which can rob the traveler and injure
-the community. In that case, you can
-clearly see it is <i>not the road</i>, it is <i>not the
-land over</i> which the road passes, that is
-hurting the individual and the public.
-<i>The thing which hurts is that franchise</i>
-which empowers the corporation to tax
-the citizens and the property of the citizens
-as they pass along that highway.
-In like manner, the road which the
-transportation companies use could
-never have inflicted harm upon individuals
-or communities. <i>The thing
-which hurts is the franchise</i> which empowers
-the corporation to rob the people
-with unjust freight and passenger
-tolls as they pass along the highway.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Doctrinaire mires up badly in
-trying to evade the point which I made
-about Italy. I contended that while
-it was true that great estates were the
-ruin of Italy, there had to be some
-general cause at work, injurious to the
-average man, before the soil could be
-concentrated into these great estates.
-This is very obvious to anyone who will
-stop to think a moment. Mr. Doctrinaire
-thinks that the great estates in
-Italy were acquired by simply claiming
-the land and fencing it in, by “each
-individual claiming far more than he
-could use.” If all the land of Italy had
-been claimed and enclosed, the power
-that these land claimers had over subsequent
-comers is obvious; but <i>how</i> did
-“the claimers” get the lands? The most
-superficial knowledge of Roman History
-ought to convince Mr. Doctrinaire that
-<i>Italy was cut up into small holdings</i>
-until one branch of the government,
-the aristocracy, represented by the
-Senate, gathered into its own hands
-by persistent encroachment all the
-powers of the State. After that had
-been done, they fixed the machinery
-of government so that the aristocracy
-were almost entirely exempt from public
-burdens, whereas the common people
-had to bear not only their just portion,
-but also the portion which the aristocracy
-shirked. The ruling class, the
-patricians, not only escaped their
-burdens in upholding the State but
-they <i>appropriated to themselves</i> the revenue
-which the Roman State exacted
-from the lower class, the plebeians.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-The result was that the Italian peasant
-found himself unable to sustain the
-burdens which the government put
-upon him and he abandoned his farm,
-just as the French peasant quit the land,
-for the same reason, prior to the French
-Revolution. In other words, <i>the small
-proprietor had to sell out to the patrician</i>,
-and the patricians got these great
-estates in the same manner that Rockefeller,
-for instance, got the estate which
-he now holds at Tarrytown. The
-Standard Oil King did not simply
-stretch his wires and “claim” land.
-He bought out the people who found
-themselves unable or unwilling to hold
-their lands. Rockefeller stood relatively
-on the same ground of advantage
-held by the Roman patricians. Governmental
-favoritism, and special privilege,
-the power of money which he had
-attained through unjust laws, made him
-more able to buy than the individual
-owners around him were to hold.
-<i>Therefore he absorbed the small estates</i>,
-and his estate became the “great
-estate,” just as such great estates were
-created in Italy.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Doctrinaire can see the process
-going on around us. He can see how
-great estates absorb small estates.
-Our legislation for one hundred years
-has been in the interest of capital
-against labor. A plutocracy which enjoys
-the principal benefits of government,
-and contributes almost nothing
-to the support of the government, has
-been built up: charters have been
-granted by which large corporations
-exploit the public; and in this way
-great estates, whether in stocks or
-bonds, or gold, or land, have been created.</p>
-
-<p>The same principles, the same favoritism,
-the same privilege, working
-in different ways, brought about the
-same results in France before the
-Revolution, in Rome before its downfall,
-in Egypt, in Persia, in the Babylonian
-Empire. If there is any one
-word which can be appropriately used
-as an epitaph for all the dead nations
-of antiquity, that word is “<i>privilege</i>.”
-The government was operated by a
-ruling class for the benefit of that class,
-and the result was national decay, national
-death.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Doctrinaire asks me: “How did
-the ruling class at Rome come to control
-the money?” I might answer by
-asking him: “How did the controlling
-class in the United States come into control
-of the money?” He would certainly
-admit that they have got control
-of it. How did they get it? They
-took into their own hands, in the days
-of Alexander Hamilton, the control of
-governmental machinery. They erected
-a tariff system to give special privileges
-to manufacturers. Out of this
-has come the monopoly which the
-manufacturers enjoy of the American
-market, and the natural evolution of
-the tariff act which Alexander Hamilton
-put upon our statute book more
-than one hundred years ago, produced
-The Trusts.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the power to create a circulating
-medium to be used as money and
-to expand and contract this circulating
-medium, thereby controlling the rise
-and fall of markets, was a vicious principle
-embedded into our system by,
-Alexander Hamilton, more than one
-hundred years ago.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the granting of charters to
-private companies to exploit public
-utilities is another means by which
-our patrician class has secured the
-control of money. Now at Rome
-there was a similar process. Instrumentalities
-were different, the names
-of things were different, but the
-ruling class at Rome had the power
-of fixing the taxes, and they appropriated
-to themselves the proceeds of these
-taxes. They had the power of legislation
-in their hands and exploited the
-public for their own benefit. In this
-way they secured, of course, the control
-of money. The one advantage of
-paying no tax themselves and of appropriating
-to themselves the taxes which
-they levied upon the plebeians was
-sufficient to give them not only the control
-of money, but the control of the
-land and of the man. In fact that tremendous
-power, to fix the taxes and to
-appropriate the public revenue, is all
-that the ruling class of any country<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
-need have in order to establish an
-intolerable despotism over the unfavored
-classes.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Doctrinaire has the fatal habit of
-crawling backwards with his logic. He
-says that the Roman Patrician could
-not have controlled the money until he
-got control of the land. The slightest
-reflection ought to convince him that
-this cannot be true. No class of men
-ever secured the control of money by
-merely controlling the land. Just the
-reverse is the universal truth. Without
-any exception whatsoever governmental
-machinery, the taxing system,
-usury, expansion and contraction of the
-currency hold the land-owner at their
-mercy. The land-owner, as such, never
-had them at his mercy and he never
-will.</p>
-
-<p>Another instance of the crawl-backwards
-method of reasoning is given
-when Mr. Doctrinaire says that <i>usury
-grew out of land monopoly instead of
-land monopoly growing out of usury</i>.
-When a man gets himself into such a
-state of mind that he can deliberately
-write a statement of that sort for publication,
-he is beyond reach of any ordinary
-process of conviction and conversion.
-My statement was that usury
-is a vulture that has gorged itself upon
-the vitals of nations since the beginning
-of time. Mr. Doctrinaire says this is
-not true. On the other hand, he says
-that land monopoly came first, and <i>then</i>
-usury. If the rich people got all the
-land first, so that they had a land monopoly,
-upon whom did they practice
-usury? <i>How could they fatten on those
-who had nothing?</i> If Mr. Doctrinaire is
-at all familiar with the trouble between
-the Russians and the Jews in Russia he
-knows that one of the accusations
-brought by the Russian against the Jew
-is that the Russian land-owner has been
-devoured by the money-lending Jew.
-If he knows anything about our agricultural
-troubles in the South and in
-the West, he knows that the Southern
-and Western farmer complains that he
-has been devoured by usury. If he
-knows anything about the history of
-the Russian serf, he knows that the
-money-lending patricians made serfs
-out of the small land-owners by usury.
-If he will study the subject, he will find
-that in Rome, Egypt and Assyria the
-small land-owner was devoured by
-usury, had to part with his property
-and thus surrender to those who were
-piling up great fortunes by governmental
-privilege and by the control
-of money.</p>
-
-<p>Take the Rothschild family for an example.
-Did they have a land monopoly
-which made it possible for them
-to wield the vast powers of usury?
-Theirs is a typical case. Study it a
-moment. A small Jewish dealer and
-money-lender in Frankfort is chosen by
-a rascally ruler of one of the German
-States as a go-between in a villainous
-transaction whereby the little German
-ruler sells his subjects into military service
-to the King of England. These
-soldiers, who were bought, are known
-to history as the Hessians, and they
-fought against us in the Revolutionary
-War. This was the beginning of the
-Rothschild fortune, the transaction
-having been very profitable to the
-Rothschild who managed it. Later,
-during the Napoleonic Wars, the character
-of a Rothschild for trustworthiness
-became established among princes
-and kings who were confederated
-against Napoleon and many of the financial
-dealings of that day were made
-through him. Of course, these huge
-financial transactions were profitable to
-the Rothschild. Again, a certain German
-ruler, during those troublesome
-times, entrusted all of his cash to the
-safe-keeping of a Rothschild, the purpose
-being to put the money where Napoleon
-would not get it. For many
-years the Rothschild had the benefit of
-this capital, and he put it out to the
-very best advantage in loans and speculations,
-here and there. By the time
-Napoleon was overthrown at Waterloo
-the Rothschild family had become so
-rich and strong that it spread over the
-European world. One member of the
-family took England, another France,
-another Austria, another Belgium, the
-parent house remaining in Germany,
-and to this day the Rothschild family
-is the dominant financial influence of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
-the European world. In other words,
-<i>by the power of money and the power of
-usury</i>, they were able to make a partition
-of Europe and they are more truly
-the rulers of nations than are the Hapsburgs,
-the Hohenzollerns, the Romanoffs,
-or any other one dynasty which
-nominally wields the sceptre.</p>
-
-<p>Now, can Mr. Doctrinaire ask for a
-better illustration of the truth of my
-statement that the power of money is
-not based upon the monopoly of land;
-and that the monopoly of land is the
-fruitage of the tree of usury? Originally,
-the Rothschilds owned no land.
-It was only after they had become so
-rich that they were compelled to look
-around for good investments that they
-began to buy real estate. Their vast
-fortune, which staggers the human
-mind in the effort to comprehend it, was
-not the growth of land monopoly, but
-<i>was the growth of usury</i>. What the
-Rothschilds have done in modern
-times, men of like character did in ancient
-times, and just as the modern
-world will decay and collapse if these
-evil accumulations be not prevented,
-so in ancient times people went to decay
-and extinction because no method of reform
-was found in time to work salvation.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Doctrinaire asks me what is the
-cause of the Standard Oil monopoly. I
-thought that if there was any one thing
-we all agreed about it was that the
-Standard Oil monopoly had its origin
-in violations of law, in the illegal use
-of those public roads which are
-called transportation lines, the secret
-rebate, the discriminating service, the
-favoritism which the transportation
-company can exercise in favor of
-one shipper against all others, to the
-destruction of competition. You might
-end land monopoly, but as long
-as the railroad franchises exist, the
-Standard Oil monopoly will exist, if
-they can get the favored illegal treatment
-which they got in the building
-up of their monopoly and which
-they still have in sustaining it. The
-power of Privilege in securing money,
-and the power of money in destroying
-competition, was never more strikingly
-evident than in the colossal growth of
-Standard Oil. Mr. Doctrinaire might
-own half the oil wells in America, but
-unless he made terms with the Standard
-he would never get his oil on the
-market at a profit. The Big-Pistol
-is not the ownership of the oil-well.
-The Big-Pistol is the mis-use of
-franchises.</p>
-
-<p>With all the power that is in me, I
-am fighting the frightful conditions
-which beset us, but I know, as well as I
-know anything, that the principle of
-the private ownership of land has had
-nothing whatever to do with our trouble.</p>
-
-<p>Repeal the laws which grant the
-Privileges that lead to Monopoly; equalize
-the taxes; make the rich support
-the government in proportion to their
-wealth; restore public utilities to the
-public; put the power of self-government
-back into the hands of the people
-by Direct Legislation; restore our Constitutional
-system of finance; pay off the
-National debt and wipe out the National
-banking system; quit giving public
-money to pet banks for private benefit;
-remove all taxes from the necessaries
-of life; establish postal savings banks;
-return to us the God-given right to freedom
-of trade.</p>
-
-<p>With these reforms in operation, millionaires
-would cease to multiply and
-fewer Americans would be paupers.
-Trusts would not tyrannize over the
-laborer and the consumer, Corporations
-could not plunder a people whose political
-leaders they have bought. Some
-statesman might again declare as Legaré
-declared twenty years before the
-Civil War: “<span class="smcap">We have no poor</span>.”</p>
-
-<p>English travelers might have no occasion
-to say, as Rider Haggard said last
-year, that our condition was becoming
-so intolerable that there must be reform
-or revolution. On the contrary,
-the English travelers might say once
-more, as Charles Dickens said in 1843,
-that an Angel with a flaming sword
-would attract less attention than a beggar
-in the streets.</p>
-
-<p>And with these reforms accomplished
-any man in America who wanted to work
-a farm of his own could do it.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot promise that he would get<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-one of the corner lots of the Astor estate,
-but I have no doubt whatever that if
-he really wanted a farm, and were willing
-to take it a few miles outside of the city,
-town, or village, he could get just as
-much land as he cared to work.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h2>Random Comment</h2>
-
-<p>Sir Walter Scott used to say that he
-had never met any man from whom
-he could not learn something. No matter
-how ignorant the humblest citizen may
-appear to be, the chances are that he
-knows a few things which you do not
-know; and if you will “draw him out”
-you will add to your knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>The Virginia negro who happened to
-pass along the road while the Chief Justice
-of the Supreme Court of the United
-States was puzzling his brains over the
-problem of mending his broken sulky-shaft,
-knew exactly the one thing which
-John Marshall did not know.</p>
-
-<p>The great lawyer was at his wit’s end,
-helpless and wretched. How could he
-mend that broken shaft and continue
-his journey? He did not know and he
-turned to the negro for instruction.</p>
-
-<p>With an air of superiority which was
-not offensive at that particular time,
-the negro drew his pocket-knife, stepped
-into the bushes, cut a sapling, whittled
-a brace and spliced the broken
-shaft.</p>
-
-<p>When the Chief Justice expressed his
-wonder, admiration and pleasure, the
-negro calmly accepted the tribute to
-his talent and walked off, remarking,</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Some</i> folks has got sense and some
-ain’t got none.”</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>That little story is a hundred years
-old, but it’s a right good little story.
-A school-teacher, whom I loved very
-dearly, told it to me when I was a kid.
-He was the only man I ever knew who
-had it in him to be a great man, and
-who refused to strive for great things
-because, as he said, “<i>It isn’t worth the
-trouble</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>He was naturally as great an orator
-as Blaine or Ben Hill. He was far and
-away a loftier type than Bryan, for he
-had those three essentials which Bryan
-lacks—humor, pathos and self-forgetful
-intensity of feeling. But after
-one of his magnificent displays of oratory
-he would sink back into jolly indolence,
-and pursue the even tenor of
-his way, teaching school. “It is not
-worth while. Let the other fellows
-toil and struggle for fame and for office,
-I don’t care. They are not worth the
-price.”</p>
-
-<p>Few knew what was in this obscure
-teacher, but those few knew him to be a
-giant.</p>
-
-<p>Once, at our College Commencement,
-the speaker who had been invited to
-make the regular address was the crack
-orator of the state. He was considered
-a marvel of eloquence. Well, he came
-and he delivered his message; and it
-was all very chaste and elegant and
-superb. Indeed, a fine speech.</p>
-
-<p>He sat down amid loud applause.
-Everybody satisfied. Then the obscure
-genius to whom I have referred
-rose to talk. By some chance the faculty
-had given him a place on the program.</p>
-
-<p>I looked at my old school-teacher as
-he waddled quietly to the front. I saw
-that his face was pale and his eyes blazing
-with fire. I felt that the presence
-and the speech of the celebrated orator
-had aroused the indolent giant. I knew
-he would carry that crowd by storm—would
-rise, rise into the very azure of
-eloquence and hover above us like an
-eagle in the air.</p>
-
-<p>And he did.</p>
-
-<p>Men and women, boys and girls,
-laughed and cheered and cried, and
-hung breathless on his every word, as
-no crowd ever does unless a born orator
-gets hold of them. Actually I got to
-feeling sorry for the celebrity who had
-made the set speech. He sat there
-looking like a cheap piece of neglected
-toy-work of last Christmas.</p>
-
-<p>The faces of the leading people after<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
-my old teacher had sat down, were a
-study. The expression seemed to say,
-“Who would have thought it was in
-him!”</p>
-
-<p>I don’t think he ever made another
-speech.</p>
-
-<p>The brilliant eyes will blaze no more.
-The merry smile faded long ago. The
-great head, that was fit to bear a crown,
-lies low for all the years to come.</p>
-
-<p>He left no lasting memorial of his
-genius. Only, as through a glass
-darkly, you may see him, in a book
-called “Bethany,” written by one in
-whom he, the unambitious, kindled the
-spark of an ambition which will never
-die.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>There being no smokers in the
-“smoker,” I went in there to stretch
-out. The Florida East Coastline train
-was working its way down the peninsula,
-and was doing it very leisurely.</p>
-
-<p>Into the “smoker” came a young fellow
-with whom I opened conversation.
-It turned out that he had been pretty
-much all over Europe. He had toured
-Germany several times. On the Sir
-Walter Scott principle, I sought knowledge
-from him, and he told me several
-interesting things.</p>
-
-<p>One evening he had been at Heidelberg
-when the soldiers mounted guard.
-This being a regular function many
-civilians had assembled to see it.</p>
-
-<p>An officer was putting the men
-through some of their exercises, when,
-at the order to “ground arms,” one
-of the privates let his gun down too
-slow.</p>
-
-<p>The officer flew into a rage, rushed up
-to the soldier, slapped his jaws, kicked
-him repeatedly on the shins, struck
-him with the flat of his sword, and <i>spat
-time and again in the man’s face</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Of course the officer was cursing the
-private for every vile thing he could lay
-his tongue to, all the while.</p>
-
-<p>Said my informant, “He not only
-spat in the man’s face once, but he did
-it four or five times.”</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>I asked, “Was there no murmur of
-disgust or indignation in the crowd of
-citizens who were looking on?”</p>
-
-<p>“None whatever,” he said. “The
-people took the occurrence as a matter
-of course. It happens so often.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the young man rose up in the
-smoker, and showed me how the private
-had stood in his place, rigid, staring
-straight ahead, not daring to change
-his position or expression while enduring
-the kicks and spits of the
-officer. Not a word of protest or
-complaint did he venture to utter.</p>
-
-<p><i>That’s Militarism, gone crazy.</i></p>
-
-<p>Not long ago one of our high-priced
-city preachers declared publicly that
-we Americans needed an Emperor to
-head our army.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Do you recall a story which went the
-rounds of the newspapers a few years
-ago? In substance it hinted that William
-Hohenzollern, Emperor of Germany,
-had compelled one of his young
-officers to kill himself.</p>
-
-<p>My traveller related to me the particulars
-as he had learned them in
-Germany.</p>
-
-<p>The Emperor was holding a banquet,
-a revel, on board his yacht, the <i>Hohenzollern</i>:
-wine had been drunk freely;
-loose talk was going on. The Emperor
-made some insulting reference to the
-mother of a lieutenant who was seated
-near him.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the impulse of the moment, the
-brave boy did a most natural thing—he
-slapped the brutal defamer of his
-mother in the mouth.</p>
-
-<p>Consternation paralyzed the Emperor
-and all his guests.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant left the yacht; no
-one tried to stop him. Going ashore,
-he made ready to quit the world; and
-next morning he rode his bicycle deliberately
-off a precipice and fell headlong
-to his voluntary death.</p>
-
-<p>And the high-priced, city preacher
-declared that <i>we</i> needed an Emperor!</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Frederick the Great was really a
-great man.</p>
-
-<p>Riding along the streets of Berlin one
-day, he saw a crowd looking up at a
-placard on a wall, Reining his horse,
-the old King inquired, “What is
-it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span></p>
-
-<p>He was told that the placard contained
-a lot of violent abuse of himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Hang it lower, so that the people
-can read it better,” ordered the King,
-and he rode on.</p>
-
-<p>The pompous despot who now sits
-upon the throne of Frederick the Great
-puts girls and old women, as well as
-boys and men, in jail if they dare to say,
-or to write, anything disrespectful of
-<i>him</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Is democracy gaining ground anywhere?
-Are not those historic allies,
-the Church and the State, encroaching
-steadily upon the masses? Are
-not the High Priest and the War
-Lord constantly putting a greater distance
-between themselves and the Common
-People?</p>
-
-<p>Does not <i>the individual citizen</i> have
-less power and recognition now than at
-any other time since the founding of
-our Government?</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Poor General Wheeler! After all
-his efforts to please Northern sentiment,
-they would not permit him to be
-buried with the Confederate flag in his
-coffin!</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p><i>The Nation</i> is a mighty good paper,
-but it ought not to class General N. B.
-Forrest as “a scout” and “guerrilla.”</p>
-
-<p>General Forrest was named by
-General Lee, during the last year of
-the war, as the best soldier that the
-Civil War had developed.</p>
-
-<p>Forrest was greater than his commanding
-general at Fort Donelson, at
-Murfreesborough, and at Chickamauga.
-He finally swore that he would not obey
-any more fool orders from blundering
-superiors, and he struck out for himself.
-During the short time that he
-held independent command his achievements,
-considering his resources, rivalled
-those of Stonewall Jackson in
-the Valley Campaign.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Nor should <i>The Nation</i> be too hard
-upon the West Point officers who followed
-their native states out of the
-Union. Justice to those officers requires
-one to remember that they were
-taught at West Point that the States
-had the right to secede from the Union.</p>
-
-<p>If <i>The Nation</i> will consult the text-book
-from which Generals Lee, Johnston,
-Beauregard and Wheeler were instructed
-in Constitutional Law, it will
-discover that these young officers simply
-put in practice that which their
-teachers had taught them to be their
-right.</p>
-
-<p>The book to which I refer is Rawle’s
-work upon Constitutional Law.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>After General Wheeler had tried so
-hard to win the heart of the North, <i>don’t</i>
-you think they might have allowed the
-Confederate flag to rest upon his folded
-hands?</p>
-
-<p><i>That</i> was the flag which he had followed
-in the storm of actual war. The
-Cuban business was nothing. It was
-child’s play, and pitiful child’s play at
-that. But the Civil War was real, was
-colossal, rent a continent asunder, and
-shook the world. It was the Confederate
-flag which had led Wheeler to his
-fame. His youth, his first and best,
-had been given to <i>that</i>; of all the banners
-on earth none could have been
-dearer, holier to him than <i>that</i>.</p>
-
-<p>To look upon it was to bring back the
-years and the deeds which had brought
-him glory. It associated itself with
-the heroes who had listened to his
-battle-cry, and who had sanctified
-their sacrifice to duty with their blood.
-It spoke to him of the hopes and the
-griefs and the despair of his home, the
-South; it recalled the enthusiasm and
-the heartbreak; the splendid devotion
-of noble women, and the resignation of
-conquered men.</p>
-
-<p>Surely, surely the Confederate flag
-must have been the dearest emblem of
-Duty and Sacrifice to General Joe
-Wheeler.</p>
-
-<p><i>Don’t</i> you think that Charity might
-have softened the heart of the North
-to the old warrior who was dead, and
-that they might have let him rest under
-the “Conquered Banner?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
-<img src="images/illus10.jpg" width="450" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The House: I give you warning, old man; it’s loaded!</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Bart, in Minneapolis Journal</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus11.jpg" width="475" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>If George Washington Came to the Capital Today</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Morris, in Spokane Spokesman-Review</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus12.jpg" width="700" height="675" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Stirring War Drama Entitled: “Chased By the Enemy; or, Curfew Shall Not Ring This Evening”</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Opper, in N. Y. American</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Machine_Rule_and_its_Termination"><i>Machine Rule and its Termination</i><br />
-<span class="smaller">BY GEORGE H. SHIBLEY<br />
-<i>President of the People’s Sovereignty League and Editor of the Referendum News.</i></span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Underneath the existing political
-and legislative evils in
-this country there is found a
-common cause—the rule of the few
-through machine politics. The powers
-of sovereignty are exercised by the
-few. Proof of this is the fact that the
-evils complained of are banished, or
-are in process of disappearing, wherever
-the people have established their sovereignty—have
-established the right to
-a direct vote on public questions. This
-system is the initiative and referendum.
-It is exercised in combination with representatives,
-and the system as a whole
-is termed Guarded Representative Government—the
-people’s sovereignty is
-guarded.</p>
-
-<p>This improved system of representative
-government is an evolutionary
-product, and being such it will gradually
-extend throughout the world. A
-practical question is: How best can
-its spread be promoted? To arrive at
-an answer, one must study the methods
-whereby the improved systems came
-into being.</p>
-
-<p>We find that the forerunners were
-third parties and non-partisan organizations.
-The first declaration by a
-political party in this country was the
-Socialist Labor Party in 1889. Next
-came a declaration by the Knights of
-Labor in 1891. The same year there
-appeared “The Referendum in America,”
-by Ellis Paxton Oberholtzer,
-Ph.D. The next year J. W. Sullivan
-published his book, “Direct Legislation.”
-During the year the National
-Direct Legislation League was
-organized. There was also published,
-during 1892, “Direct Legislation by
-the People,” by Nathan Cree of Chicago.</p>
-
-<p>On July 4th of the same year, 1892,
-the newly organized People’s Party
-commended “to the favorable consideration
-of the people and the reform
-press the legislative system known
-as the initiative and referendum.”
-And state conventions of the People’s
-Party and the allied parties also paid
-considerable attention to the initiative
-and referendum. During the Autumn
-the American Federation of Labor
-gave its emphatic endorsement to the
-initiative and referendum by commending
-“to affiliated bodies the careful
-consideration of this principle and
-the inauguration of an agitation for its
-incorporation into the laws of the respective
-states.”</p>
-
-<p>The same year the National Grange
-adopted a resolution recommending to
-the state and subordinate granges the
-Swiss legislation method known as the
-referendum and the initiative.</p>
-
-<p>The following year the People’s
-Party, wherever it was in power, endeavored
-to submit to the people a
-constitutional amendment for the
-initiative and referendum, but as a
-two-thirds vote was required there
-was a temporary failure.</p>
-
-<p>In 1896 the People’s Party at its
-national convention came out strongly
-for the initiative and referendum, as
-also did the National Party convention,
-composed of 299 delegates who seceded
-from the Prohibition convention. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
-Socialist Labor Party also reaffirmed
-its people’s sovereignty plank of 1892.</p>
-
-<p>The first legislation in this country
-for the initiative and referendum was
-by the People’s Party in Nebraska,
-1897. The voters in municipalities
-were empowered to petition for the
-adoption of the initiative and referendum
-system for local affairs, and the
-system was to be adopted if approved
-by a majority of those who should vote
-upon the question. Hon. John W.
-Yeiser was chiefly instrumental in
-securing the law, and he endeavored to
-secure its adoption in Omaha, but without
-success.</p>
-
-<p>The same year, 1897, the People’s
-Party representatives in the South
-Dakota Legislature combined with the
-Silver Republicans and Democrats to
-submit a constitutional amendment for
-the initiative and referendum. Most
-of the Republicans in the Legislature
-fell in line and voted with the promoters
-of the reform. At the next election,
-1898, the voters adopted the system.
-Afterward the Republican party,
-which then had a majority in each
-house, enacted the statute to put it in
-operation. Since then two sessions of
-the Legislature have been held and the
-effects of the referendum (the people’s
-veto) have been splendid. The following
-words are credited to the Republican
-Governor, Hon. Charles Herried, by
-a member of the Toronto Parliament:</p>
-
-<p>“Since this referendum law has been
-a part of our constitution we have had
-no chartermongers or railway speculators,
-no wildcat schemes submitted to
-our Legislature. Formerly our time
-was occupied by speculative schemes
-of one kind or another, but since the
-referendum has been a part of the constitution
-these people do not press
-their schemes on the Legislature, and
-hence there is no necessity for having
-recourse to the referendum.”</p>
-
-<p>The initiative in South Dakota was
-crippled by inserting a “joker”! The
-system provides that five per cent.
-of the voters may propose bills to the
-Legislature, “which measures the Legislature
-shall <i>enact</i> and submit to a vote
-of the electors of the state.”</p>
-
-<p>The year (1898) that the voters of
-South Dakota balloted upon the question
-of adopting the improved system
-of representative government, the
-People’s Party, Silver Republicans and
-Democrats in Utah submitted to the
-voters of the state the question of
-adopting a constitutional amendment
-for the referendum and initiative. At
-the next election the voters adopted
-the system; but the Republican party
-gained control of the Legislature and
-refused to enact a statute for putting
-the constitutional amendment into
-operation. Two years later the same
-thing occurred.</p>
-
-<p>The same year that the Fusionist
-Legislature in Utah submitted the
-amendment a similar thing was done by
-a Republican legislature in Oregon. A
-proposal for an amendment in Oregon
-has to pass two successive legislatures;
-therefore the question was a live issue
-in the next campaign—1900. The
-People’s Party, the Democratic and
-the Republican state platforms each
-pledged that, should the party be
-placed in power in the Legislature, it
-would permit the voters to ballot upon
-the question. The Republican party
-secured a majority in the Legislature
-and submitted the question. In the
-next campaign, 1902, the question was
-again a live issue, for it was to be balloted
-upon by the voters; and again all
-the parties declared for the improved
-system and advised the voters of the
-state to adopt it, as also did the
-Granges and Organized Labor, likewise
-both the United States senators and
-the Republican governor, and nearly
-all the prominent men in political life
-in Oregon, together with most of the
-newspapers in the state. All advised
-the adoption of the system, and the
-vote of the people was 11 to 1 for the
-system.</p>
-
-<p>Governor Geer’s advice to the voter
-was: “If the referendum amendment
-is adopted by the people and made use
-of after adoption, it will be helpful
-all around as a restraining influence
-over careless legislatures. Even if not
-often brought into requisition, the fact
-that it is a part of the state Constitution,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
-ready to be used as a check against
-ill-advised legislation at any time, will
-justify its adoption. It may not be
-needed now any more than it was 100
-years ago, but there have often been
-times in the past when even ‘Our
-Fathers’ could have been wisely
-checked by this wholesome reservation
-of the rights of the people.”</p>
-
-<p>In Nevada, at the legislative session
-of 1901, the Fusionist party had a
-majority in the Legislature and voted
-to submit to the people the question of
-adopting the referendum. The next
-Legislature gave its consent and submitted
-a constitutional amendment for
-the initiative. At the following election
-the voters adopted the referendum,
-but the Legislature elected was Republican
-and it refused to consent to
-the submission of the constitutional
-amendment for the initiative.</p>
-
-<p>The same year in Illinois, 1901, a
-Republican Legislature and governor
-established the advisory initiative in
-municipalities and in state affairs.
-Through this system the voters in
-Chicago have voted three times for
-municipal ownership of street railways
-and the instructions are being obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>The Republican senators from Illinois,
-Cullom and Hopkins, are both on
-record as favoring the initiative and
-referendum.</p>
-
-<p>Since 1901 the progress of the initiative
-and referendum has been
-through the systematic questioning of
-candidates by non-partisan organizations.
-The start in this direction
-came from the successful experiences
-of Winnetka, Illinois. These experiences
-began in 1896 and continued
-from year to year with unvarying
-success.</p>
-
-<h3>THE WINNETKA SYSTEM</h3>
-
-<p>Winnetka is a suburb of Chicago,
-peopled largely by bright and active
-business men. Certain would-be monopolists
-proposed to the village council
-that it grant them a forty-year franchise
-for a gas plant. This was opposed
-by the citizens, for they wanted public
-ownership of city monopolies. They
-possessed a publicly-owned waterworks
-system and aimed to keep themselves
-from the clutches of private monopoly.
-Fortunately, at the time the gas franchise
-was asked for, there was being
-held each month a public meeting to
-consider public questions. It was
-called the “town meeting.” At the
-next town meeting, after the gas question
-came up, a resolution was adopted
-asking the village council to submit the
-question to the people. A deputation
-of leading citizens called upon the city
-council at its next meeting and Mr.
-Lloyd was accorded the privilege of
-speaking. After a warm time the
-council reluctantly agreed to submit
-the question to the voters and abide by
-their decision. The polls were opened
-and the proposed franchise received
-only 4 votes, with 180 against it.</p>
-
-<p>This settled the gas franchise and it
-did much more, for at the next caucus
-for nominating village trustees it was
-proposed and decided that only those
-men should be nominated who would
-stand up before their fellow-voters and
-promise, if nominated and elected, to
-submit all important questions to a vote
-of the people and abide by their decision.
-This was agreed to by the
-voters present, and each nominee for
-village trustee stood before his fellow-citizens
-and promised.</p>
-
-<p>Thus was the system installed, for
-there were no competing nominations.
-The casting of ballots on election day
-was a mere form.</p>
-
-<p>From that day until the present time
-the people of Winnetka have been the
-sovereign power as to ordinances. They
-are a Self-emancipated People.</p>
-
-<p>Reviewing the foregoing, it is seen
-that the pledges for installing the referendum
-system were secured by questioning
-candidates, while the system itself
-is through rules of procedure, which
-may be incorporated in the rules themselves
-or in an ordinance or statute.
-The system is the advisory referendum,
-the candidates being pledged to
-carry out the people’s advice. This
-they have done in Winnetka and elsewhere,
-as we shall show. But the system
-is intended for use only until the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
-usual form can be installed. In fact,
-it is through an advisory initiative
-that a change in the Federal Constitution
-is to be secured, and in the
-near future.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately after the election in
-1900 the writer, who was a delegate to
-the People’s Party National Convention
-of that year, withdrew from the
-Bureau of Economic Research and began
-devoting his entire time and energies
-to spreading the news concerning
-the Winnetka System, the primary
-aim being to help establish the people’s
-sovereignty in national affairs and to
-do so without waiting to change the
-written words of the Federal Constitution—a
-practically unalterable instrument
-until such time as the advisory
-initiative is installed. The following
-July the second social and political
-conference at Detroit approved the
-Winnetka System—the advisory initiative
-and advisory referendum—as
-also did the National Direct Legislation
-League.</p>
-
-<p>And Prof. Frank Parsons, president
-of the National Referendum League,
-said: “The Winnetka System is clearly
-great in its possibilities—a bridge ready
-for immediate use to the promised
-land.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Eltweed Pomeroy, president of
-the National Direct Legislation League,
-wrote: “I am also glad that you demonstrate
-that direct legislation is not
-only a great scheme which will be of
-inestimable value in its entirety, but
-that it is more than that, and can be
-applied on a small scale here and now,
-and that almost anyone can exercise
-influence enough to secure a first step.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Louis P. Post, editor of <i>The
-Public</i>, visited Winnetka during August,
-1901, and in his paper of September
-7 described the system, saying in
-conclusion:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>This Winnetka Plan of securing the advantages
-of direct legislation without waiting
-for party action, has special merit. It
-can, for one thing, be easily made the subject
-of effective non-partisan organization.
-For another, if the organization were to become
-influential, it would completely effect
-its purpose. Meanwhile, here and there
-locally the purposes would be effected even
-though balked and delayed in the larger
-government divisions. Moreover, the plan
-has been for years in actual and effective operation
-at Winnetka. Finally, it contemplates
-a spontaneous command from the people
-as to public servants, not a petition from
-them as to public masters.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Executive Council of the American
-Federation of Labor, at a meeting
-in Washington, D. C., September 20,
-1901, considered briefly the Winnetka
-System, and the following is the published
-report:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>It was decided to issue an address to all
-affiliated organizations, requesting them to
-endeavor to secure the passage of local ordinances
-and laws for the initiative and referendum
-<i>on measures relating to local interests</i>,
-and thus to secure the beginning of this system
-of direct legislation, <i>with the view of
-subsequently enlarging the scope of that
-method of enacting laws in the interests of
-the people</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus the new system—the systematic
-questioning of candidates for the
-establishment of the people’s sovereignty—began
-and was endorsed
-throughout the land. During the four
-and a half years that have since
-elapsed the system has made steady and
-rapid progress.</p>
-
-<p>In December, 1901, President Gompers,
-of the American Federation of
-Labor, in his annual message recommended
-the system, and the convention
-ordered that it be explained in the
-<i>American Federationist</i>, “in order that
-Trade Unionists may be able to study
-it as carefully as it deserves.” Accordingly
-it was published in an eighty
-page extra number and 20,000 copies
-were circulated in addition to the regular
-mailing list.</p>
-
-<p>Gov. Altgeld wrote concerning this
-extra number: “It presents the subject
-of the initiative and referendum
-and representative government in the
-most lucid, striking, and comprehensive
-manner that I have ever seen.” He
-added: “Through the agency of the
-labor organizations it ought to get into
-every neighborhood, and in time it will
-create a sentiment that will be irresistible.”</p>
-
-<p>Gov. Altgeld’s prediction is correct.
-The very first year after the issuance
-of the extra number of the <i>Federationist</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-the Winnetka System was established
-in Detroit, Mich., Toronto, Canada,
-and Geneva, Ill.; with the pledging
-of the Missouri Legislature for the
-submission of a constitutional amendment
-for the initiative and referendum;
-also the systematic questioning of candidates
-by organized labor in several
-other states, and the questioning of
-candidates as to the initiative and referendum
-by the granges in the state of
-Washington. The net result of questioning
-candidates was a majority vote
-for the initiative and referendum in six
-legislatures; also the pledging of nine
-of the sixteen congressmen of Missouri
-for a national system of advisory initiative
-and advisory referendum, and
-the pledging of the United States senators
-elected from Missouri and Illinois.
-During the course of the campaign the
-actions of four state conventions of the
-two great parties were reversed—the
-Republican state conventions in Missouri,
-California and Montana; and the
-Democratic state convention in Montana.
-The states where the majority
-vote in the legislature was secured
-were Missouri, Colorado, California,
-Montana, North Dakota and Massachusetts.
-In Illinois there was a two-thirds
-vote in the House, but the Senate
-refused to act. This Illinois vote was
-caused by an instruction from the voters
-through an advisory referendum
-taken under the 1901 act of the Legislature.
-The vote of the people was
-5 to 1 for the establishment of the improved
-system.</p>
-
-<p>Before the meeting of the legislatures,
-after the autumn elections, the
-American Federation of Labor at its
-annual convention established a national
-system for the questioning of
-candidates, the interrogatories to apply
-to such measures as the organization
-should deem most important.</p>
-
-<p>The next year, 1903, legislatures
-were elected in but ten states and, as
-organized labor in these states had not
-yet been educated to the use of the
-questioning system, except in Massachusetts,
-little was accomplished for the
-initiative and referendum. In Massachusetts
-the labor people found themselves
-almost alone in demanding the
-people’s sovereignty, and during 1903
-were quiescent. But in Kentucky
-Hon. J. A. Parker did valiant work.
-Through his paper, <i>The Home Tribune</i>,
-he called for workers for the referendum
-in Kentucky. At a joint state convention
-of the Allied People’s Party
-and the United Labor Party, a platform
-was enunciated in which existing political
-and legislative evils were outlined;
-and it was pointed out that the
-remedy is an improved system of government—the
-establishment of the
-people’s sovereignty through the initiative
-and referendum, to be exercised
-in combination with representative
-government. <i>The proposed change,
-it was declared, was the open door
-through which all the desired legislative
-reforms would come.</i> It was
-further declared that candidates of the
-Democratic and Republican parties
-should be questioned, and wherever a
-reliable candidate would pledge in
-writing for the improved system of government,
-no opposing candidate of the
-Allied Party should be nominated, and
-that every possible effort would be
-made to help elect the pledged candidate.
-The result in Mr. Parker’s own
-words at the close of the campaign was
-as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>In all my work I found but little antagonism.
-The one obstacle was the bitter, unreasonable
-campaign carried on in this state,
-in which all principle was lost sight of, and
-the issue made on the hanging of Caleb
-Powers. The election was a riot of fraud
-and dishonor, and showed too clearly what
-little hope there can be in partisan action.
-The last election, not only in Kentucky, but
-all over the nation <i>has shown that to gain any
-substantial reform we must concentrate all
-effort on pledging candidates, <span class="smcap">and if this
-effort is supported by intelligent local
-effort we can win in any state</span>.</i> An instance
-of this is found in a senatorial district
-in this state, where Dr. J. S. Dossey had enrolled
-perhaps 300 volunteers for Majority
-Rule. The Republican signed our pledge,
-and, the Democrat ignoring the matter until
-after the time fixed as a limit, I wrote letters
-to our workers stating the situation. Within
-forty-eight hours came the Democrat’s
-pledge with a strong letter to support it,
-declaring that if elected he would give our
-bill his hearty support.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The following year, 1904, the Presidential<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
-contest absorbed a large degree
-of attention, yet the people’s sovereignty
-cause was triumphant in four
-states—Montana, Nevada, Texas and
-Delaware—with considerable progress
-in many others; and a 33⅓ per cent.
-increase in pledged congressmen in
-Missouri, i.e., twelve of the sixteen are
-pledged to the people’s sovereignty in
-national affairs through the advisory
-initiative and advisory referendum, as
-also are five of the Chicago congressmen,
-and scattering ones throughout
-the country. The Pennsylvania
-granges, which are very strong, established
-a magazine of their own and
-questioned candidates for the initiative
-and referendum and other measures.</p>
-
-<p>The next year, 1905, like 1903, was a
-year in which few legislatures were
-elected, yet one state and probably
-two were rescued from machine rule—Ohio
-and possibly Massachusetts. In
-Ohio the required three-fifths of the
-Legislature are pledged to the submission
-of a constitutional amendment
-for the initiative and referendum; and
-in Massachusetts it is hoped that an
-advisory referendum system will be
-established. The Ohio campaign is
-especially noteworthy in that most of
-the Republican candidates refused to
-pledge, while the Democratic candidates
-pledged universally, the initiative
-and referendum being part of the state
-platform. Election day was a surprise
-to every one, for many of the people’s
-sovereignty candidates were elected
-where it was supposed they were hopelessly
-beaten. The Democratic gain
-in the Senate was 47.5 per cent.—an
-unprecedented landslide. The change
-was not caused by the Anti-Saloon
-League’s work, for the Republican
-candidates were pledged to its cause.
-The change was due to the independent
-voters, who had been apprised of the
-attitude of candidates through the publication
-of the answers to the initiative
-and referendum question. Early in
-October the State Federation of Labor
-at its annual convention instructed that
-all candidates for the Legislature should
-be questioned as to the initiative and
-referendum, and the replies published.
-The Woman’s Suffrage Association
-also questioned candidates as to the
-initiative and referendum. Referendum
-Leagues were active, and years ago the
-Union Reform Party had specialized on
-the initiative and referendum, thereby
-instructing the voters—a lesson which
-they evidently did not forget.</p>
-
-<p>This same year the State Federation
-of Labor increased most materially
-their activity for the people’s sovereignty.
-The Pennsylvania Federation
-of Labor set the pace. At its annual
-convention it provided not only for the
-questioning of political candidates, but
-took steps to provide for a people’s
-sovereignty committee within each
-union, and arranged in other ways for
-an educational and non-partisan campaign
-for the initiative and referendum.
-A fraternal delegate was received from
-the state grange, which also is working
-for the people’s sovereignty. Later in
-the year the New Jersey State Federation
-of Labor adopted the Pennsylvania
-program, and a few weeks afterward
-the New York State Federation
-did likewise. At the annual convention
-of the American Federation of
-Labor, representing one-eighth of the
-people of the United States, the executive
-council report recited the rapid
-spread of the people’s sovereignty
-cause through the questioning of candidates,
-and said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>The systematic questioning of candidates,
-to which reference has been made, is gaining
-in importance each year. More and more
-our state branches, central bodies and local
-unions are realizing the system’s usefulness.
-It enables our people to prevent the evasion
-of issues by party machines, and the self-interests
-of candidates cause them to answer
-favorably in most cases. And the success
-of organized labor’s political work without
-engaging in party politics strengthens the
-union in the sentiment of its members and
-increases their number.</p>
-
-<p>Co-operation is also advanced with other
-interests, such as organized farmers. In
-Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Indian Territory
-and Texas the organized farmers, with organized
-wage earners, are questioning candidates
-as to the establishment of the people’s
-sovereignty in place of machine rule. This
-is accomplished without a formal alliance.</p>
-
-<p>We recommend the general use of the
-questioning-of-candidates system.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The state Granges in sixteen commonwealths<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-have declared for the initiative
-and referendum. These states
-are: Oregon, Washington, Colorado,
-Montana, South Dakota, Minnesota,
-Wisconsin, Illinois, Missouri, Texas,
-Oklahoma, Kentucky, West Virginia,
-Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Maine.</p>
-
-<p>The Farmers’ Union, a rapidly growing
-organization (described in <span class="smcap">Watson’s
-Magazine</span> for February) has adopted
-the initiative for use within the
-association. The National American
-Woman’s Suffrage Association declared
-last year for the initiative and referendum,
-and this year’s convention has
-urgently requested action by the state
-associations. Last year in Ohio the
-Woman’s Suffrage Association questioned
-candidates as to the initiative
-and referendum, and this year it is
-likely that the suffrage association in
-every state will apply the system. The
-Referendum Leagues are also questioning
-candidates.</p>
-
-<p>All these organizations have learned
-or are learning that the questioning of
-candidates immediately terminates the
-machine’s power to sidetrack the live
-issues, provided there is an organization
-to take the case to the voters. One
-individual in a state can easily co-ordinate
-the forces for the questioning of
-candidates, and thereby secure the immediate
-termination of the machine’s
-power to evade the live issues. One
-person in a state has repeatedly secured
-this result; in fact, every reform
-within a state is largely due to the
-engineering tact and skill of some one
-individual. Today, as never before, it
-is easy and practically costless to terminate
-machine rule by establishing
-the initiative and referendum.</p>
-
-<h3>A NEW THIRD PARTY</h3>
-
-<p>Heretofore the essential element in
-questioning candidates as to people’s
-sovereignty has been a State Referendum
-League, in order that the business
-and professional interests shall be
-represented. But in January a new
-departure occurred in Pennsylvania.
-The Pennsylvania Referendum League
-changed its form of organization to the
-<span class="smcap">Referendum Party of Pennsylvania</span>.
-The platform is as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>The Referendum Party urges the following
-legislative action as the only certain
-peaceable means of forever eradicating the
-gigantic evils that have gradually crept into
-our system of government:</p>
-
-<p>1. The calling of a constitutional convention
-to revise the state constitution.</p>
-
-<p>2. Granting to the people the right to
-veto unjust laws or ordinances by direct
-vote; this right to be exercised only if a
-vote is demanded on any law or ordinance,
-by petition signed by two percentum of the
-voters of the state or locality affected.</p>
-
-<p>3. Granting to the people the right to
-enact, by direct majority vote, needed laws
-which their Legislature fails or refuses to
-enact.</p>
-
-<p>This is known as the Referendum System.
-Wherever it has been in operation it has
-effectually stamped out bribery, graft,
-bossism and ring rule, and has made “government
-by the people and for the people”
-a practical reality instead of a mere theory.</p>
-
-<p>The Referendum Party invites the co-operation
-of all who favor this action.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The members of the preliminary
-committee on organization are:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Clarence V. Tiers, Chairman, Pittsburg, Pa.,</li>
-<li>Clement V. Horn, Wilkinsburg, Pa.,</li>
-<li>H. F. Lea, Bellevue, Pa.,</li>
-<li>H. W. Noren, Allegheny, Pa.,</li>
-<li>Walter Becker, Allegheny, Pa.,</li>
-<li>John C. Innes, Pittsburg, Pa.,</li>
-<li>George D. Porter, Philadelphia, Pa.,</li>
-<li>John E. Joos, Allegheny, Pa.,</li>
-<li>Nathaniel Green, Swissvale, Pa.,</li>
-<li>J. Ludwig Koethen, Jr., Pittsburg, Pa.,</li>
-<li>Hon. W. F. Hill, (Master State Grange) Chambersburg, Pa.,</li>
-<li>James Wm. Newlin, (Member of Constitutional Convention 1873) Philadelphia, Pa.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>Reformers will watch with great
-interest this new experiment in third
-party politics. By limiting the demand
-to a constitutional convention and the
-initiative and referendum, and proposing
-to endorse such of the reliable
-candidates as pledge for the people’s
-sovereignty, the program is largely that
-of a Referendum League, plus the possibility
-of making an independent nomination.
-But a league can circulate
-nomination papers; in fact, every league
-impliedly stands ready to do so, if necessary.
-One thing is clear; that the
-<i>Pennsylvania situation was such that
-the change to a Referendum Party put
-life and vigor into the referendum movement</i>.
-Not only were hundreds of enthusiastic
-offers of support sent in, it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>
-is said, and from every quarter of the
-state, but leaders in the minority party
-and in the Lincoln party were brought
-to a point where they found it desirable
-to take immediate notice of the organization.</p>
-
-<p>One reason for this is that the
-granges in the state, large in number
-and strong in membership, and organized
-labor, have not only declared for
-the initiative and referendum, but are
-systematically questioning candidates
-and publishing their replies. All that
-is needed to give great political power
-to these voters is an organization that
-stands ready to nominate referendum
-candidates. The mere existence of
-such an organization will accomplish
-most of its purposes. In this connection
-the experience of Jo A. Parker, in
-Kentucky, described above, should be
-borne in mind; also the fact that the
-People’s Party Conference of 1902 at
-Louisville almost adopted the program
-which Mr. Parker applied in Kentucky
-the following year. But in states
-where the minority party is under progressive
-leadership it is probable that
-a State Referendum League is the best
-possible instrument.</p>
-
-<p>Isn’t it clear that the thing for the
-People’s Party to do is to complete at
-once the establishment of the initiative
-and referendum in America by going
-at it through the Kentucky or Pennsylvania
-program? Or that the workers
-in a state should organize an Initiative
-and Referendum League?</p>
-
-<p>If we review the foregoing pages
-several things become clear:</p>
-
-<p>1. That machine rule can be terminated
-and the people’s sovereignty
-re-established without waiting to change
-the written constitution. All that is
-required is a majority vote in the city
-council, legislature or congress. By
-this means an advisory-vote system
-can be established and then the candidates
-for public office can be pledged
-to obey the will of their constituents
-when expressed by referendum vote.
-This is merely the re-establishment of a
-direct vote system for instructing representatives—a
-system as old as representative
-government itself. The
-President of the United States is selected
-through an advisory vote by the
-people and public questions are also being
-determined by advisory vote;
-for example, municipal ownership of
-street railways in Chicago.</p>
-
-<p>2. The basis of machine rule is an
-evasion of vital issues by both the leading
-parties. This power can be terminated
-at once by the systematic
-questioning of candidates as to vital
-issues, provided an organization or candidate
-stands ready to take the case to
-the people. Another way of stating the
-reason for questioning candidates is
-that the people are entitled to know
-how the candidates will vote if
-elected.</p>
-
-<p>3. A third party organization can
-question candidates and declare that
-unless there is within each district a
-clear-cut written pledge by a reputable
-candidate, it will place one in nomination.</p>
-
-<p>Or the program can be to place
-on the third-party ticket some of
-the old line party candidates, except
-in those states where fusion is prohibited
-by law.</p>
-
-<p>4. The People’s Party during its
-palmy days was a leading factor in
-popularizing the initiative and referendum,
-and in securing its adoption,
-and today, by centering its effort on the
-termination of machine rule through
-the establishment of the initiative and
-referendum, it can at once complete
-the rehabilitation of the American system
-of government. Not only can the
-remaining states be redeemed within
-the next two years, but it is thoroughly
-practicable to exert in national affairs
-this year an influence that shall result
-in a pledged majority in the national
-House and Senate—the pledges to be
-for the advisory initiative and advisory
-referendum. The entire body of organized
-labor is centering its efforts in
-this direction, the referendum leagues
-are demanding it, and all that is needed
-to secure immediate victory is a political
-party that stands ready to put
-up candidates. The mere existence of
-such a party will win the day. How
-best can the desired end be attained?</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="A_Basket_And_A_Fortune">
-<img src="images/heading1.jpg" width="700" height="175" alt="" />
-<h2>A Basket And A Fortune<br />
-<span class="smaller">By Louise Forsslund<br />
-AUTHOR OF “THE STORY OF SARAH”, ETC.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">The Old Men’s Home, Indian Village, Long Island. June 10, 19—</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">To the Matron of the Old Ladies’ Home, Shoreville, Long Island.</p>
-
-<p>Dear Miss: The writer of this letter has had
-a windfall and he wants one of your woman-folks
-to have a share in it. He has lived
-in an old folks’ home himself for ten years,
-hand running, and he has a feeling for them
-others. My cousin Obadiah Hawkins died
-up to Lakeland last week. He never would
-so much as lend me a penny whilst he was
-living, but now he’s dead, he’s left me ten
-thousand dollars in ready money and a house
-and a home. There’s a pump in the kitchen.
-He never was no hand for investments and
-the money was all in an old silver water
-pitcher. It’s all good and the matron here
-has counted it over. I always wanted a
-home of my own and never was able to afford
-one. I always wanted a wife of my own and
-never could get up gumption enough to ask
-any woman to share my bad luck. Now the
-luck has turned. I got the home. All I
-need is the wife. I be going to drive over
-this afternoon and see if you got anybody
-that’s willing. I put it that way ’cause I
-ain’t much account if I have come into a tidy
-little fortune. I wear a wig and have spells
-of lumbago. It’s the lumbago what brought
-me here. There ain’t a lazy bone in my body.
-As for the requirements of the lady. She
-must be under seventy years old; she mustn’t
-wear a wig or dye her hair. I want one respectable
-suit of hair between us. She
-mustn’t squint or take snuff, and if she is sot
-on keeping chickens—some women be—she
-must keep them in the coop. I’ll build the
-coop. And she must love flowers and garden
-sass.</p>
-
-<p>Expecting them to be on deck this afternoon
-at three o’clock, I am,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Yours most respectfully,</p>
-
-<p class="right">Samuel Jessup.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A moment’s intense silence followed
-the matron’s public reading of this letter
-in the large hall which served as the
-community room of the Old Ladies’
-Home. The matron, her young gray
-eyes twinkling and shining, looked from
-one old face to the other. Some were
-broadly grinning under their crowns of
-gray hair, some were hurt and scornful,
-some were only puzzled and amazed—these
-belonging to the old ladies who
-had held their shriveled, shaking hands
-as trumpets before their ears during the
-reading of the letter. And some faces
-were marred by a shrewd, keen, calculating
-look as if to exclaim: “I wonder
-if—!” The matron looked at them
-all, her smile slowly growing broader,
-then quickly she looked down at her
-desk and said with business-like briskness:</p>
-
-<p>“That is a very honest letter. I wish
-you could all give it your serious attention.
-There is no fraud in it, for I have
-telephoned to the Old Men’s Home, and
-Mr. Jessup is a noble, straightforward
-character. Now, are any of you willing
-to see him this afternoon? I suggest
-that all those who can not or who will
-not give Mr. Jessup a chance for their
-hands this afternoon, leave the hall.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a curious reluctance on the
-part of the old ladies to move. There
-was much wagging of heads, much
-nudging of elbows, whispers and winks
-and murmurs from every quarter, but
-no one stirred. Those who really had
-no personal interest or legitimate right
-to an interest in Mr. Jessup’s quest for
-a wife stayed to see what the others<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
-might do. The matron repeated her
-request. Then old Mrs. Smith, bent
-and humpbacked, took up her cane and
-hobbled slowly toward the stairway.</p>
-
-<p>“Ef he wanted me,” she declared
-with mock asperity, “he should oughter
-come twenty year ago. Ye notice,”
-she added, looking over her shoulder
-with her sharp, shrewd peaked face,
-“he didn’t tell how old <i>he</i> was.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s sixty-nine,” laughed the matron.
-“Most men of his age would
-have insisted on a wife of eighteen.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a scurrying sound among
-the group of old ladies and suddenly
-there darted across the hall a younger,
-slimmer, straighter figure than Mrs.
-Smith’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Ellie!” protestingly called the
-matron, “where are you going?”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Ellie paused, her face flushed
-with shame to think she had not fled
-from the hall before. She paused and
-looked at the matron. However old
-she was, Miss Ellie did not look more
-than fifty years. Her hair was luxuriant,
-half silver, half gold, faded, yet
-giving a curious effect of a halo of
-moonlight. The flush mounted higher
-up the spinster’s cheeks until it crept
-over her forehead to the edge of her
-hair. For a moment she stood thus,
-looking at the youthful matron. Then,
-with a world of reproach in her tones,
-she said simply: “Miss Jessica!” Then
-she went up the stairs with quick and
-trembling limbs, but with an air of
-dignity that acted as a rebuke upon
-those lingering the hall.</p>
-
-<p>“Proud Miss Ellie!” murmured Jessica,
-herself feeling ashamed.</p>
-
-<p>“I do think,” began Mrs. Honan in a
-loud, strident key, “I do think myself
-that the man didn’t show very fine feeling.
-The idea of him a-spectin’ a
-woman ter jump at his head. Ef he
-wanted a wife, why didn’t he come
-a-lookin’ around modest an’ quiet-like
-in the good, old fashioned way?”</p>
-
-<p>With that she swept out of the hall.
-She was down on the register as having
-passed her seventy-third birthday, and
-anyway, she mused, she had always
-preferred a yard full of chickens to a
-yard full of flowers, because chickens
-are more lively. They keep you better
-company, she said. Then, with or
-without verbal excuse, one woman after
-another left the hall. There were two
-with the deplorable squint, several far
-on the shaded side of seventy, some
-who wore honest wigs, and some too
-honest to proclaim either that they did
-not dye their hair or that they had
-never sniffed at the contents of a snuffbox.
-Then there were the dear old
-ladies loyal to their dead husbands, the
-old ladies who did not care to give up
-the serene, uneventful security of the
-Old Ladies’ Home for a house shared
-only with a man afflicted with lumbago
-and very decided notions. However,
-ten remained, openly ashamed, yet not
-sufficiently ashamed to reject Samuel
-Jessup’s hand before they had seen him.</p>
-
-<p>“It don’t mean that none of us promise
-to take him, oh no!” said Mrs.
-Young, a woman living in the memories
-of her long reign as a belle. “It only
-means that we’d like to get a good look
-at him. We’ve had plenty of chances
-all our lives. We ain’t none of us here
-because no man wanted us—neither us
-widders nor us maidens. We’re here
-from ch’ice, Miss Jessica, from <i>ch’ice</i>!
-But still if there’s another ch’ice open
-to us with a real, kind honest man—his
-letter shows he’s that, bless his
-heart!—we’d each of us ten like to have
-one tenth of a show at him.”</p>
-
-<p>Then, greatly flustered at having
-spoken with such unmaidenly freedom
-on such a subject, Mrs. Young moved
-away from the desk across the hall and
-out of doors, where she could take a
-good long breath. After she had gone,
-one of the nine remaining candidates
-wondered aloud how Mrs. Young would
-look without her false front, for of
-course no one would deceive Samuel
-Jessup as to her quantity of hair.</p>
-
-<p>“But the rest of it?” whispered
-another. “You can’t wash all that dye
-off in one day, can you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Waal!” retorted a third, coming
-hotly to Mrs. Young’s rescue, “a man
-who wears a wig hasn’t no right ter be
-so particular.”</p>
-
-<p>Said the first one firmly: “She
-shouldn’t deceive him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span></p>
-
-<p>Answered a third: “Deceive him all
-she wants ter as long as it’s in somethin’
-no man would have wit enough
-ter find out.”</p>
-
-<p>At three o’clock to the minute,
-Samuel Jessup appeared, emerging
-from a closed coach together with a
-plump middle-aged woman who carried
-with extraordinary care a large market
-basket covered with a red tablecloth.</p>
-
-<p>“Good gracious!” exclaimed Mrs.
-Young, peeking with half the household
-from the upper hall windows. “He’s
-been an’ picked up a wife on the road
-an’ come to offer his apologies.”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed merrily at the possible
-joke against them all. And yet what a
-pity that would be, too, for Samuel was
-a pleasant, self-reliant looking little
-man with his head hanging sideways as
-if he had never lifted it from a one-sided
-attack of the mumps. Somehow this
-attitude made him appear younger.
-But the wig! That was too much in
-evidence and they all decided that it
-must be clipped at once. Samuel did
-not scan the house with lover-like eagerness
-as he came up the steps. Instead,
-he watched the basket with intense
-interest—so intense that he stumbled
-on the way.</p>
-
-<p>“I bet he’s got a dog in it!” cried one
-of the candidates. “I will not stand
-no leetle measly pet dog around the
-house, a-sheddin’ hair all over the parlor
-sofy. I ain’t agoin’ downstairs!”</p>
-
-<p>But she went with the others and
-met Mr. Jessup. The woman with the
-basket was nowhere in sight, having
-been relegated to the dining-room.
-No attempt whatever was made to explain
-her to the old ladies. Samuel
-Jessup was immediately enthroned by
-the matron in her private office; and
-one by one in alphabetical order of
-their names, Jessica sent the candidates
-to him, thinking that this would be
-more delicate than to have them all
-face him at once. Delicacy in this
-affair did not seem so difficult after
-coming face to face with little Mr.
-Jessup. Very modestly, and with his
-head more on one side than ever, he
-told the matron that she must convey
-to the ladies his doubts as to any one
-of them accepting him. He thought
-it was very kind of them to receive
-him anyway, and—this with a quick
-keen look into Jessica’s wise and bonny
-face—he hoped that they would not
-laugh at him.</p>
-
-<p>The first five filed out of the room
-after only a few moments’ conversation,
-each briefly explaining in her turn why
-Mr. Jessup “hadn’t took” with her.
-One did not like the way he held his
-head. One never could stand that wig.
-She knew that it got askew every time
-he took a nap. One thought him too
-much like her dead husband. One
-thought him too unlike her departed
-John to make a happy union possible.
-One said she never could bear a pump
-dribbling water in the kitchen; and he
-was too stubborn and “sot” in his ways
-to take it out. Then went in the sixth—she
-who had not rebuked the deceit
-of Mrs. Young’s dyed hair and she who
-hated pet dogs. After a longer period,
-she came out and with customary candor
-bluntly declared that she would
-have had Samuel Jessup in a minute,
-but she saw that she did not take with
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“The woman that gits him will be
-lucky,” she declared, “basket and all.”
-Nothing more would she tell. Then
-into the private room went the seventh
-old lady. She immediately demanded
-of Samuel an explanation of the woman
-and the basket; whereupon Samuel
-said that he refused to be questioned by
-any woman and he knew that they
-could not get along well together.
-She came out sniffing contemptuously,
-and vowed that in her opinion there
-was something very mysterious about
-this man. Number Eight went in even
-more eagerly, on tip-toe. She had
-read romances all her life. She loved
-mysteries and she was so sensitive
-about living in an Old Ladies’ Home
-partly on charity that she would have
-married any man that asked her. Almost
-any man—but not quite. She
-and Samuel Jessup talked together for
-a long time.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure we would git along,”
-said Samuel at last, his heart stirred to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-sympathy for one who hated a Home
-of this sort with the same proud hatred
-that he had borne. “But,” he went
-on, “before I let you decide, I be agoin’
-to take you into the dining-room and
-show you the basket. What belongs
-in the basket belongs with me an’s
-agoin’ with me. I ain’t much ter git,
-but come an’ see the basket!”</p>
-
-<p>Her romantic old heart beating high
-with excitement, Miss Ruby tip-toed
-ahead of him, across a tiny, dark back
-hall into the dining-room. On the very
-threshold she paused, her eyes popping
-out of her head as she looked within;
-then she uttered a faint scream and
-went scuttling into a corner among the
-shadows of the dim passage.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye, Mr. Jessup!” she called
-tragically. “Good-bye!” and there
-ended Samuel Jessup’s affair with Miss
-Ruby.</p>
-
-<p>A humorous light twinkled in the old
-man’s eye as he went back into Jessica’s
-office and waited for the ninth
-candidate. She was a woman famous
-in the Home for always managing to
-find some one to wait upon her, and
-she wanted a house of her own with
-several servants, an unobtrusive husband,
-and stained glass windows in the
-parlor.</p>
-
-<p>“I kinder fancied stained glass winders
-myself,” said Samuel. “But you
-can’t be keepin’ a hull passel o’ servants.
-One servant gal—that’s all I
-agree to, ma’am.”</p>
-
-<p>She thought that one servant might
-do if they put out the washing. Samuel
-looked dubious for a moment, seeing
-himself a henpecked husband, and
-then that twinkle came again into his
-wholesome eye.</p>
-
-<p>“Before we decide, m’am, I want ter
-show you what I got in that there basket.
-Me an’ the basket be inseparable.”</p>
-
-<p>She preceded him into the dining-room,
-her shoulders high and her nose
-uplifted. She stood for some moments
-staring at the contents of the basket,
-the basket’s owner, and the basket’s
-guardian staring at her. Slowly her
-face grew rigid. She shook her head
-once. She strove to speak, swallowed
-hard and then gasped;</p>
-
-<p>“How dast you presume, Samuel
-Jessup!”</p>
-
-<p>Samuel winked at the guardian of
-the basket and chuckled soft and low.
-But then he realized that he really
-wanted a wife, a companion in his old
-age, a mistress for the snug little home,
-and now there was but one candidate
-left. To be sure he might find some
-one outside the Home, but he had wanted
-in truth to share all that he had—the
-basket not excepted—with one who
-had tasted as he had the well buttered
-bread of charity in an old folks’ home.
-Soberly he went back to the private
-room, and Mrs. Young came drifting
-leisurely in to him. She congratulated
-herself on being the last. She wanted
-never to be twitted with having failed
-to give the others every possible chance,
-and she knew that had she entered the
-private room first the result would have
-been the same. She would be the wife
-selected by Mr. Jessup if she wanted
-him. A woman with real charm for
-old men, a woman who could have
-graced many a home in her lazy, yet
-pleasingly frivolous ways, she felt that
-Samuel could not resist her if she chose
-to throw her charm around him.</p>
-
-<p>“This is a very ridiculous position,”
-she began, with a quavering little trill
-of laughter. “I never went a-seekin’
-a man before. They always sought
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>This was more than Samuel’s natural
-gallantry could withstand. He took
-her small lean fingers in his and drew
-her down beside him on the couch.
-Her fingers twined around his hand.
-She wore jewels—relics of bygone
-splendors—which seemed pitifully out
-of keeping with her present state. To
-Samuel they told a long, familiar story,
-and sent a feeling of pity out from him
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Mis’ Young,” he said gently. “I
-am jest as much obliged to all of you
-folks fer seein’ me as I kin be.”</p>
-
-<p>“To us <i>all</i>?” she asked and lifted her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>They had been very fine blue eyes
-once and now they were bright in spite
-of their puffy lids. And her thin hair,
-parted simply in the middle, was more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>
-becoming than the false front had been.
-He wondered that she had no gray hairs,
-but was too straightforward himself to
-suspect the deception. What a very
-pretty woman she still was, and, with
-that not displeasing girlish attempt at
-flirtation, how exceedingly feminine!</p>
-
-<p>“Obliged to us <i>all</i>?” she repeated,
-her eyes still uplifted, her hand still
-clinging to his. She remembered how
-eloquently hands can speak and so did
-Samuel, but of a sudden he felt that
-his horny old hand had become tongue-tied.
-He knew that she wanted him to
-say: “I be obliged to <i>you</i> in perticular,
-Mis’ Young.”</p>
-
-<p>And he did stumble through some
-such gallant speech, but all the while
-he was thinking: “So I have got to take
-this! This frivolous old lady with a
-spot of red paint on either cheek and a
-pair of penciled eye-brows.” Why had
-he not mentioned rouge in his letter?
-Mrs. Young still looked at him, still
-held his hand, remembering of old the
-value of long looks and of silence. Of
-a truth many and many a man had she
-captivated in this way in the days of
-long ago and once again in her mind’s
-eye she could see suitor after suitor at
-her feet. She had refused them all,
-after the first one had given her his
-name and then gone into the unknown
-world. Even after coming into the
-Old Ladies’ Home, she had refused
-offers of marriage, and yet, now of a
-sudden, she wished to share the good
-fortune and the ill fortune of Samuel
-Jessup. She laid her free hand on his
-shoulder and murmured a line from
-her favorite Browning—Browning who
-was a mere name and scarcely that to
-Samuel:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Grow old along with me,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The best is yet to be.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Samuel was embarrassed. He pushed
-his wig back from his brow and,
-going opposite to the natural, sidewise
-slant of his head, it gave him a
-rakish expression, delightful to Mrs.
-Young’s eye. Then all of a kindle with
-the light of an eager hope went Samuel’s
-own brown orbs.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes,” he said glibly, “but the
-best ain’t <i>ter be</i>. It’s here, right now,
-in the dinin’-room. Come along with
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>He was so mixed as to his own desires
-and emotions that he half hoped,
-half feared that she would stand the
-test, but when she saw the basket and
-its contents, first horror crossed her
-face, then the shadow of a deep disappointment
-fell among the wrinkles and
-the rouge and the penciled eye-brows.
-Sadly she faced Samuel Jessup as if
-certain of his answer before her questioning:</p>
-
-<p>“And you insist on a-keeping it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s mine. It belongs ter me. I
-had it jest half a day, but now all the
-women in the country couldn’t make
-me give it up. I don’t want ter be
-imperlite,” added Samuel in a milder
-tone, “but them’s the facts. Me an’
-the basket, or ‘Good-bye, Samuel.’”</p>
-
-<p>She interpreted him literally. Holding
-out her fragile, jeweled hand, she
-clasped his warmly, yet with honest
-sadness and compassion:</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye, Samuel. If it hadn’t
-been for the basket—.” She paused,
-slowly withdrawing her hand, and
-then went on again: “You’re makin’
-an awful mistake. Who’d a thought
-it of a man o’ your age! I shall never
-forget you. Good-bye, Samuel.”</p>
-
-<p>With one swift, half hungering, half
-frightened glance at the basket, she
-slipped out of the room. Samuel did
-not laugh and his eyes did not twinkle
-as he went up to the matron’s desk.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Jessica, they’ve all practically
-refused me. What shall I do?”
-He had a vision of an endless quest of
-an eligible, willing old lady from an old
-folks’ home.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Jessica thought a long while,
-biting the end of her pencil, and at last
-she said slowly, half reluctantly:</p>
-
-<p>“There is one more—who—answers
-your requirements, but she was too
-proud to enter the lists.”</p>
-
-<p>Samuel’s face lit up. Proud women
-can be very tender and only a tender
-soul could accept the basket. Moreover,
-a woman with sufficient spirit to
-resent his action today was a woman
-after his own heart. He lifted his head
-from its sidewise slant and, throwing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>
-back his shoulders, looked Jessica
-square in the eyes:</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the woman’s name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Ellie Smith.”</p>
-
-<p>“Waal, I be goin’ ter change it!”
-vowed Mr. Jessup. “Whar be she?”</p>
-
-<p>The matron hesitated, wondering
-whether she could play the part of
-the traitor to dignified, self-reliant
-Miss Ellie, but Jessica was very
-young. She looked down the long
-years that these two had traveled,
-and seeing how dusty and stony
-and hard the road had been, wondered
-why they should not come into a
-restful, fragrant garden at last. Ellie,
-she knew, even yet, with the help of the
-right man, could make the garden.
-And now as she looked keenly into
-Samuel Jessup’s eyes—eyes shaded by
-iron-gray brows, but deep, dark brown
-eyes, limpid, sparkling, full of tenderness
-and an appealing hunger for tenderness—she
-felt that Samuel could
-play an all-sufficient Adam to Ellie’s
-Eve, in the garden.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Ellie’s all alone in the kitchen,
-hulling strawberries for supper,” she
-said very low. Then bending far over
-her desk, as if completely absorbed in
-her books, she went on: “It’s the south
-dining-room door. Go right in, take
-the basket with you—no, no, not that
-woman, too—and ask Miss Ellie if she
-won’t take charge of your basket for an
-hour or so.”</p>
-
-<p>Samuel grinned. He wagged his
-head back and forth until his wig shook
-in sympathetic anticipation. Years
-and years seemed to fall from him, until
-with his small, thick-set figure and his
-sparkling, youthful eyes he looked like
-a boy getting ready to steal apples.
-With short, firm, quicksteps he entered
-the dining-room. No one would have
-thought him a victim of lumbago from
-his gait now. Then of a sudden, Miss
-Jessica, no longer able to contain herself,
-went into her private room, where
-he had consulted with the ten, and
-danced around with glee.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Ellie, you darling!” she whispered
-to herself. “I know you’ll do
-it!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Ellie, in a prim, dainty blue
-gingham dress, with a great bib apron
-enveloping her slender figure, sat at the
-south kitchen window hulling berries,
-the basket of red fruit on the table beside
-her, a yellow earthen bowl in her
-lap. Her silver-gold hair caught sunbeam
-lights from the window until each
-single thread danced and twinkled.
-Little curls of silver gold nestled against
-the nape of her slender neck. Her face
-was that of an April lady’s—first the
-clouds chased across it, clouds of contempt,
-of anger and of regret; and then
-it took on a soft blaze of tenderness and
-of passionate longing.</p>
-
-<p>She did not want Mr. Samuel Jessup
-or any other man. She scorned the
-woman who might take him today for
-his home and that little sum of money;
-but why—why had she with all her
-power of loving and of attracting love,
-all the unspent passion of motherhood
-that had been her ruling passion since
-the doll-baby age—why had she come
-to see sixty-one without finding Mr.
-Right? Lovers in moderate numbers
-she had had in the days of long ago, and
-old people do not forget the loves of the
-springtime, but all the while—all
-through the spring and the summer and
-this swiftly passing autumn—or was it
-really winter-time?—there had never
-come to her one whom she would rejoice
-to call her mate! Him she did not
-regret so much nowadays, or she regretted
-him with a vague, indistinct
-feeling. He might have liked strong
-drink and smoked a strong pipe indoors.
-But the children! Ah, the children
-that had never come!</p>
-
-<p>She had outlived all her people.
-There were no nieces, no nephews, no
-one in all the world whom she could call
-her own, and there had never been and
-never could be a little grandchild to
-pull at her skirts.</p>
-
-<p>“Dran-ma! I love oo, dran-ma!”
-Only yesterday she had heard a little
-child lisp this into the ears of Mrs.
-Young.</p>
-
-<p>“Dran-ma, I love oo, dran-ma!”
-whispered Ellie, bending far over the
-berries with the hot gushing of tears
-coming into her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Both the ache of motherhood and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>
-ache of grandmotherhood were upon
-her. Never to have felt the touch of
-her own babe at her breast! And, now
-that old age had withered the breast,
-never to hear the prattle of grandchildren
-in her ears! And her ears
-were still so finely attuned, unlike
-the average grandmother! Miss Ellie
-looked up from her berries at the window.
-Her eyes were too dim to see,
-and wiping the tears away she looked
-out of the window again, down the garden.
-So, young girls stare wistfully as
-if they would look to the very end of
-the world and discover what, in the very
-end, may come to them.</p>
-
-<p>The dining-room door opened. Miss
-Ellie turned back to her task. She
-scorned to look up and ask her fellow
-inmate of the Home who had won Samuel
-Jessup. It was probably Mrs.
-Homan coming to help with the supper.
-Steps came across the kitchen. Ellie
-bent far over the yellow bowl and went
-on with her berry hulling. It needed a
-great many berries to supply that supper
-table. The sunbeam darted down
-from the top of Ellie’s head to seek out
-with its twinkling, gold-shod feet the
-silver-gold curls in Ellie’s neck. The
-steps paused close beside Ellie. Suddenly
-the spinster realized that they
-were not Mrs. Homan’s steps and she
-looked up. Scorn, indignation, amazement,
-and then something more subtle,
-something which one sees in faces everywhere
-all over the world, and something
-which makes the world more
-beautiful, crossed her face. There
-stood Samuel Jessup with the huge market
-basket in one hand. He held out
-the basket to Miss Ellie. He looked at
-her eagerly, almost with piteous appeal,
-as if to say:</p>
-
-<p>“They would have none of it, but—<i>you</i>!
-<i>You?</i>”</p>
-
-<p>The red table cover had been thrown
-off the basket. There lay the contents
-before Miss Ellie’s eyes. A big white
-pillow and resting upon it, a baby—a
-real, live, pink-and-white, wide-awake
-baby. More than this, a baby who at
-first sight of Miss Ellie holding poised
-in her hand a huge, red strawberry,
-struggled up into a sitting position, held
-out his two pudgy, dimpled little hands
-and cried with the softest, most ecstatic
-little cry imaginable: “Dranny!”</p>
-
-<p>The baby’s grandmother had died
-last week, but neither Miss Ellie nor the
-baby knew that, and Samuel Jessup
-kept a wise silence.</p>
-
-<p>Trembling, agitated, scarcely able to
-see or hear for the moment following
-the baby’s cry, Miss Ellie put down the
-red berry, placed the bowl on the table,
-and then turned to take the baby. She
-asked no questions. She simply took
-him. She knew that he was hers. Even
-now again—would her heart burst
-with joy and her ears lose their power
-of hearing!—even now again he was
-murmuring and mumbling: “Dranny!
-Dranny!” Now she knew that she
-would hear the prattle of one she called
-grandchild in her ears and guide with
-her shriveled old hands the unsteady
-movements of these little feet. Samuel
-Jessup counted not at all just then;
-but if he had attempted to take away
-that baby, she would have fought him
-like a mother-tigress.</p>
-
-<p>Samuel had meant to say much. He
-said nothing, but simply put his hand
-against his throat and looked at her.
-He saw her devour with eyes and lips
-the tender little form—saw her seek out
-the baby wrinkles in the fat little dimpled
-neck—saw her munch hungrily at
-the baby’s yellow curls—saw her feel
-every bone of the little body through
-the stiff starchy white dress as if she
-loved each one more than the other.
-And then at length he watched her
-unfasten the shoes, pull off the tiny
-white socks and then adore with the
-pent-up passion of the lonely years the
-adorable little rosy heel of his baby.</p>
-
-<p>Samuel cleared his throat with a loud
-noise and walked across the room. He
-noticed a red calico curtain at the cupboard
-door and wondered whether
-Miss Ellie had made it. In his
-mind’s eye, he saw another kitchen,
-smaller than this, cosier, but still
-with red calico curtains at the cupboard
-door and crisp white swiss
-ones—as crisp as the baby’s dress—at
-the windows. He knew that Miss
-Ellie would not want to get those curtains<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>
-stained up with tobacco smoke—she
-looked so dainty—so he would volunteer
-to do his smoking on the back
-porch. If she left the window open,
-he could look through and talk to her
-and the little one. He came beside
-Miss Ellie’s chair and stood looking
-down at her lovely head and the
-baby’s cheek pressed against her own.
-The baby, quieted with happiness
-against that breast, was profoundly still.</p>
-
-<p>Through the open door came a wonderful
-fragrance—as the fragrance of
-youthful love—blown in from the syringa
-bush beside the kitchen door.
-They must plant a syringa beside the
-kitchen door-step in the new home,
-thought Samuel. Out of the stillness,
-he spoke, his voice very husky.</p>
-
-<p>“You be a woman arter my own
-heart—I knowed it when I see you a-settin’
-here a-hullin’ berries. It’s more
-than I ’spected. I never dreamed it
-could be: I was that old. But, Miss
-Ellie, you be—you be—” He lost his
-voice entirely for a space and fearfully,
-reverently, he lifted in his trembling
-fingers one of the silver-gold curls that
-lay on her neck, lifted it and immediately
-let it fall in place again. “You
-be,” he whispered, “a woman arter my
-own heart. I never found sech a one
-when I was young. I know it now, fer
-ef I had, I wouldn’t ’a’ been afeared of
-no bad luck fer neither her ner me. I’d
-a took her an’—” another pause and
-then with brave, masculine assurance,
-“she’d ’a’ took me.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Ellie did not move, she did not
-speak. She felt that his voice was very
-far away, away off back in her youth
-where she had dreamed of the mate
-who was yet to come. Closer she
-pressed her cheek to the baby’s and so
-assured herself that baby and the man
-who had brought her the baby were real
-and belonged to today.</p>
-
-<p>Samuel was speaking again, his hand
-now on the back of her chair, so that it
-brushed against the ruffle that ran
-across the shoulders of her apron.</p>
-
-<p>“I allers wanted children, an’ when
-I got too old to have the hope o’ ever
-a-marryin’, I used ter say ter myself:
-‘Oh, ef they was only leetle grand-younguns
-now!’ Then the fortune
-come. Says I fust thing: ‘I’ll have
-a baby. I’ll be a granddaddy yit.’
-Thar wa’n’t much mean about me. I
-be sixty-nine, but I wanted my own
-home, an’ my own wife, an’ my own
-baby. But I wanted the baby most of
-all. So the fust thing I done when the
-money come was ter go to that thar
-Margaret Jane Orphan Asylum an git
-this here baby. He hadn’t been there
-but a week. Jest lost his grandma an’
-his grandpa—didn’t yer, yer pore leetle
-cuss, yer? He’s legally adopted. His
-name is Samuel Biggs Jessup, Jr.
-Ain’t he a wallopin’ fine feller!”</p>
-
-<p>Samuel exploded at the last. His
-bashfulness, his self-depreciation, his
-afraidness, were all gone. He bent
-over, his hands on his knees, and looked
-into the baby’s face. The baby’s face
-was very close to Ellie’s. The baby’s
-face was dimpled and smiling, while
-over Ellie’s face there was a flush of
-joyous young motherhood together
-with the proud, all-wondering delight
-of grandmotherhood, and blending
-with both, a sweet shame and shrinking
-such as no one but a virgin can wear.
-Oh, exquisite, young-old Miss Ellie!
-Your eyes swimming in unshed tears
-were so beautiful then with the inner
-light that Samuel blinked to see them.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Ellie,” he whispered. Very
-still was the kitchen. The syringa outside
-the door shook out its perfume
-just for these two. The wind murmured
-through the fragrant flowers—it
-murmured:</p>
-
-<p>“Again and again and again! Even
-for the old, this same old story!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ellie,” whispered Samuel. “I want
-you even more than I want the baby.
-Will you marry me?”</p>
-
-<p>Again the silence fell, and after a
-long while, the voice of Ellie’s dream-swept,
-ideal-keeping youth came from
-within the curves of the baby’s cheek
-where her lips were hiding:</p>
-
-<p>“Samuel, you been a long time
-comin’.” Her voice faltered and then
-gathering a girlish tremor went on,
-“But, even ef you hadn’t brought the
-baby, I should say you was wuth all
-the waitin’.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Control_or_Ownership"><i>Control or Ownership?</i><br />
-<span class="smaller">BY CHARLES Q. DE FRANCE</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Few men who have studied the
-question, and who are free to
-make a frank statement of their
-views, see much hope for a “square
-deal” in railroad rates under private
-ownership. Most of those who really
-want a square deal, however, are giving
-the President their moral support, not
-because they expect him to solve the
-problem with his formula of “control,”
-but because they feel that the agitation
-he has caused and is fomenting
-will inure to the benefit of the public
-ownership and operation idea. His
-opponents charge as much—and they
-are correct. Many of their arguments
-against control are valid, too, if we
-grant that private ownership in this
-age of our civilization is best. Of
-course, we do not grant that.</p>
-
-<p>It seems certain at this writing
-(March 4) that the Hepburn-Dolliver
-bill will become a law—one of those
-dead letters, so many of which already
-encumber our Federal and State statute
-books. That it cannot and will not be
-enforced, except in a few spectacular
-instances to fool the multitude, is as
-certain as anything in human affairs.
-The roads will continue to take all that
-the traffic will bear, to give rebates, and
-to water stock in the good old way. If
-any doubt this, let them read the intensely
-interesting letters in various
-newspapers sent out each week from
-Washington by Lincoln Steffens. Mr.
-Steffens has, after most thorough investigation,
-reached the conclusion
-that our people are suffering not so
-much because of bribery and corruption
-as from having abdicated in favor of the
-railroads and other big corporations.
-It is not necessary now for a railroad
-corporation to bribe a congressman or
-senator—because most of these supposed
-people’s representatives are actually
-the railroad representatives, and
-many of them heavy stockholders.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Steffens can lay no claim to a
-patent on this information by right of
-original discovery, for Populists said
-the same thing (only not so aptly, perhaps),
-twelve to fifteen years ago. But
-he is reaching an audience that the
-Populists did not and possibly never
-could reach. And he tells the story so
-well that we must accord him the
-highest meed of praise. I cannot refrain
-from quoting a paragraph concerning
-the spectacle he sees in Washington
-(New York <i>World</i>, March 4):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“We, the people of the United States, are
-the petitioners. (For railroad rate legislation).
-We are coming here asking through
-the President that that bill (Hepburn-Dolliver)
-be passed so as to relieve us from
-certain abuses practised everywhere by our
-chartered common carriers, the railroads.
-And the representatives of those railroads
-and their allied corporations sit here enthroned;
-and they decide upon our case.
-They may decide in our favor but—the
-intolerable fact of it all is—they decide.
-They rule; they may be good rulers; but
-they rule.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>That is the deliberate statement of a
-man who has gained an enviable reputation
-for thorough-going investigation.
-He is not a demagogue or a writer of
-penny-dreadfuls. He is on the ground
-and supports every one of his general
-statements with concrete examples.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Steffens blames the people for
-the present state of affairs. I heartily
-agree with him. But I believe we
-should try to reason out where the first<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
-big mistake was made and arrive at a
-conclusion as to the best way out of the
-difficulty, unless, perchance, our people
-really like the rule of railroad oligarchy.
-I believe it is a useless task to chide the
-people for lack of civic righteousness,
-for indifference, for supineness, for
-failure to go to the primaries, etc.,
-unless we point out clearly how complete
-sovereignty may be secured. It
-is useless to scold a man for not filling
-his lungs with oxygen, if you advise him
-to stay in a room overcharged with carbonic
-acid gas.</p>
-
-<p>The present state of affairs is due
-primarily to two great causes, or really
-to one cause operating through two
-different channels:</p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) The private ownership of railroads.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) The private control of the issue
-and circulation of money.</p>
-
-<p>The latter cause, in my judgment, is
-immeasurably greater than the former;
-but public opinion is now directed
-toward the former, so that a discussion
-of it is sure of a careful hearing. I do
-not insist that permitting the private
-ownership of railroads was an irremediable
-mistake; in fact, there is much
-good argument in favor of the contention
-that under private ownership the
-roads were developed faster and better
-than they, in all likelihood, would have
-been under public ownership. And
-we may admit, without at all prejudicing
-our case, that in the evolution of
-railroading, private ownership was best
-at the start. This is not capable of
-demonstration—but we need not quarrel
-over it.</p>
-
-<p>A railroad is a highway; and a highway
-is one of the attributes of sovereignty.
-Whoever owns and controls
-the road is to that extent a sovereign.
-And under our aggravated system of
-<i>laissez faire</i>, ownership and control
-always go together, except with the
-slightest modifications. Hence, with
-private ownership of railroads, it was
-inevitable that we should reach just
-such a state of affairs as Mr. Steffens
-pictures. Why shouldn’t “representatives
-of those railroads and their allied
-corporations” sit here enthroned?</p>
-
-<p>The owners of those roads are absolute
-sovereigns over the principal
-avenue for the distribution of commodities;
-and under our highly developed
-methods of production, with extreme
-division of labor, a great distribution
-of commodities is absolutely essential.
-With power to tax at will all users of
-highways, their owners can control, in a
-great measure, all productive industry.</p>
-
-<p>I am not a believer in total depravity.
-I can see no necessity or reason for
-calling railroad magnates hard names, or
-accusing them of unpatriotic scheming
-for power—except, possibly, for the
-purpose of arousing a lethargic people
-to a sense of their own wrongs. Being
-an actual sovereign, because owning
-the highways—the real, vital highways—and
-possessing the power to
-tax, I can understand how the railroads
-were, in a great measure, compelled to
-unite <i>de jure</i> and <i>de facto</i> sovereignty.
-With non-railroad or anti-railroad men
-in the legislative, administrative and
-judicial bodies, “sand-bagging” and
-hold-ups were common. In self-defense
-(for no man ever lived who
-likes to be deprived of power),
-the railroads bribed and corrupted.
-They were by no means the sole
-culprits. The taker of a bribe is
-just as despicable as the giver. But
-gradually the system evolved to its
-present state—the union of all sovereign
-powers. The Government persisted
-in its refusal to go into the railroad
-business—so the railroads quite naturally
-went into the governing business.</p>
-
-<p>We cannot undo what has been done.
-We cannot turn back the wheels of
-time and begin all over again with
-public ownership of railroads; but we
-can, and I think we will, in not many
-years hence, take over the railroads
-and make them public property, operating
-them by Government officials.
-The union of sovereign powers is now
-complete: the owners of highways and
-“their allied corporations,” by their
-representatives, are now enthroned as
-the actual Government. This is as it
-should be, except that the ownership is
-too limited. <i>It should be made to include
-the whole people.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus13.jpg" width="475" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Will It Come to this at Niagara?</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Morris, in Spokane Spokesman Review</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
-<img src="images/illus14.jpg" width="450" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“<i>What, Doctor, All of This?</i>”</p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Warren, in Boston Herald</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
-<img src="images/illus15.jpg" width="450" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Puzzle.—Which Way Is He Going?</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Handy, in Duluth News Tribune</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
-<img src="images/illus16.jpg" width="450" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>R. R. Magnate: I cannot tell a lie. I am
-going to do it with my little hatchet.</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Handy, in Duluth News Tribune</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="THE_SACRIFICE">
-<img src="images/heading2.jpg" width="700" height="125" alt="" />
-<h2>THE SACRIFICE<br />
-<span class="smaller">BY JACK B. NORMAN.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“Don’t think that I ain’t
-willin’ for you to have
-the home-place like pa
-wanted you to, Indie,” said the thin,
-tired voice that was fast wearing
-into silence, “’cause I am. It’s no
-more ’n right after all you’ve done
-for me ’n pa. The t’others has all
-got homes o’ their own an’ you ain’t
-got nobody to fall back on. But,
-Indie, promise me you won’t close the
-door agin poor Tom if he should come
-back. Give him shelter an’ welcome
-for my sake, won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>Indie promised solemnly. Her
-thoughts went back to one still, tranquil
-night years before, when the doors
-of that same home had been closed
-against the wayward son by the father
-who vowed never to look upon his boy’s
-face again. The mother—a frail,
-submissive, toil-worn woman—had
-mourned in secret, but her prayers
-had been unanswered.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve been dreadful good to us,”
-the dying voice murmured; “I hope the
-Lord will make it up to you somehow,
-Indie. Do you reckon the girls will git
-here ’fore I die?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Aunt Viney, I really b’lieve
-they will. But you go to sleep if you
-can. I’ll wake you as soon as they git
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>By and by the sick woman fell into
-a gentle doze that deepened into the
-sleep that knows no earthly waking.
-The married daughters came too late,
-but if they were greatly grieved over
-their mother’s death they made little
-outward sign. They stayed at the
-home place for two days, during which
-the will was read. It deeded all that
-remained of the Pasely farm, that had
-been divided and subdivided to supply
-marriage portions for four, to Indie, in
-consideration of her faithful services
-for the old folks.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you can ketch Lem Powers
-with this bait,” was Louise’s spiteful
-comment, after the reading was over.
-“Everyone knows you always wanted
-him bad enough.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary, the eldest cousin, laughed
-dryly. “Indie can’t complain of the
-way our folks treated her,” she said
-with ill-concealed bitterness. “This
-farm is worth a thousand dollars above
-the mortgage money. It ain’t many
-poor relations that has property like
-this left to ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess Indie knows that she didn’t
-come by it plum honest,” the third
-cousin remarked. “She knowed how
-to work around the old folks so’s to git
-’em to leave her what they had. Well,
-we ain’t the kind to make trouble even
-if we <i>have</i> been wronged.”</p>
-
-<p>When they had gone, Indie abandoned
-herself to a passion of helpless,
-piteous grief. She recalled one cruel
-hour long ago when her cousin Louise
-had accused her of caring, unasked, for
-friendly, pleasant Lem Powers, whose
-off-hand calls on the family stood out
-in Indie’s memory as the brightest
-events of her lonely, toilful life. Indie
-was twenty-three and plain, for the
-flower-like prettiness of her early childhood
-had long since succumbed to the
-triple blight of care and drudgery and
-loneliness. It had been known among
-her neighbors and acquaintances that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>
-Indie, at the age of eighteen, had never
-been “spoke for,” wherefore she had
-meekly accepted the stigma of spinsterhood
-that comes very early to the
-Southern country girl and had withdrawn
-from the mild frivolities of youth
-to become a household drudge in her
-uncle’s family in order that her cousins
-might have more leisure and freedom.
-After the death of her hard-working
-uncle, she had stayed with her ailing
-aunt while the girls married and left
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“I wisht I’d died instid of Aunt
-Viney,” Indie sobbed in utter loneliness.</p>
-
-<p>For two years Indie lived quietly and
-comfortably in the old home, paying
-her simple expenses by raising garden
-truck for the town hotel. Then a letter
-came from Tom’s widow imploring
-his people to send her enough money to
-defray Tom’s funeral expenses to avert
-his threatened burial in the potter’s
-field. It was a pathetic appeal, involving
-the brief story of Tom’s struggles,
-how he had worked his way with
-his little family from Texas to the old
-home state, where he had obtained employment
-in a factory. He had met
-his death through a boiler explosion the
-day before the letter was written.
-Tom had always hoped for a reconciliation
-in spite of his father’s unyielding
-hardness, the widow wrote. In conclusion,
-she begged his people not to
-allow his body to be consigned to a
-nameless grave.</p>
-
-<p>Indie went straight to Mr. Griggs,
-the real estate agent, who held the four-hundred-dollar
-mortgage on her farm,
-and asked him to lend her a hundred
-dollars. He refused gently but firmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Indie, by the time you sell
-that farm it may not be worth five hundred
-dollars in all,” he said. “The
-interest on the mortgage is about due
-now and here you are wanting to borrow
-more!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s for a particular purpose that
-can’t wait a day,” Indie told him anxiously,
-trembling in every nerve with
-the fear of disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t help that. Business is business
-you know, and every man must
-look out for his own interests. There
-is only one way to get that money and
-that is to sell the place as it stands before
-the debts eat it up completely. I
-know a party that would buy, probably.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I couldn’t sell the only home
-I’ve got,” Indie said piteously.</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll come to that in the end, anyhow,”
-Griggs answered indifferently.
-“My advice is to get rid of it now, while
-there is a few dollars in it for you. Anyway,
-you can’t raise that hundred you
-want any other way. If I was in your
-place I’d sell and go down to Birmingham
-and get work in the factory, where
-you’ll make something besides a mere
-living.”</p>
-
-<p>Indie’s heart almost stopped beating
-at the very thought of leaving the old
-familiar haunts for a strange city.
-Yet, Tom must have a decent burial at
-any cost to herself.</p>
-
-<p>“What could you get for the farm?”
-Indie asked huskily.</p>
-
-<p>“Eight or nine hundred I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Could you let me have the hundred
-right now if I agree to sell the place?”
-she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll sell—because I’ve got to
-have that money right off.”</p>
-
-<p>Indie hurried home and began to put
-things to rights. She packed up her
-personal belongings and moved all her
-humble furniture into one room, where
-it could be easily got at in case she
-should send for it a little later, if she
-were fortunate enough to secure steady
-work in the factory which Mr. Griggs
-had referred to. He had even given
-her a clipping from the Sunday paper
-containing an advertisement calling for
-twenty new hands, “experience not
-necessary.”</p>
-
-<p>Indie was sweeping the back yard
-when some one strode up the pebbled
-walk with brisk, business-like steps,
-which she mistook for Mr. Griggs’s walk,
-for he had promised to stop in on his
-homeward way. But it was not the
-agent. It was Indie’s old friend Lem<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>
-Powers, whom she had so timidly avoided
-for years. His broad-brimmed hat
-was turned up squarely in front, framing
-his dark, strong, sunny face in a sort
-of a rough halo.</p>
-
-<p>“Evenin’, Indie,” said he, with a tug
-at his up-standing hat-brim. “Do you
-happen to have a wrench about the
-place? My buggy wheel’s locked an’ I
-ain’t got no tools with me.”</p>
-
-<p>Indie shook down her sleeves hurriedly,
-keenly conscious of her unpleasing
-appearance. “Won’t you set down
-while I hunt up the wrench?” she asked,
-nodding toward the veranda bench.
-“I’ve done packed up everything, but
-I can find the wrench easy’s not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Packed up!” the young man echoed
-in blank astonishment, with a sweeping
-glance at the denuded premises.
-“Why, you don’t aim to move, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect to leave Shallow Ford to-morrer
-mornin’,” Indie answered solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t say so? Goin’ to live
-with your cousins?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, oh no,” Indie answered quickly,
-with a dry smile. “None of them ain’t
-never asked me to live with ’em, and
-even if they had I wouldn’t go.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know you had other kin.”</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t. I aim to go to Birmingham
-to work in the factory. I seen a
-advertisement callin’ for twenty new
-hands and I thought it would be a good
-chance to get started.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whatever put that idee into your
-head, I’d like to know? I don’t
-b’lieve you’ll like the work one bit,
-Indie,” the young man said with grim
-conviction. “It ain’t healthy, to begin
-with. Don’t you rec’lect how pale an’
-peekedy them Baldwins looked when
-they come back here on a visit after
-havin’ worked in the thread factory
-down at Birmingham? They didn’t
-have the sperit of a jack rabbit between
-’em, an’ their ways was plum changed
-too—sorter forrard like. You won’t
-like the sort of company they keep,
-Indie.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got to go now,” said Indie,
-doggedly, “cause I’ve done put the
-place for sale. Mr Griggs thinks he
-can sell it without any trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>“He may. Indie, is it on account
-of the mortgage you’re leavin’?”</p>
-
-<p>Indie shook her head. She could not
-tell Lem her real motive.</p>
-
-<p>“’Cause if it is,” said Lem, earnestly,
-“I’d be only too glad to stand good for
-the debt if you’ll let me.”</p>
-
-<p>Indie’s pale face reddened painfully,
-and her head went back an inch or two,
-for she had her pride in spite of her
-helplessness. “I couldn’t ever raise
-enough truck to pay off the debt,
-anyhow,” she answered coldly.</p>
-
-<p>“You could rent the place an’ pay
-off that way. I do wish you would let
-your old friends do a little something
-for you, Indie,” he pleaded, growing
-red and embarrassed under her increasing
-coldness.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s too late to rent now, ’cause it’s
-way past corn-plantin’ time,” Indie
-objected, “an there ain’t nothin started
-but two acres o’ roastin’ ears an’
-some garden truck.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think you’d hate to leave
-the old place,” Lem observed, letting
-his bright gaze wander over the green
-pasture strip and the narrow creek
-bottoms where the young corn waved
-idly in the evening breeze.</p>
-
-<p>Indie’s thin face clouded with the
-shadow of regret, but she made no reply,
-for she would not have admitted,
-on pain of death, that her heart ached
-with the pathos of renunciation.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t there nary thing I can do for
-you, Indie?” Lem asked, after an awkward
-pause, in what seemed to the
-listener a very off-hand, indifferent voice.</p>
-
-<p>“No thanky. There ain’t a thing to
-do but to take the cow over to board
-with the Bankses. Seems like I can’t
-bear the thoughts of sellin’ her to out-an’-out
-strangers, so I thought I’d
-board her till some of the neighbors
-gits ready to buy her. Miss Clayton’s
-goin’ to keep Billy for me till I get
-settled, so’s I can take him.”</p>
-
-<p>Billy, the big tortoise-shell cat that
-purred on the door step, lifted his head
-at the sound of his own name and
-blinked contentedly, whereupon Lem
-stooped and stroked his glossy fur.
-“I guess Billy’ll miss you if no one else
-does,” he remarked dryly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span></p>
-
-<p>Then he rose and held out a big
-brown hand. “Well, good-bye, Indie,
-an’ good luck to you,” said he. “If
-ever I can do anything for you, let me
-know, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye,” said Indie gravely.</p>
-
-<p>Indie went away the next morning—a
-morning full of balm and peace.
-Fresh, fragrant winds scattered the
-rose petals thickly over her shoulders
-as she hurried down the garden path
-to meet the stage. She did not trust
-herself to glance back, for some strange,
-dumb emotion tugged at her heart-strings
-and soundless voices called to
-her out of the sweet silence that enveloped
-earth and sky.</p>
-
-<p>She shivered as she entered the hot,
-sultry, dust-laden train with its burden
-of dull, spiritless travelers. “It must
-be the air,” she murmured to herself
-as she sank into a seat. “These cars
-is awful clost with the sun beatin’ down
-on ’em an no air stirrin’. Now, if a body
-was at home they could open the doors
-an’ winders an’ set in the shade.”</p>
-
-<p>“Home! Home! Home!” said the
-swiftly revolving wheels that bore her
-relentlessly away from the old, sweetly
-familiar scenes toward an unknown,
-lonely future. She watched the green
-fields and woods that whirled past the
-windows until they grew less and less
-frequent, with dingy little stations
-squatted between them. The landscape
-changed and the car grew hotter
-and the smoke thicker, for the train
-was approaching the factory district
-of Birmingham, the Alabama metropolis.
-Children, with unclean, pallid, faces,
-stared up at the car windows as the
-train pulled through their grimy quarters,
-and men in blackened, greasy
-clothes lounged along the tracks in the
-occasional shade of a sweltering brick
-wall.</p>
-
-<p>Indie found the squalid home of
-Tom’s widow after much patient wandering
-about the uneven, unswept
-streets. Many minutes passed before
-her ring was answered; then a white-faced
-woman opened the door a very
-little way. Yes, she was Mrs. Pasely.
-Did anyone want to see her?</p>
-
-<p>“I am Tom’s cousin, Indie,” the
-caller announced simply. “I’ve brung
-the money for Tom’s funeral.”</p>
-
-<p>The widow cried a little at first while
-she told Indie of Tom’s tragic death,
-but her mind was too absorbingly occupied
-over the funeral to permit of
-the luxury of self-pity. She dressed
-hurriedly and went out to communicate
-with the undertaker, leaving Indie
-with the children, three little, frail,
-colorless, old-young beings, who reminded
-Indie of cellar-grown plants.
-The widow was not long away; late
-that afternoon the two women and
-their three charges followed Tom’s
-remains to consecrated ground.</p>
-
-<p>“I never can tell you how thankful
-I am,” was all Mrs. Pasely said to Indie
-concerning her sacrifice, “for now I
-feel at rest about poor Tom bein’ laid
-away like he ought to be. If the baby
-was just well I’d try to start out an’
-make a livin’ and do my best without
-Tom,” she added mournfully, “but it
-seems like I ain’t got no heart to do
-nothin’ while he’s so weak and puny.
-He ain’t been to say real well since we
-left Texas, where we lived right out in
-the country. I’ve tried everything I
-could think of but nothin’ don’t do him
-no good as I can see. The doctor says
-he won’t never git well till I take him
-back to the country, an maybe not
-then. Me’n Minnie’s got promise of
-work in the factory next week, but if
-little Tom ain’t no better I can’t leave
-him with jest Jim to look after him.
-If we only could git back to Texas agin
-we’d all git well an’ stout, an’ I wouldn’t
-care if we <i>was</i> poor. All I care about
-is for little Tom to git well.”</p>
-
-<p>Oh, if she could only take them all
-back to the farm with her, thought
-Indie. A great wave of home longing
-surged through her heart as she thought
-of the peace and beauty of the deserted
-home. She knew just where the shadows
-of noontide lay darkest over the
-old rose-bordered yard—knew that the
-back veranda where she always ate her
-simple midday meals with Billy purring
-at her feet was just then in the thickest
-shadow of the china-berry trees, and
-that all was still and sweet and tranquil<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>
-in that far-off haven of rest. Instead
-of factory walls there were green, blossomed
-hedges; instead of the strident
-clamor of motor cars and mill gongs
-there was a ceaseless chorus of song
-birds, and instead of the hot, smoke-tainted
-air of the city, there was the
-fine, earthy fragrance of the good
-sweet soil that lay fallow while so many
-weary toilers sweltered in their city
-prisons.</p>
-
-<p>Indie made Tom’s widow understand
-the whole situation, then she offered
-herself in any capacity that could serve
-little Tom, who had the look that she
-dimly remembered in young Tom when
-she first went to live with his parents.
-Indie would take work in the factory as
-she had planned to do and board with
-Tom’s widow to help along all she
-could, or she would take them all back
-to the farm and work very hard to make
-a mere living while little Tom had a
-chance for his life.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I’d be willin’ to work day an’
-night on a farm!” the widow answered
-earnestly. “I’m jest plum certain
-Tom will git well way off there in the
-country. Oh, do take us back with
-you! Me’n Minnie an’ Jim can make a
-real good crop between us. You’ll see!”</p>
-
-<p>That was what Indie wanted. She
-would sacrifice the last thing that remained
-to her—her pride—and ask
-Lem to help her by standing good for
-the hundred-dollar note, and far the
-rest she would work as she had never
-worked before.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll go tomorrow,” Indie announced.
-“You git right to work
-packin’ up what you want to take.”</p>
-
-<p>The world was aflame with the splendid
-fires of sunset when the little party
-alighted before the farm gate on the
-following evening. “I’m real glad it’s
-light enough for you to see the flowers
-an’ things,” said Indie, as she led the
-way up the rose-bordered walk that
-seemed to greet her with sweet familiarity.
-“Good thing I left the key
-under the porch steps right where I
-could find it handy. There, now walk
-right in an’ set down, while I kindle a
-fire an’ git some supper.”</p>
-
-<p>She had bought a few eatables the
-last thing before leaving Birmingham,
-which she speedily converted into a
-tempting meal. Her guests rewarded
-her industry to a gratifying degree,
-even to little Tom, who seemed to have
-acquired a good appetite which delighted
-his frail, worried mother beyond
-bounds. “He ain’t et like that in I
-dunno when!” she exclaimed with tears
-of joy.</p>
-
-<p>It was close upon Indie’s usual bedtime
-when her ministration ended. She
-slipped out for a quiet rest on the front
-door-step to enjoy the peace and loveliness
-of the perfect spring night, but
-hardly had she seated herself when the
-garden gate creaked rustily and someone
-strode up the walk with heavy
-strides. At the sight of the dim figure
-on the step the intruder stopped
-precipitately.</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s there?” asked a familiar
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>Indie rose tremblingly. “It’s Indie
-Bright,” she answered. “Did you
-want to see me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Indie!” exclaimed a voice so thrillingly
-joyous that the listener felt herself
-quiver from head to foot with a
-strange, inexplicable ecstasy.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t it Lem Powers?” she asked.
-“Has anything happened?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I’d like to know,”
-came the surprised answer. “I thought
-you was gone!”</p>
-
-<p>Indie told her story briefly, carefully
-deflecting all merit from herself. “I’m
-real glad it happened that way,” she
-finished, “for I did hate to sell the old
-place.”</p>
-
-<p>Lem drew a deep breath. “You’re
-jest five hours too late, Indie,” he said
-in a queer voice, “for the agent sold the
-farm this afternoon at four o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p>Indie felt the solid earth recede beneath
-her. “Sold it!” she echoed
-fearsomely. “Oh, Lem, whatever <i>shall</i>
-I do!”</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno. There ain’t no use in
-tryin’ to buy it back, ’cause the man
-that bought it won’t part with it for
-anything, except——”</p>
-
-<p>He paused and went a step nearer.
-“Except you’ll give him what he’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
-always wanted—yourself. Indie, I
-never did want no other girl but you,
-an’ never will.”</p>
-
-<p>Indie shrank away, but a strong,
-warm hand found hers in the shadow,
-while the low earnest voice went on to
-tell her of a miracle that thrilled every
-fibre of her being with unspeakable
-happiness.</p>
-
-<p>“I aimed to ask you the day you
-told me about leavin’,” Lem confessed,
-“but by the way you talked I thought
-it wouldn’t be no use, so I bought the
-place hopin’ you’d want to come back
-some day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lem,” said Indie, after a long,
-happy silence, “I never had no idee
-that—that you ever wanted me. I
-thought it was Cousin Louise you
-wanted.”</p>
-
-<p>“Louise—after I’d seen you!” Lem
-cried incredulously. “Why that would
-be like chosin’ a bit o’ glass instid
-of a real diamond. It was Louise
-as told me how you’d took a dredful
-dislike to me from the very first, an’ of
-course I couldn’t help but believe it
-by the way you always acted when I
-was around. I tell you, Indie, that
-made a heap o’ difference to me. I’d
-a done anything in the hull world for
-you an’ would yit if you’d only let
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>Indie drew a deep breath that sounded
-strangely like a stifled sob. “Oh,
-Lem, that’s just the way I’ve always
-felt about you,” she confessed very
-softly and hesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>After a long, long while, during which
-the years and their burden of care and
-loneliness and heart-ache slipped away
-from Indie’s heart like an wornout garment,
-she drew her hands away from
-Lem’s close clasp. “You’d better
-go now, Lem,” she said very gently,
-“’cause it’s gitting late an’ I don’t want
-to wake the folks up after they’ve got
-to sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Indie. I’ll be back tomorrow
-to see about putting in a late
-crop o’ corn for Tom’s folks to work
-out. We’ll jest let ’em keep the place
-free of rent for a while an’ see to it that
-they make enough to keep ’em. You
-can look after ’em all you want to, for
-it ain’t but a little piece from our place
-over here. Good night, Indie.”</p>
-
-<p>Indie lingered in the soft, starry dusk
-for a few moments after Lem had gone,
-to gloat over her great happiness; and
-presently something dark and small
-scuttled out of the lilac hedge and
-bounded into her lap with a mew of
-welcome. It was Billy, quivering with
-elation and delight.</p>
-
-<p>Indie caught her pet to her breast
-with a cry of rapture. “Oh, Billy,
-Billy, ain’t it lovely to be home again!”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/footer1.jpg" width="500" height="200" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Our_Civilization"><i>Our Civilization</i><br />
-<span class="smaller">BY COUNT LYOF TOLSTOY</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Men say that civilization, our
-civilization, is a great good.
-But they who have this conviction
-belong to the minority who
-live not only in this civilization but by
-it; who live in ease, almost idleness,
-in comparison to the lot of workmen.</p>
-
-<p>All such men; kings, emperors,
-presidents, princes, ministers, functionaries,
-soldiers, proprietors, investors,
-merchants, engineers, doctors,
-scientists, professors, priests, writers,
-are so sure our civilization is a great
-good that they cannot bear the thought
-that it should disappear or that it
-should even be changed.</p>
-
-<p>Ask, however, of the great mass of
-agricultural people, slave people,
-Chinese, Hindus, Russians—ask nine-tenths
-of humanity whether this
-civilization, which seems a superlative
-good to those who are not agriculturists,
-is really a blessing or not?
-Strangely enough, nine-tenths of humanity
-will reply in the negative.</p>
-
-<p>What they need is soil, fertilizer,
-irrigation, sun, rain, forests, harvests,
-and simple farming implements that
-one can make without abandoning the
-agricultural life. As for civilization,
-either they know nothing of it, or
-it presents itself to them under the
-aspect of the debauchery of cities,
-with their prisons and their bagnios;
-or under the aspect of taxes and useless
-monuments, of museums, of palaces;
-or under the aspect of duties which
-prevent the free circulation of products;
-or under the aspect of cannon,
-of armor and of armies that ravage
-whole countries. And they say, if
-that is civilization it is of no use to
-them, and that, it is even hurtful to
-them. The men who enjoy the advantages
-of civilization maintain that
-it is good for all humanity; but in this
-case they cannot bear testimony because
-they are both judges and parties
-concerned.</p>
-
-<p>One cannot deny that we are now
-far along the road of technical progress;
-but what is far along on that road?
-A little minority lives on the back of
-the work people; and the work people,
-they who serve the men that enjoy
-civilization in the whole Christian
-world, continue to live as they lived
-five or six centuries ago, profiting
-only from time to time of the leavings
-of civilization.</p>
-
-<p>Even if they live better, the breach
-that separates their lot from that of
-the rich classes is rather wider than it
-was six centuries ago. I do not say,
-as many think, that, since civilization
-is not an absolute good we should
-throw out at one stroke the structure men
-have devised for the struggle against
-nature; but I do say that, to make sure
-this structure shall really serve men
-well, it is necessary that all and not
-only a small minority enjoy it. No one
-must be deprived of his due by
-others under the pretext that these
-benefits will return one day to his
-descendants.</p>
-
-<p>The good and reasonable life consists
-in choosing, of many ways that lie
-open, the way that is best.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore Christian humanity in
-the present situation should choose
-between two things: either to continue
-along the path of wickedness in which
-existing civilization gives the greatest
-number of benefits to the smallest
-number of people, keeping the others
-in poverty and slavery; or immediately,
-without postponing it to a future
-more or less remote, to renounce in
-part, or wholly, the advantages which
-this civilization has given to certain
-privileged ones, thereby preventing
-the liberation of the majority of men
-from poverty and serfdom.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_Coal_Miners_Story"><i>A Coal Miner’s Story</i><br />
-<span class="smaller">BY CHARLES S. MOODY, M. D.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The average worthy citizen reclining
-beside an open coal-grate,
-reading the press accounts of the
-latest coal strike, has little interest in the
-matter further than his interest in the
-probable effect of the labor disturbance
-upon the price of his winter’s fuel. When
-he reaches that part of the narrative
-that tells of the troops having been
-ordered to the scene of action, the powerful
-arm of the military invoked to put
-down the uprising among the working-men,
-he heaves a sigh of relief that now
-the strike will be of short duration and
-the price of coal will not be advanced.
-Seldom does he consider the matter
-from the standpoint of the man who
-mines the coal.</p>
-
-<p>Were that one big lump glowing
-warmly in the centre of the grate gifted
-with the power of speech, it would tell a
-tale that might well harrow up the feelings
-of the most callous. Alas! it is
-dumb, just as the man who dug it out of
-the bowels of the earth is dumb. It
-glows its heat away, crumbles into gray
-ash, and the worthy citizen retires to
-his rest with mind untroubled by any
-unpleasant thought of want or penury
-among those who go down into the unwholesome
-deeps of the mine and toil
-all day shut out from God’s gracious
-light that he and you and I may enjoy
-comfort and warmth.</p>
-
-<p>At one time of my life the relentless
-wheel of Fate in its ceaseless revolving
-whirled me to its nadir, and spilled me
-into the squalid chaos of a coal-mining
-town, and, not content with that, hurled
-me into the nethermost hell of all that
-seething vortex of toil and poverty.</p>
-
-<p>That the worthy citizen may see
-something of that side of the shield—the
-side sable—I will attempt to tell it,
-not with the graces of one skilled of pen,
-but in all its plain, naked, glaring
-hideousness.</p>
-
-<p>At this point allow me to crave pardon
-for the frequent use of the personal
-pronoun. I am speaking as a coal-miner,
-and can tell it better by using
-the first person.</p>
-
-<p>I was raised in the Far West. My
-life had been spent among the green
-mountains of the Pacific Coast, and I
-knew but little of the land beyond the
-Rockies. When ambition came, as it
-comes to youth everywhere, I dreamed
-of other lands where that ambition
-might find its full fruition. I left the
-mountain home, and set out to conquer
-the world of my dreams. My
-journey ended at the little town of Excello,
-in Northern Missouri. I was
-moneyless, and, as I soon ascertained,
-friendless. Disappointment glared at
-me from every door. Every vocation
-in life seemed filled, and all the avenues
-leading thereto were crowded with men
-eager to push the possessor of a job
-from his place and occupy it in his
-stead. I tried every possible chance
-for work, but without avail. Not even
-a country district school, with all its
-manifold possibilities of poverty, was
-open to the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>Not far from Excello, the Kansas and
-Texas Coal company have opened up
-extensive mines at Ardmore. At last,
-desperate and in absolute despair, I
-turned to the coal mines that wait with
-black, widespread maws to suck in
-such flotsam of humanity as I was then.
-I set out from Excello on foot in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
-bleak dawn of a March morning, for the
-only Mecca left open to me. A donkey-engine
-drawing a train of coal-cars soon
-overtook me, and the engineer stopped
-his train and took me on. It was but a
-trivial act of kindness to a stranger, but
-it stands out so distinct and vivid by
-reason of its rarity that I must speak of
-it here. Motives of the most sordid
-meanness so completely actuate the
-principles of those people that the simple
-act of one of them giving a tramp a
-ride glows from out the grime of greed
-like a gem.</p>
-
-<p>The little engine grumbled and rattled
-its way down the banks of a dirty
-yellow stream, dignified by being called
-a river, until it halted beside the head-house
-of one of the mines, and I was
-permitted to take my first view of Ardmore,
-one of the worlds that I had come
-so far to conquer. Ah, the irony of it
-all! What a contrast to the mental
-picture that the boy had painted upon
-the canvas of fancy not so many weeks
-before!</p>
-
-<p>First the tall head-house and hoist,
-with the coal-screens all under one roof
-standing black and grimy at the mine’s
-mouth. Then the long incline, up
-which crawled the laden cars from the
-mine, looking for all the world like
-filthy serpents from some subterranean
-world. Off to one side towered the
-culm-pile, emitting its choking sulphurous
-smoke and polluting the muddy
-water of the little stream that wound
-about its base. Off yonder, on either
-side of the same stream, perched a
-double row of squalid grimy shacks,
-like gigantic carrion birds waiting to
-pounce upon the filth that flowed down
-the current of the river. These were
-the homes of the miners. Home! What
-a travesty on the sweetest word in
-any tongue! In the distance clustered
-the offices of the Company and the
-Company store, that most powerful
-tentacle of the giant octopus by
-which the Company holds its operatives.</p>
-
-<p>I made my way down the narrow
-sidewalkless street, past the rows of
-miserable huts with their reeking front
-yards filled with children in no less
-degree reeking, past that bane of all
-mining towns, the low doggery, where
-for a few cents the miner buys the
-vilest of vile liquor, on to the town
-proper. The contrast between the two
-was startling. The officials must perforce
-reside where they collect their
-tithes, but they strive to make life bearable.
-Every house was neatly painted
-and every lawn set with trees and
-smoothly kept. I saw ill-clad women
-and low-browed men black with the
-grime of the mine entering a large building
-which I rightly surmised to be the
-Company store. The offices were on
-the other side, and those who entered
-there did so with an air of the utmost
-servility, as though they fully expected
-to be kicked into the street.</p>
-
-<p>It is wonderful what an influence
-one’s surroundings will have upon their
-character. Here I had been in Ardmore,
-only thirty minutes and I caught
-myself approaching that office in
-the same servile manner affected by all
-whom I saw enter there. I stood for
-some minutes hesitating before the portals
-where sat enthroned those who
-held my destiny in their hands. Cold
-and hunger are grim and determined
-drivers, however, and both were flaying
-me with their whips. Summoning my
-manhood I entered, approached the
-employment window and begged the
-right to earn my bread. The clerk
-gave me one keen look that swept me
-from head to foot and tersely assigned
-me to servitude in Mine 33, the one I
-had passed in the morning. He handed
-me an order on the store that entitled
-me to a miner’s outfit to be paid for out
-of the first money earned. He also
-assigned me a number by which I was
-henceforth to be designated in all my
-dealings with the Company. I became
-Number 337, and if I differed in any
-particular from the man bearing that
-same number in the Jefferson City penitentiary
-I was unable to detect that
-difference. True, I was permitted to
-walk the streets unmolested, but the
-product of my toil belonged to the Kansas
-and Texas Coal Company. I felt
-relieved. I had passed from the ranks
-of the unemployed. Henceforth I was
-to be a sovereign American citizen enjoying,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
-as such, the Constitutional
-right to earn my bread.</p>
-
-<p>I passed into the store and purchased
-such things as appeared needful, using
-one of the miners as a model from which
-to deduce my needs. A coarse pair of
-heavy shoes, ducking overalls and shirt,
-a pit cap with place in front to carry
-the lamp, the lamp itself, a gallon of
-lard oil for the same, a dinner-pail
-called a “deck” and the necessary picks
-and shovel about completed the outfit.</p>
-
-<p>One of the clerks rather grudgingly
-answered my question regarding a
-boarding-place by informing me that
-there was a house on the hill that made
-a practice of feeding miners. Carrying
-my bundle, I called at the designated
-house and secured board and lodging.
-The house was slightly better than
-those I had passed before and, standing
-upon higher ground, was rather less
-filthy. I soon found that the miner is
-expected to do without all the luxuries
-and generally all the necessities of life.
-Water seemed the only article that
-could be obtained in plenty and for that
-I soon had reason to be truly grateful.
-The table fare was of the coarsest and
-cheapest variety possible. It possessed
-the sole merit of sustaining life, and that
-to me at the time overbalanced all other
-considerations. The beds were arranged
-in rows in an upper room. Two
-people were expected to occupy one bed.
-I had assigned to be my bed-fellow a
-young Cornishman, and I suspect the
-landlady selected him for that position
-owing to the fact that he was slightly
-less dirty than her other boarders.</p>
-
-<p>That evening my “buddy,” that is,
-the man who was to be my working
-companion, called to see me. He was a
-man of middle-age who had spent his
-life in the mines. He had the pronounced
-stoop that I noticed in all the
-miners and which I very soon acquired.
-His skin was of that sickly yellow
-hue characteristic of convicts and
-coal-miners, brought about by being
-shut out from the light of day. It
-seems that I drew a very lucky number
-in having this man assigned me for
-“buddy.” The other miners told
-me that he possessed a “machine.”
-That is, after years of toil in the mines
-he had been able to save enough to buy
-a drilling-machine that retails at the
-Company store for fourteen dollars.
-Wonderful fortune! Almost a lifetime
-spent in labor, and all that he had to
-show for it was a fourteen-dollar drilling-machine!
-We talked long into the
-evening and I found him not without
-ideas that were expressed in a crude
-way, but above all, and, what was of
-vastly more importance to me just then,
-he was a practical miner. I do not
-know what he might have thought about
-it, but he had the tact not to hint anything
-about objecting to a green hand
-as “buddy.” Indeed, I suspect that
-the Company would hardly tolerate
-any criticism of their actions in that
-regard.</p>
-
-<p>I appeared next morning clad in the
-habiliments of a coal-miner. My
-“deck” was filled and handed me and
-I followed the long line of stooping
-figures headed for the mines. We
-paused at the mouth of the pit and
-lighted our lamps and swung them
-from the front of our caps. Then,
-stooping still lower, passed down the
-long incline that leads into the coal vein.
-Soon the gloom surrounded us, and the
-flickering yellow-light from the burning
-lamp became our only guidance. Once
-upon the level of the coal body, the air
-became oppressive and warm. Used as
-I had always been to the free air of the
-mountains, I paused and gasped for
-breath. I was merely one atom of the
-inward moving black stream and was
-pushed onward. I soon grew accustomed
-to the lack of oxygen and before
-many days learned to exist upon a
-minimum supply of that article just as
-I learned to exist upon a limited supply
-of many other articles that in my
-ignorance I had considered essential.</p>
-
-<p>I neglected to state that I had been
-met at the pit mouth by my “buddy,”
-who escorted me through the mazes of
-the underground streets of the mine to
-the Third West, which was the field of
-our future efforts for some time to come.
-On the way in he conversed very cheerfully
-about the condition of one of his
-children who was ill with pneumonia<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
-and not expected to live the day through.
-I half suspect that he secretly hoped
-that the Death Angel would come, and
-not only relieve the little one of her
-sufferings, but relieve him of one hungry
-mouth to feed.</p>
-
-<p>It was over a mile from the surface
-to where our work lay. It consisted in
-“turning off a room”—that is, making
-an entrance into the bare face of the
-coal at right-angles to the direction of
-the tunnel. This was necessarily slow
-work and we accomplished but little
-the first day. All day long I sat upon
-my heels and picked a narrow trench
-from top to bottom into the resisting
-body of the coal. Long ere night came
-my cramped limbs refused to move
-another inch. I was simply racked
-from head to foot with pain. There
-never was a more welcome sound than
-the signal at the head of the entry to
-begin firing. Soon the boom of shots
-reverberated down the entry like the
-sound of cannonading, and the miners
-began straying out past us. We gathered
-up our tools and, placing them in a
-safe place, followed them. Ah, the
-blessed exhilaration of that air as I
-reached the surface! It was like being
-conveyed into another and better
-world. I glanced at my “buddy.”
-He had not changed one muscle of expression.
-With dogged, shambling footsteps
-he was setting off toward one of
-the miserable shacks.</p>
-
-<p>Curiously I watched the miners as
-they appeared. All nations seemed
-gathered there. Italians, Czechs, Russians,
-Finns, Hungarians, Slavs, Cornishmen,
-Americans, yes and negroes.
-While the colored man was not permitted
-to become a miner in that particular
-mine, he was employed in various
-other capacities. I saw children
-of tender years going from work, their
-dinner-pails upon their arms, the stoop
-already in their shoulders, the hectic
-flush already in their cheeks. “Merciful
-God,” I thought, “this greedy giant,
-not content with sucking the life-blood
-of men, must rob the school as well to
-sate its lust!” I learned afterward
-that there was a child-labor law on the
-statute books of good old Missouri, but
-that it was openly and flagrantly violated,
-and that the Commissioner of
-Labor was a party to the violation.</p>
-
-<p>I passed on homeward. Every step
-seemed weighted with lead. I dragged
-myself up the long hill and entered the
-house. I was shown the wash-room
-and my particular washing-tub filled
-with steaming hot water. The room
-was already filled with miners taking a
-bath. I stripped and found that though
-I had been in the mine but a day my
-body was black with coal-dust. The
-next half-hour I spent in trying to remove
-the grime, with but poor success.
-The other miners finished their ablutions
-and departed. I was shocked
-at the manner in which the most of
-them performed that important duty.
-A dash of water on the head and neck,
-a wet towel over the body, rubbing off
-the most evident particles, a brisk
-scrubbing of the head, neck and ears,
-and they were ready for supper. I was
-so long at my bath trying to accomplish
-the impossible that the landlady
-tapped on the door and informed me
-that supper only waited my appearance.
-I overheard one of the miners designate
-me as “that new dude” when I entered
-the dining-room. To be cleanly, then,
-was considered among these sons of toil
-as being a species of foppishness. (I
-soon learned to perform my ablutions
-more scientifically, and remove a maximum
-amount of coal-dust in a minimum
-length of time.) I was too tired
-to eat, too weary to sleep. All night
-long I tossed about in that comfortless
-bed and sighed for the coming of morning.
-It came at last and dawned upon
-another day of labor.</p>
-
-<p>Today we drilled our first hole and
-placed the first shot. I had the satisfaction
-of loading my first box of coal,
-affixing my leather tag to it and starting
-it on its journey toward the weighing
-office, thereby satisfying a small
-part of the Company’s claim against me
-for the clothes I wore. My “buddy”
-had lost his child the night before, and
-this afternoon the little one was to be
-buried in the graveyard on the hill back
-of the town. He asked me, as though
-requesting a favor, whether he might<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-attend the funeral! Asked me, almost
-a stranger, whether he might attend
-the funeral of his own child! Heavens,
-what a system! My heart was so
-heavy that I could not work, but he
-seemed to take it all as a matter of
-course. In fact I detected a cheerful
-note in his voice as he informed me of
-the demise.</p>
-
-<p>During the afternoon I had nothing
-to do but carry the picks out to the
-blacksmith-shop to be sharpened, for
-which service we are to pay the smith
-each a dollar per month. After they
-were prepared I returned with them to
-the mine and employed the time in
-looking into the other rooms where the
-miners were at work. In almost every
-instance I found them idle. Inquiry
-revealed the fact that they were waiting
-for coal-boxes. They had plenty of
-coal to load, but no boxes to load it in.
-The Company makes it a practice to
-allow no man to get ahead. Once he falls
-into their grasp the idea is to keep
-him there. Even at thirty-five cents
-per long ton, the price paid, the miner
-could make fair wages if he were furnished
-boxes, but the Company does
-not intend that he shall make fair
-wages.</p>
-
-<p>Our room advanced rapidly now,
-and we always had coal ahead to load
-what boxes came to us, which were few
-enough. The most we ever got in any
-one day was six, that is three for each
-of us, and could we succeed in placing
-a ton in each one we would have made
-the munificent sum of $1.05. Out
-of that princely wage we were supposed
-to pay for board, lodging, hospital fees,
-blacksmith, and powder. By the way,
-there is the greatest steal perpetrated
-by the coal companies. They furnish
-the miner with his powder at a cost to
-him of $2.50 per keg. Of course they
-do not say in so many words that he
-shall not buy his powder from other
-dealers at 90 cents per keg, but if he
-does do that they see to it that his
-tenure in the mine is very short, and
-they have divers ways of disposing of
-him without discharging him outright.</p>
-
-<p>There are two methods of mining
-soft coal. The method used in Mine
-33 was what is known technically as
-“shooting off the solid,” that is, drilling
-a deep hole in the solid coal body and
-blasting it down very much as rock is
-blasted in railroad building operations.
-This method, while it procures the
-greatest amount of coal with the least
-expenditure of labor, is at the same
-time very expensive to the miner who
-must buy his powder and in addition
-to his regular blacksmith tax must
-pay for the sharpening of all the drill
-bits.</p>
-
-<p>It is in these blasting operations that
-so many men in soft-coal mines lose
-their lives. The force of the blast
-loosening the coal at the same time
-jars the slate roof of the mine. When
-the workman returns and starts picking
-down the standing column of “shot”
-coal the treacherous top gives way,
-and, like a deadfall, buries the unfortunate
-man beneath tons of slate. Then
-there are three bells signaled to the top
-and down comes the padded car, if the
-man is not entirely dead, and he is
-carted away to the hut miscalled a
-hospital. The next day some of his
-friends are around with a paper and
-each miner is supposed to contribute a
-box of coal to the relief of the injured
-miner. Should the accident, however,
-result in the instant death of the man
-there is no such ceremony as calling the
-padded car. He is simply dumped into
-an empty coal box and hauled to the
-surface with the next trip going out.
-Once there, his very existence is forgotten
-in the mine and work goes on
-as before. The same formality regarding
-the gift of the box of coal is gone
-through with for the benefit of his
-widow and orphans. In all my mining
-experience I never knew of a miner
-refusing to subscribe to a fund of this
-kind, though they could ill afford to do
-so out of the scanty wage they were
-earning. You feel inclined to do it,
-for you know not what instant you will
-yourself require like assistance.</p>
-
-<p>One method employed by the Company
-in getting rid of an objectionable
-miner is so ingenuous in its simplicity
-that it deserves mention. They have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span>
-what is known as a sulphur bell. If a
-miner loads a lump of sulphur into his
-box that is so large that he might be
-supposed to detect it the men at the
-screens pull a rope that rings a bell in
-the weighing-office and the unfortunate
-miner has a check placed against his
-number. He not only has that box
-of coal docked about half, but he gets a
-demerit as well. Three of these demerits
-results in his dismissal from the
-mine. Now, let us illustrate. In the
-first place, there is so much of the sulphurous
-mineral scattered through
-the coal body that it is an absolute
-impossibility to remove all of it down
-there in the half light of the underground
-world. There is hardly a box of
-coal that reaches the weighing scales that
-does not contain several pounds of the
-substance. That some miners do place
-lumps of it in their boxes to increase
-the weight is perfectly true. A miner
-becomes objectionable to the powers
-that be by reason of talking too much
-(for some of them <i>do</i> think and express
-their thoughts to their fellows) and the
-powers that be decide to get rid of him.
-They could simply call him into the
-office and hand him his time, but that
-is not the policy. The word is passed
-to the man at the bottom of the screens
-to “bell” Number so and so out. The
-Argus eye of the man is upon every
-box of coal that comes sliding down the
-incline. He hears this man’s number
-called and detects a lump of sulphur
-sliding along with the descending coal.
-He reaches up, yanks the bell rope and
-that miner is one-third out of a job.
-It may take several days to complete
-the task, but Fate is no more certain
-than that it will be completed. Usually
-a miner who knows himself to be
-under the ban and sees a sulphur
-check opposite his number takes the
-hint and calls for his time. Wonderfully
-simple. Charmingly effective.</p>
-
-<p>Another and equally effective method
-is that of slow starvation. The
-banned miner finds that he is not
-getting an equal number of boxes with
-his fellows. He complains to the
-driver and obtains but scant satisfaction.
-Things go on until pay-day and he
-finds himself behind with the company.
-He is questioned very closely as to the
-reason for this and solemnly warned
-not to allow it to occur again. Naturally
-it does occur again and he is
-forced to look elsewhere for work.</p>
-
-<p>These instances are, however, comparatively
-rare. It is the policy of the
-octopus to hold securely every victim
-who falls into the slimy toils. Only
-when a man has the courage to assert
-his manhood does he become objectionable
-to the company. So complete is
-the system that there are few such.</p>
-
-<p>It does not require one skilled in
-the economics of the labor problem to
-point out the glaring evils of a coal-mining
-system. They are so evident
-that even he who runs may read.
-They are so patent that even the dull
-creatures who toil under them feel in
-a blank way that something is wrong.
-Just what, they cannot say. They
-realize that they are always hungry,
-always toiling and always in debt.
-There are three things that the strong
-arm of the judiciary should suppress—child
-labor, peonage, and weight frauds.</p>
-
-<p>I have purposely placed child labor
-first, for it deserves the first place.
-Children of very tender years are forced
-into the mines, where they serve in
-various capacities, some of them even
-being utilized by their parents in the
-actual mining operations. This is
-done that the parent may obtain an
-extra supply of coal boxes by reason
-of his having a “buddy,” though the
-coal is all loaded out under his number.
-Principally, however, the little
-fellows are employed as “trappers,”
-to open and close the immense valves
-that direct the air current down the
-various entries. All day long these
-infants stand in the noisome draft and
-swing back and forth those heavy
-doors. With the strong current of air
-pushing or pulling against these valves
-it is no light task for even a man to
-perform. Then the damp air, playing
-about the half clad figure, induces
-colds, pneumonia and consumption.
-It is a rare thing to see one of these
-little “trappers” who is not coughing
-with some form of respiratory trouble.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span>
-The parents lie cheerfully regarding
-the child’s age, and the child itself lies
-just as cheerfully. Poor creatures,
-they are hardly to be blamed! The
-few pennies that are thus obtained
-help to keep the almost empty pot
-boiling at the squalid home.</p>
-
-<p>The system of peonage is worse far
-than African slavery ever could have
-been. From year’s end to year’s end
-the miner never sees money. He is paid
-in coupon books good at the store for
-the necessities of life and that is all
-he is expected to have, and precious
-few of them. In almost every instance
-the Company has sold to the miner one
-of the miserable houses, for which he
-is to pay a certain sum every month.
-The Company proudly boast that their
-miners own their own homes. The miner
-is given a contract to be held in escrow
-(by the Company) whereby upon the
-payment of the purchase price he is to
-have a deed to the property. It is a
-very significant fact that there were
-only eighteen deeds on record in Macon
-County covering these properties.
-In other words, only eighteen miners
-actually owned their homes. It was
-never the intention of the Company to
-allow the miner to secure title to his
-“home.” If any considerable number
-of them showed symptoms of making
-good on the payments, the Company
-had many ways of causing them to
-default and thus violate the ironclad
-terms of the contract.</p>
-
-<p>The contention regarding weights
-is one of long standing. The miner is
-supposed to mine a long ton of 2240
-pounds. In reality he mines nearer
-3000 pounds. The scales are hidden
-from the view of the miner and the
-weigh boss cheerfully deducts from the
-weight of the miner’s box anything
-that he sees fit and he usually sees fit
-to deduct about one fourth. This
-systematic robbery is carried on all
-the time. Could the miner obtain
-what his labor actually produces, his
-condition would be less miserable. He
-does not obtain it, however, and he
-seems powerless to bring about change.
-Now we will return to my own
-personal experiences in the mine.
-Our room was a good one, save that the
-slate top was very treacherous and we
-took particular care to keep it well
-timbered. My “buddy” was a
-thorough miner and fully knew the
-virtue of propping the top perfectly.
-The room had been driven up some
-sixty yards when the accident happened,
-that brought home to me the dangers
-of mining.</p>
-
-<p>We fired a fourteen-foot hole in the
-evening, before leaving the mine. The
-next morning my “buddy” arrived
-before I did, and began loading the box
-that was standing in the room. Upon
-my arrival I found the box half filled,
-but my “buddy” nowhere in sight.
-A mass of slate had fallen and I knew
-instinctively that my “buddy” was
-beneath the mass. I called some of
-the nearby miners and, after propping
-the top, we fell to work removing the
-debris. First an arm showed; then
-the entire body was exposed to view.
-He had been instantly killed. I loaded
-the body into the half filled box and
-accompanied it to the top. It became
-my duty to inform the wife of the misfortune.
-She, poor woman, took the
-news stolidly, as though she had long
-expected it. Indeed, I think they
-grow to look forward to the time when
-the husband will be carried in, crushed
-out of all semblance to a human being.
-We buried him in the bleak graveyard
-on the hill and, as his “buddy,” it became
-my duty to carry around the
-paper that asked assistance for the
-widow. In her stolid way, I suppose,
-she was grateful for the charity, but
-she never showed it by any emotion of
-the face, taking the whole thing as a
-matter of course.</p>
-
-<p>It had been a very wet Spring and
-the falling rain had completely saturated
-the ground and, soaking through,
-had loosened the slate and soapstone
-top until falls were of almost daily
-occurrence. As yet we had not been
-visited with any that were disastrous
-in nature. A few tons of rock in some
-of the rooms, a miner killed or hurt,
-was about all. In June, however,
-occurred the fall that imprisoned several
-hundred of the miners in the West<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-entries for two days. Down toward
-the beginning of the first West an old
-deserted room caved in, carrying with
-it the top above the entry proper.
-For several days the miners had noted
-that the room was “working,” that is,
-the top was pressing upon the props.
-This was evidenced by the collection
-of fine flakes of slate that covered the
-room and the entry when we entered
-the mine in the morning. With characteristic
-negligence the matter was
-passed up and nothing done but to
-remove the iron track from the room.
-One day I paused at the mouth of the
-room, attracted by a peculiar noise.
-At intervals there was a sound like the
-snapping of an overwrought violin
-string. I afterward learned that the
-sound was produced by the bending
-props throwing off fine splinters.
-That evening when we passed out the
-props were snapping as they broke
-under the enormous pressure. A faraway
-rumbling was heard, like wagons
-passing over a covered bridge. The
-room was certain to fall during the
-night, the old miners said.</p>
-
-<p>It did not, however, for it was still
-“working” the next morning. Sometime
-during the forenoon I heard a
-sound as of distant artillery fire.
-Boom, boom, boom,—the sound came
-up the entry, causing a current of air
-to flare the lights hither and yon. This
-continued for an hour; then the room
-caved. There was a crash of falling
-stone, a sound impossible to describe
-in any other words than terrible, a
-great gust of wind, and every lamp in
-the entry was extinguished. We
-rushed down the entry to find that all
-egress was shut off. The fall of the
-room had carried with it the entry as
-well, and we were prisoners behind
-thirty feet of solid rock. The pit
-boss instantly ordered every man to
-put out his light and lie down. Every
-cubic foot of air must now be conserved,
-for it would be hours at least
-before the pipe could be driven in to
-supply fresh. There we lay in the
-Stygian blackness in that foul atmosphere
-waiting the signal from the relief
-party. Hours passed, and no signal
-from the other side. Every minute
-the air became more foul until at last
-we were panting for breath, the sweat
-running from every pore. Then came
-the faint tap that told us the rescue
-party was driving the pipe. Never a
-sound came with such melody to my
-ears. It seemed an age before the
-steel-nosed pipe broke through and a
-welcome rush of oxygen was forced
-in by the air-pump. The pit boss
-signaled along the pipe that all was
-well. Then the work of rescue began.
-All day they picked out and carted
-away the fallen rock. All night the
-work went on without ceasing. Another
-day and another night followed
-before they broke through the barrier,
-and we streamed out of the mine,
-hungry, thirsty and weary from loss
-of sleep.</p>
-
-<p>I was beginning to realize that
-while in time I might become an
-accomplished coal-miner, my chances
-for living a long life to enjoy that trade
-were exceedingly limited. I decided
-to sever my connection with the Kansas
-and Texas Coal Company, fully
-realizing that the Company would not
-mourn much at my loss, and I had no
-intention of falling on its neck to weep
-at the parting.</p>
-
-<p>The incident that crystallized my
-half-formed ideas into immediate
-action took place in the room one day
-when I approached nearer the swift
-current of the Dark River than I cared
-to do. By accident the driver shoved a
-box into our room (by this time I had
-a new “buddy”) and we had no coal
-with which to load it. A box was so
-valuable that we could not afford to
-allow it to be taken out unloaded, so
-we cast about for sufficient coal for
-the purpose. Sometime since we had
-shot a small blast on the pillar and the
-pit boss, coming in, had ordered us to
-let it stand as we were too far to the
-south. This shot was still standing.
-The coal was loose and needed only to
-be mined off for us to have sufficient
-coal to load out the box. That duty
-devolved upon me, and I shoved the
-box back and began mining off the
-shot. In a short time I had it all cut<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span>
-round save a small portion that I could
-not reach with the pick. I returned
-to the “face” and procured a long
-chum drill and with it began to cut
-down the standing coal. I was seated
-tailor-like upon the floor, my legs
-doubled under me. When the coal
-mass gave way it rolled toward me
-and pressing the drill across my body
-pinioned me beneath it. I felt no
-danger, for my “buddy” could soon
-extricate me from the position. I
-called to him and he started in my
-direction. As he did so I glanced up
-and was horrified to see several yards
-of the slate top easing downward.
-Frantically I grasped the drill that
-was binding me down and gave it a
-wrench. It gave and another wrench
-broke it in twain. To flop over and
-crawl on my hands and knees out of
-the way of danger was only the work
-of an instant. As I did so the great
-slab fell, tearing off my shoe soles as
-though they were but paper. I owe
-my life to the fact that the top did not
-give way instantly, but broke gradually.
-So thoroughly frightened was
-I that I sat in a stupor for some time.
-When I had sufficiently recovered to
-be able to walk I made my way out
-of the mine, went to my boarding
-place, removed my pit garments and
-bade Ardmore a lasting and affectionate
-farewell.</p>
-
-<p>I have torn a few soiled and tattered
-leaves from my book of life and have
-here given them to you. That the
-story is not well told I fully realize.
-That it is true in every particular must
-stand its only merit.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/footer2.jpg" width="500" height="150" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Pessimist_His_View-Point"><i>The Pessimist; His View-Point</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Sermons should be practiced before they are preached.</p>
-
-<p>A reformer’s idea of fun is to spoil other people’s fun.</p>
-
-<p>No man can fix a clock and at the same time sing a hymn.</p>
-
-<p>Sacrifices on the altar of foolishness never cease for lack of material.</p>
-
-<p>I wonder why they don’t charter Polygamy under the laws of New Jersey.</p>
-
-<p>There are a great many more fools in the world than they have any idea of.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes they are editorials, and the rest of the time they are idiotorials.</p>
-
-<p>And, oh, if the great problems solved by the graduates would only stay solved!</p>
-
-<p>The reason why I am so well is that I have always been too poor to stay long at
-a health resort.</p>
-
-<p>There are two kinds of women who cannot be reasoned with: the one in love
-and the one not in love.</p>
-
-<p>The best way to preserve the beauty of a finely shaped nose is to keep it out of
-other people’s business.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Tom P. Morgan.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="THOSE_THAT_ARE_JOINED_TOGETHER">
-<img src="images/heading3.jpg" width="700" height="175" alt="" />
-<h2>THOSE THAT ARE JOINED TOGETHER<br />
-<span class="smaller">BY CHARLES FORT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>You are standing on an Eighth
-Avenue corner, looking down a
-side street toward the ugly
-black streak made by the Ninth Avenue
-elevated railroad. You see peddlers,
-right hands curving at the sides
-of their mouths, left hands holding
-pails of potatoes; a woman with a basket
-of wash, which is tucked under a
-sheet; many fire escapes that look like a
-jumbling of giant gridirons, when seen
-from the corner. You notice the signs
-over doorways: a gilded boot; a carpenter’s
-sign projecting a little farther;
-glazier’s sign, of stained-glass squares
-trying to eclipse signs of shoemaker and
-carpenter; tailor’s sign almost obscuring
-all of them. In the tailor-shop
-windows are prints of the latest fashions,
-labeled, “Types of American
-Gents.” American gents, going to
-work, in overalls and sweaters, pause
-to enjoy the very latest in riding, golf,
-and hunting costumes, and perhaps
-go in to order a three-dollar pair of
-breeches. The tailor shop occupies the
-first floor of a three-story frame house—a
-grimy-looking house; its grimy
-clapboards are stained by streaks of
-rain dripping from the rusty fire-escape.</p>
-
-<p>The McGibneys lived in the second-floor
-rooms. McGibney was log-shaped;
-he seemed as big around at his ankles
-as at his chest, and, though he
-wore collars, it was because everyone
-else wore collars, and not because his
-neck was perceptible. Close-cropped
-hair, a rather sharp nose, bright, alert
-eyes, cheeks red and all other visible
-parts of him pinkish. Mrs. McGibney
-was a plump, delicately featured little
-woman, who could express most amazing
-firmness upon her small features.
-When she had household cares, she
-worried; when she had household duties,
-she bustled. And it would surely
-please you to look at Mrs. McGibney
-when she worried; left forefinger beginning
-over the fingers of the right hand;
-left forefinger lodging on right little
-finger, Mrs. McGibney pausing to look
-into space, counting up to assure herself
-that the butcher had not cheated;
-forefinger beginning again and dealing
-with the grocer, this time; another fixed
-look into space to be sure the grocer
-had not imagined a can of tomatoes or
-a pound of flour. It would please you,
-because you would know that not one
-penny, worked so hard for by McGibney,
-would be wasted. When Mrs.
-McGibney bustles—ah, now that is
-pretty! That means a very keen sense
-of responsibility, nothing shirked, nothing
-that will make McGibney’s comfort
-neglected. Bustling to the oven door,
-opening and shutting it; fingers dabbing
-at under lip and sizzling on under
-side of a flat iron; frying-pan moved
-back on the stove; quick, short steps to
-the table to roll out breadcrumbs;
-dash to a window to sharpen a knife
-on the sill—when Mrs. McGibney
-bustles!</p>
-
-<p>Evening! Both of them in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span>
-cheerful kitchen. Very cheerful kitchen!
-Three conch-shells, like big pink
-ears, up on the mantelpiece, and four
-palm leaves, painted green, stuck in a
-flower pot, just like a bit of Florida.
-The dish-pan, on the stove murmuring;
-a subdued rattle and good-natured
-growling of bubbles forming on the
-bottom of the pan, and dishes fluttering
-on them. The oil-cloth was bright and
-new-looking, except in the corner where
-heavy McGibney sat. There, chair legs
-had indented as if someone had beaten
-around at random with a hammer.
-And in his corner, reading the newspaper,
-sat McGibney, his wife sitting
-beside the table his elbow was on,
-frowning, puzzling, and counting her
-fingers. “Yes,” said Mrs. McGibney,
-“I can keep expenses down to five dollars
-a week, but you mustn’t charge on
-my book what you spend. I don’t
-think I ought to mark down the cent
-for your newspaper, do you? I’m
-not going to have my book any more
-than it’s got to be. I’ll cross off this
-two cents for a stamp. Now, you know
-you oughtn’t to charge me for that; it
-was for your own letter—don’t sit like
-that! How often have I told you you
-ruin the oil-cloth?”</p>
-
-<p>McGibney not only continued to tilt
-back and dig into the oil-cloth but
-rocked himself on the hind legs of the
-chair; one is sometimes tempted to
-torment severe little women when they
-are too serious.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t care; you’re not harming
-me. Go ahead, if you feel like paying
-for new oil-cloth.” McGibney
-could not sit straight without some
-demonstration to cover his accession;
-he put out fingers like tongs and
-pinched just above her knee. If you
-are an old married man, you know
-just how far from dignified and severe
-that immediately made McGibney.
-Then McGibney sat straight, sat as if
-he would have sat straight anyway.</p>
-
-<p>A rap on the door. Mrs. McGibney
-put away her account book as if it were
-wrong to keep account-books; McGibney
-sat crooked as if it were wrong to
-sit straight. No matter what one is
-doing, one feels that someone else coming
-makes a difference. Mrs. McGibney
-started toward the door, went to
-the stove instead, and covered the
-dish-pan; started again but paused to
-twitch a curtain; finally got to the door
-and opened it, but had glanced back
-twice and had motioned to McGibney
-to put away a bag of crackers.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s you, Clara?” exclaimed
-Mrs. McGibney. “Why, come right
-in!”</p>
-
-<p>Into the room came a stocky person,
-with a broad, flat, amiable face. Everything
-about her seemed to suggest
-that she was made to work hard and
-suffer, usually not complain, but,
-quite without reasoning, flash into
-short-lived rebellion against hardships
-now and then. Like your impression
-of peasantry more than a century ago,
-down-trodden, without leaders, should
-be your impression of Clara. In her
-heavy arms was a huge bundle, done
-up in a sheet, four corners of the sheet
-hanging loose at top. She appeared to
-be carrying a monstrous turnip, all
-white, loose ends like white turnip-tops.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, good evening!” said Clara
-awkwardly, turning to the right, turning
-to the left, with her huge bundle,
-looking for a place to set it down, but
-still clinging to it, her chin buried in
-the top of it, the big bundle making her
-look like a pouter-pigeon.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. McGibney,” said Clara, turning
-to the right, to the left, still clinging,
-“I don’t like to ask you, knowing you
-ain’t got accommodations, but could
-you lend me the loan of your ironing-board
-for the night? I’ve flew the
-coop on him for good and all this time,
-and tomorrow will get a room for myself;
-but, if you can let me have your
-ironing-board, I can sleep on it here, on
-the floor tonight. This is my wash,
-which I brought with me, not to leave
-him so much as a stitch that’s mine.
-Would it be too much to ask for your
-ironing-board?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, put down that heavy bundle,
-Clara!” cried Mrs. McGibney, having
-dabbed at the bundle, but missed it;
-“it’s sopping wet!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sopping wet!” repeated Mrs. McGibney,
-as if pleased. And she was pleased,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span>
-for here was an occasion for her to bustle
-around the room. Very much did
-Mrs. McGibney like to bustle around
-a room. And Clara, by the door, sat
-at the table at the other end of which
-McGibney sat.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s wet because I just took it in off
-the line, not to leave him anything of
-mine,” said Clara. She moved uneasily
-in her chair. And she winked,
-as if in physical distress.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t move my line, because the
-rain’s made it too tight,” said Mrs.
-McGibney, “but we can hang up the
-wash here to dry. Ironing-board?
-Ironing-board, how are you!” She
-pounced upon the huge turnip, seizing
-turnip-tops, plucking them apart. “No,
-but we can make you comfortable
-in the front room, Clara.” Sheet
-spread out and wash in a mound.
-“And you’ve carried this with you all
-the way through the streets? I’ll fix
-up lines.” Two parallel lines, rigged
-up one from each end of the table to
-the opposite wall, sheets thrown over
-them; kitchen looking like Monday
-morning in your back yard. Room
-divided into three compartments: Clara
-in one, by the door; middle one,
-including the table, reserved for Mrs.
-McGibney; McGibney isolated in the
-third. Mrs. McGibney hung wash on
-the backs of chairs, and, forgetting
-how picture frames collect dust, jumped
-up at comers of picture frames, with
-more wash. Then she returned to
-her chair, which was in the middle
-compartment.</p>
-
-<p>“Not bothering you too much,” began
-timid Clara. An expression of
-pain suddenly shot across her broad
-face. “Oh,” she breathed, “I guess
-that must be the tintypes! Anyway,
-don’t bother about me. Oh! yes, I’m
-sure it’s the tintypes. Tintypes has
-such sharp corners, even if there is pink
-paper frames to them. I had nowhere
-else to carry my belongings, which I’d
-not leave behind, as I have flew the
-coop on him.”</p>
-
-<p>Clara stuck one foot out and lifted
-her skirt somewhat. Untied a handkerchief
-from somewhere, though I
-have heard that the material is usually
-more elastic—never mind; in a most
-matter-of-fact way, Clara untied the
-handkerchief. As if it were the most
-natural thing in the world to do, and
-very serious about it, she delved and
-drew forth an alarm clock, a comb,
-shoe-strings, a looking-glass, a tea-strainer,
-a box of matches, the tintypes——</p>
-
-<p>“It was the tintypes!” cried Clara.
-“I knew, because they got such sharp
-corners and was sticking me, all the
-way over, most every step I took.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. McGibney and McGibney, who
-drew his sheet aside, stared at the astonishing
-collection on the table and
-then laughed heartily. Clara, looking
-calm and unintelligent, drew forth a
-can of baking powder. Nothing to
-laugh at could she see, but the others
-seemed amused, so she smiled sympathetically
-with them.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Clara, no longer timid,
-for it was her way to be awkward at
-first and then feel as much at home as
-anybody, “I’ve flew the coop on him
-forever. I’ve said I meant it before,
-but this time I do mean it. And he
-can be so nice when he wants to be.
-You know that yourself, Mrs. McGibney.”</p>
-
-<p>“He always seemed a perfect little
-gentleman whenever I saw him,” declared
-Mrs. McGibney.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a shame you two can’t get
-along better!” was heard from behind
-McGibney’s sheet. “I’ve always found
-Tommy all right.”</p>
-
-<p>And Clara exclaimed: “He’s the
-nicest little man in the world! This
-time I have flew the coop on him forever.”
-She smiled at her sheet, so
-that no one within hearing should be
-depressed, just because she had troubles.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know!” said Clara, with
-her broad, slow smile, “it’s pretty
-hard for a woman to come home from
-her day’s work, and find the man
-stretched on the floor before her sleeping
-it off. Isn’t it?” she asked, as if
-by no means sure and wishing to hear
-what others thought.</p>
-
-<p>From behind two sheets:</p>
-
-<p>“It certainly is hard!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span></p>
-
-<p>Rumbling up over McGibney’s sheet:</p>
-
-<p>“You hadn’t ought to put up with it!
-It is hard!”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it!” cried Clara, as if crying.
-“There, I was right, after all! I
-thought, myself, it was hard, and here’s
-others thinks the same. And then,
-when you’re getting along nice, both
-working and laying by a little, and
-going to buy the brass lamp in Mason’s
-window, and get a whole half-ton of
-coal instead of by the bag, which is robbery,
-and then he goes out to change
-the savings into one big bill which you’d
-never be tempted to break, and comes
-back in the morning without one
-cent—” Clara paused. She would not
-like to be ridiculed for regarding trifles
-too seriously. “I don’t think he does
-right by me—does he?”</p>
-
-<p>Both sheets agitated. Over both
-sheets:</p>
-
-<p>“He certainly don’t do right by you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Does he!” cried Clara, almost excited,
-also triumphant, hearing her own
-suspicions verified.</p>
-
-<p>“He oughter be ashamed of hisself!”
-rumbled McGibney.</p>
-
-<p>Clara looked up, and there was a
-slow heavy frown, instead of the slow
-heavy smile.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s worse than him!” she said
-sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll never speak to him again!” declared
-Mrs. McGibney.</p>
-
-<p>“You might speak to worse, Mrs.
-McGibney. I’m sure he always spoke
-most kind of you——”</p>
-
-<p>“How could he speak otherwise of
-me?” demanded Mrs. McGibney in
-quick anger.</p>
-
-<p>“Now! now! now!” rumbled McGibney,
-thrusting his sheet aside and
-looking warningly at his wife.</p>
-
-<p>“Not making you a sharp answer,
-Mrs. McGibney,” pursued thick, slow,
-heavy Clara, “he never said nothing
-but kind words of you. There’s lots
-worse than him and he was always a
-good husband to me, excepting when he
-was bad, and I hope I’ll never lay my
-two eyes onto him again.”</p>
-
-<p>And Mrs. McGibney looked at the
-McGibney sheet as if to say, “You’d
-best always keep quiet!” and her resentment
-was over, for she was fond of
-Clara and had known her many years.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll get a pint of beer,” said McGibney.
-“Can I leave youse two without
-there being a clinch? You like a little
-ale in it, don’t you, Clara?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t never mind me!” said Clara
-restlessly. “I just remember I left the
-gas burning and him sleeping his buns
-off. Do you think the gas would go
-out and then start up again and not
-burning? I’ve heard tell of such cases.
-Not meaning to go back to him, maybe
-I’d better go back and turn the gas out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do go back, Clara!” urged Mrs. McGibney,
-feeling through the sheet for
-Clara’s hand and impulsively seizing
-Clara’s nose, trying again for the hand,
-closing fingers upon Clara’s ear, Clara
-leaning over, with head near her knees,
-“Give him another chance. A wife’s
-place is at home. Don’t mind what
-others tell you—your husband is dearer
-to you than all the rest of the world.
-Go back and make him promise to do
-better.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t wish him no harm,” said
-Clara, hesitatingly. “This time I’ve
-flew the coop on him forever, even if he
-is the nicest little man in the world
-when he has a mind to be—if I thought
-the gas would go out on him, I might
-go back and turn down the gas, anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>Oh, then, here was a fine chance for
-Mrs. McGibney to bustle. Down came
-everything on the lines, as if it were
-Monday night in the back yard. Down
-came everything from the backs of
-chairs and from picture frames. Back
-into a bundle with everything! Big
-white turnip again, loose, sprawling
-turnip-tops.</p>
-
-<p>“I might try him again for a week,
-anyway,” decided Clara. Out and
-away and back home with her big white,
-turnip and its pouter-pigeon effect, too
-bulky for her arms to go around, her
-chin lost in fluttering turnip-tops;
-back home with bundle, alarm clock,
-looking-glass, box of baking-powder
-and tintypes taken one almost impossibly
-happy day at Coney Island.</p>
-
-<p>An evening or two later. McGibney<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
-out for a walk. Mrs. McGibney up to
-her elbows in the washing that had
-driven him out, for if he had remained
-in he would have had to carry boilers of
-water to the stove from the sink in the
-hall. So McGibney had said, “Marietta,
-I ain’t getting fresh air enough.
-I don’t sleep good unless I take a little
-walk in the evening.” Mrs. McGibney
-had to fill the boiler one dishpanful at a
-time and that was satisfactory to McGibney.</p>
-
-<p>Rap on the door. Mrs. McGibney
-quickly concealed socks with holes in
-them and turned to the door. Vain
-little Mrs. McGibney! She paused to
-rummage through the wash until she
-found curtains. They were very fine
-lace curtains. The very fine curtains
-were placed where a caller would surely
-see them and note how very fine they
-were. Then Mrs. McGibney’s hand
-did around and around on the door
-knob, hand slippery with soap-suds,
-until the slipperiness wore off and she
-could open the door. She exclaimed:
-“Why, Tommy! come right in.” The
-“nicest little man in the world” was an
-uneasy, squirming, twisting, little man;
-bald-headed; Hebraic nose like a number
-six inclining at forty-five degrees;
-chin with a dimple looking like a bit
-gouged out of it; very neat; fussy.
-And a very polite little man, scraping,
-bowing, grinning.</p>
-
-<p>“Sit down, Tommy. You won’t
-have much room to stir. The old man is
-out, but will be back almost any minute.
-Sit down, but first I’ll trouble you to
-fill the boiler for me, if you don’t mind.
-How is Clara?”</p>
-
-<p>Tommy seemed to scrape and bow to
-the boiler, before lifting it, seemed to
-scrape with his right foot and bow to
-the wash-tub as he passed it and went
-scraping and bowing down to the sink,
-filled the boiler, came back with it, set
-it on the stove and stood grinning, prepared
-to scrape and bow, if given half a
-chance to, until invited again to sit
-down.</p>
-
-<p>“My!” said Mrs. McGibney, “the
-wash does gather on one so!”</p>
-
-<p>Tommy opened his eyes wide and
-wrinkled his forehead to express profoundest
-sympathy. Not only with
-eyes and forehead, but with elbows,
-feet, knees and hands, it was his way to
-show how very attentively he listened
-to anyone speaking to him; ready to
-laugh heartily at anything he might be
-expected to smile at; equally ready to
-commiserate with anybody.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you feeling pretty well?”—soap
-dabbed on a McGibney shirt. “How
-is—” laundry-brush up and down where
-the soap was, which was at elbows; McGibney
-<i>would</i> lean on elbows. “Clara?
-Is she—” up and down with the shirt
-on the wash-board—“feeling pretty—”
-wringing out and dropping shirt on pile,
-on a newspaper, “well?” Pile too
-high and toppling over, top pieces falling
-on the floor outside the newspaper.
-Not a speck on them, but rubbing over
-for them, anyway.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, ma’am; Clara is very well.
-I have left her.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve what? You’ve left her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, ma’am!” said Tommy,
-head bobbing, shoulders, arms, knees,
-all of him bobbing. “I called to see
-would you keep these tintypes for me?
-I’m going to Maddy-gascar, where I
-hear there’s openings.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Tommy, what’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>“She don’t keep the house picked up—not
-saying a word against her,” answered
-Tommy. “These tintypes is
-mine, and she can have everything else;
-but these is mine, and it was my money
-paid for them down to Coney Island,
-me and her in them, and all I got in the
-world I care about, and will you keep
-them for me till I can send for them
-from Maddy-gascar?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course I’ll do that, Tommy;
-but you know you’d never do such a
-thing as leave Clara. That would be
-very wrong of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, indeed, ma’am, very wrong
-of me! Not saying one word against
-her, she lies in bed all day and won’t so
-much as do any sweeping. There’s
-never any cooking, and I’m tired to
-death of the delicatessens and rather
-go to Maddy-gascar and eat spiders, me
-going in the spider-web industry there.
-She don’t do no wash like you, Mrs. McGibney,
-but just rinses out in cold water.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-She’s so lazy she washes dishes by rubbing
-newspapers on them. That ain’t
-so bad as when she does wash them;
-she washes clothes in the dish-pan and
-then washes dishes after them—not
-that I’d say one word against her. So,
-will you mind the tintypes with her
-and me in them, ma’am? They’re all
-I have to care about, ma’am.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, now Tommy—” But how
-could one possibly argue with Tommy?
-With eyes and forehead and elbows
-and knees, he would most emphatically
-agree with everything said to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Your wife is a very good woman.”</p>
-
-<p>Of course she was! Best in the city!
-Best in the whole world! But would
-Mrs. McGibney care for the tintypes?</p>
-
-<p>“It’s very wrong of you, Tommy!”</p>
-
-<p>Wrong? Shocking! Heartless!
-Wicked, shocking, heartless Tommy!
-Of course he was, and he admitted
-every word of it; but would Mrs. McGibney
-take care of the tintypes until
-he could send from “Maddy-gascar”
-for them?</p>
-
-<p>Tommy left the tintypes on the
-mantelpiece, hoping he was disturbing
-nothing by so doing; imploring Mrs.
-McGibney not to bother with them if
-she thought they would take up too
-much room, begging her to throw them
-in the ashes or burn them, or jump on
-them if they should be the slightest
-annoyance to her; then he went away.</p>
-
-<p>Back in five minutes. Well, after
-all, “Maddy-gascar” was pretty far
-away and he had heard stories about
-the Esquimaux there, so he would take
-the tintypes back with him; Clara
-might wonder where they were. Five
-minutes later. Back again. Perhaps
-Mrs. McGibney had better not say anything
-to anyone about the tintype
-matter. Bowing, bobbing, scraping.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, not a word would Mrs. McGibney
-say! Rest assured of that! Indeed,
-she had quite enough to do in attending
-to her own affairs. Mrs. McGibney
-promised to say nothing, and like a
-busy little housewife with too much to
-do to waste time gossiping, breathed
-not a word of it till McGibney came in.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all Tommy’s fault!” said McGibney.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid Clara is a good deal to
-blame,” said Mrs. McGibney.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, always stand up for the
-man, of course!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, take the woman’s part
-every time, won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>The next time the McGibneys saw
-Clara, there was no persuading her to
-go home. She had no home.</p>
-
-<p>“Because,” said Clara, “when we
-found there wasn’t no use in our trying
-to get along together, we just broke up
-and gave away everything in the rooms
-and went down the stairs and down
-the stoop together. We didn’t so
-much as say good-bye nor nothing;
-he went up the street and I went
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right!” declared McGibney,
-“when two people can’t get along together,
-it’s best for them to part, I
-say!”</p>
-
-<p>“You say!” cried indignant Mrs.
-McGibney. And scornful Mrs. McGibney!</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m entitled to speak, ain’t
-I?” grumbled McGibney.</p>
-
-<p>“No!” firmly. “Leastwise, not when
-you talk like that.” She looked her
-scorn and continued:</p>
-
-<p>“No, Clara, there’s nobody dearer
-to any woman than her own husband.”
-Looked at McGibney as if he were a
-pile of wash just toppled over into the
-ash-pan. “Your husband will be with
-you when others are far away.”
-Looked at him as if he were two piles
-of wash toppled over into three ash-pans.
-“There ain’t any luck in any
-such advice as he’s giving you. I
-know how I love my own dear husband,
-and you know you’re the same,
-and you’ll find what the world is when
-you’re alone in it.” Glared her indignation,
-scorn, contempt for McGibney,
-who mumbled, with an air of sagacity,
-astonishing to himself:</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t wimmen the queer things,
-though!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve flew the coop on him forever!”
-said Clara, with her broad, amiable,
-unintelligent smile. “I got a little hall
-room for myself, and—me go back to
-him? Oh, my! is that a step on the
-stairs? I wouldn’t wish it, not for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span>
-world, for him to find me here! I
-never want to see the face of him
-again!” Clara looked around for a
-place to hide; ran to the door of the
-front room, and, with her hand on the
-knob, stood listening.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tain’t him! It’s someone going
-upstairs,” she said, smiling her relief.
-“I’ll never go back to him.”</p>
-
-<p>A week later. Clara again. And
-Clara was out of breath.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mrs. McGibney, has the man
-come yet? I thought I saw him over
-on Ninth Avenue, and I run clear
-around the block for fear he’d be after
-me and track me here. I was just buying
-a bit of furniture and going to start
-rooms for myself, when I get a few bits
-together. And is it too much to ask
-you to store them for me till I get
-rooms, Mrs. McGibney?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re only too glad—” began
-Mrs. McGibney.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, on your life, don’t stir! It’s
-him! He mustn’t know where I am,
-or he might try to get me back! I
-don’t never want to see him again!”
-whispered Clara. “On your life, not
-giving no orders, don’t stir, or he’ll
-know you’re in and see me here.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a rap on the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my! Look out—would he hear
-us?”</p>
-
-<p>Out in the hall:</p>
-
-<p>“McGibney! Anyone know where
-McGibney lives?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” breathed Clara, “that’s all
-right. It’s the furniture men.”</p>
-
-<p>And two men from a Ninth Avenue
-furniture store came in with a bureau.
-At least they set it in the hall, and
-turned to hasten down the stairs;
-paused to do little better than that,
-and rolled the bureau half way into
-the room; turned to run back to the
-store, but, in turning, thrust back with
-their heels, and pushed the bureau
-quite into the room, which was conscientious
-enough delivering of goods
-to suit anybody.</p>
-
-<p>“I bought that!” said Clara, proudly.
-The bureau was rolled into the
-front room, and she helped, her hands
-caressing more than pushing. There
-was no back to the bureau. The varnish
-was worn off. Some one had
-broken open the top drawer, splintering
-the wood on each side of the keyhole.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s mine!” said Clara rapturously.
-“It took three days of hard scrubbing
-on hands and knees, for me to buy that.
-It’ll be every bit as good as new, with
-a few boards nailed on the back, and
-a little oil rubbed over it.”</p>
-
-<p>The bureau was rolled to a corner
-of the front room, but Clara could not
-leave it, hovering over it, stooping and
-pulling out drawers, one by one, gazing
-delightedly at the disgraceful old
-wreck.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes!” said Clara. “The other day
-when I was scrubbing the restaurant
-floor, there was customers looking at
-me, and they says, ‘Look at that poor
-woman! Ain’t some got hard lots in
-life!’ They needn’t of pitied me! I
-was earning that! Just a few boards
-and a little oil is all it needs, and I’ll
-get as fine a home together as anybody’s
-got—what’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>Clara ran to the kitchen to listen.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m so afraid he’ll find me that I do
-be hearing sounds all the time!” she
-said. “Ain’t that bureau something
-elegant? I’ll have my own bit of a
-home and never see him again.”
-Then, as McGibney came out to the
-kitchen, shutting the front-room door
-behind him, she asked;</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t that sounds of excitement in
-the street? Maybe there’s a fire!”
-Clara ran to the front room and pretended
-to look out the window. She
-had heard nothing; it was only a pretext
-to get back to the disgraceful old
-wreck. On her own hands and knees
-she had earned it.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t it nice!” said Clara, ecstatically.
-“I got my eye on a gilt-framed
-mirror I’ll buy next week. It’s nice,
-ain’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>Clara went away. Back in five minutes.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess maybe I left my rolled-up
-apron in the front room.” Whether
-she had or not, she stood looking at the
-bureau; turned to go; looked again;
-moved it to get a better light on it;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span>
-stepped toward the door; paused and
-looked back.</p>
-
-<p>“I bought that!”</p>
-
-<p>And she went away, leaving McGibney
-standing in the front room.
-With an expression of deep melancholy
-he stood looking at the clumsy,
-broken bureau. He looked at his best
-furniture surrounding it—fragile, gilded
-chairs, on a big rug better than any
-other rug in the neighborhood—a
-sideboard with French plate glass in
-it; the very fine curtains. He was a
-log-shaped man, and not remarkably
-æsthetic, but his eye was sorely offended.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well,” said the melancholy,
-log-shaped man, “if us poor folks don’t
-help each other, who will?” And the
-eye of Mrs. McGibney was equally
-offended; but Mrs. McGibney was not
-melancholy, for here was an opportunity
-for her to bustle. Out with the sofa
-and around in front of the bureau!
-The standing lamp placed where it
-would help to conceal the bureau. To
-hide the bureau was quite a problem,
-but Mrs. McGibney rejoiced in it.
-She bustled.</p>
-
-<p>The next Saturday night Clara
-bought a wicker rocking-chair. Fearful-looking
-old rocking-chair! Interstices
-of it filled with white paint; all
-paint worn off wherever arms, legs,
-and backs had rested on it.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s nice, ain’t it?” said Clara,
-dreamily, fondly.</p>
-
-<p>McGibney sat straight, as if he had
-just dug through the oil-cloth and
-feared reprimanding. Then he fell
-back limply.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, ve-ry,” he said, without enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll fill out your front room nice,
-while I’m waiting for it, won’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, ye-es; it’ll be ve-ry nice.”</p>
-
-<p>“And so comfortable!” said Clara.
-She sat in the chair and clumsily
-rocked it. “Try it, Mrs. McGibney!
-You ain’t got no idea how comfortable
-it is. You sit in it, Mr. McGibney.
-Just lie back and push with your feet
-and see what a comfort it is. My! I
-can just see myself in it, me with my
-shoes off and resting after the day.
-Such comfort in it! I don’t guess I
-ever made such a bargain before.
-But what do you think? That mirror
-I was so set on was bought! That’s
-mean, ain’t it? I was awful provoked
-when I heard it. Just the same, I got
-my eye on a stove that’s fine and well
-worth the four dollars they ask for it.
-It’s all nickel in front, and only one of
-the bricks broken, and can be fixed
-with five cents’ worth of fire-clay.
-It’ll look nice in your front room, won’t
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ve-ry nice!” answered distressed
-McGibney.</p>
-
-<p>Clara got up to go. Had to sink back
-and take another rock in the chair, so
-comfortable after the day’s work, and
-one’s shoes off. It was indeed worth
-scrubbing for! Up to go. Well, just
-one more rock—away back and slowly
-down again, you know. And you, too,
-look again at it! My! but what a bargain!
-And Clara bought it! On her
-own hands and knees she had
-earned it. Before going away, Clara
-lingered at the door. Perhaps they
-would laugh at her if she should take
-another rock, but she might look at the
-chair for another moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t this pretty oil-cloth you got!”
-Looking only at the chair.</p>
-
-<p>“I must get a kitchen table like
-yours.” Looking only at her own
-rocking-chair. She left McGibney staring
-gloomily, but saying, sturdily:</p>
-
-<p>“Us poor folks must help each other!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. McGibney bustled.</p>
-
-<p>It was a different Clara when seen
-again. Her face was flushed; the unintelligent
-but soft eyes were like eyes
-that could not see outward things, as if
-they were engaged in the unusual
-occupation of looking within at her own
-mind. Convince Clara that she had a
-grievance, and thick, obstinate brooding
-replaced uncomplaining stolidity.</p>
-
-<p>By force of habit, Clara’s slow,
-amiable smile flickered, but her eyes
-were as if turned upon brooding within.</p>
-
-<p>“Someone’s did that a-purpose!”
-said Clara, slowly, deliberately, staring,
-seeming to see neither McGibney nor
-Mrs. McGibney. “Me that thought I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-didn’t have a enemy in the world!
-Where would I get a enemy, me always
-kind to everybody? I had my heart
-set on that stove that only needed a
-little fire-clay. Someone’s bought it,
-just to annoy me. When the mirror
-went, I didn’t think nothing of it, but
-the stove too, is to annoy me. They
-won’t make nothing by that, and bad
-luck will come upon them for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Clara, it only happened that
-way,” reasoned Mrs. McGibney. “Nobody
-would go and be as mean as that
-to you, specially as they’d have to
-spend money.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s tricks done me!” declared sullen,
-dogged Clara. “Oh, there’s somebody
-at the door. Maybe it’s him
-after me. Say I’m not here, Mrs. McGibney!
-On your life, don’t let him
-find me! I got to work for my living,
-anyway, and I’ll work for myself and
-not divide with no man. Never—oh,
-I guess it’s the kitchen table!”</p>
-
-<p>“A kitchen table, Clara?” demanded
-McGibney. “Did you say a kitchen
-table?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes!” said Clara, brightening. “It’s
-nice! You can put it in the centre of
-your front room and maybe have
-ornaments onto it. It’s a very nice
-kitchen table.”</p>
-
-<p>Door opened; a table thrust into the
-room; heels flying down the stairs.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you think it’s nice?” Clara
-asked eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Nice?” repeated honest McGibney.
-“Oh, is that the table?”</p>
-
-<p>Scratched legs to it; two plain boards
-forming the top of it; heads of nails
-sunk in the boards, and once filled with
-putty; putty fallen out.</p>
-
-<p>Clara shook it to show that the legs
-were firm. She would varnish it and
-cover it with a beautiful table cover
-she had seen in the five-and-ten-cent
-store, though there was one just as
-good in the three-and-nine-cent store.</p>
-
-<p>“Next week,” said brightened Clara,
-“it’s going to be portcheers. They’re
-chenille and grand for a doorway. No
-room ain’t complete without portcheers.”
-She again shook the table to
-show how firm the legs were and then
-went away.</p>
-
-<p>McGibney and Mrs. McGibney stood
-out on the front stoop of the rust-stained
-frame house, looking at the
-tailor, who was putting up a new sign:
-“Pants pressed, ten cents. Full-dress
-suits cleaned and pressed, one dollar.”
-McGibney thought of “full-dress” suits
-and looked down the street, at rags and
-dirt and ashes. It was Saturday night
-and they were going over to Ninth
-Avenue, to Paddy’s Market. Along
-came Clara, reaching the stoop, starting
-up the stoop, half up the stoop before
-she saw the McGibneys.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, is it you?” said Clara, with only
-the beginning of the slow, amiable
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>“The portcheers is gone!” she said,
-without excitement. “My heart was
-set on them—the portcheers has gone.
-Would you say to me, now, that it only
-happens that way, Mrs. McGibney?
-Is there somebody playing mean, low
-tricks on me, or ain’t there? Does
-three times in succession just happen?
-The portcheers was bought last Monday.
-Was that only accident? Oh,
-but I came around to see would you
-lend me fifty cents? There’s a hat-rack
-I want. It’s meant for a front
-hall, but the mirror in it is nice and
-there’s a bit of marble to it, and it’ll
-look nice in my rooms, where, to my
-longest day, no man’ll ever hang his
-hat on it, unless you, Mr. McGibney,
-when you and Mrs. McGibney come
-and see me. I don’t like to ask you
-for fifty cents, Mrs. McGibney, and you
-just going to do your bit of marketing.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s fifty dollars in the bank
-that you can have any time you say so,
-Clara!” exclaimed McGibney.</p>
-
-<p>“We’d rather have you owing it
-than have it in the bank, Clara,” said
-Mrs. McGibney, “because the bank
-might bust.”</p>
-
-<p>Clara looked embarrassed. “Don’t
-you want to come look at the hat-rack?”
-she asked. “It’ll set your front room
-off fine!” The McGibneys pinched
-each other’s arms, as if saying, “Oh,
-Lord, preserve us!” All three went
-down the street toward Ninth Avenue,
-Clara preferring one side of the street;
-then, thinking the other side was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
-darker, choosing the darker side so
-that if they should meet “him” he
-might not recognize them.</p>
-
-<p>Torches on wagons, wagonloads of
-oranges, twenty for twenty-five cents;
-pairs of rabbits slung on headless barrels,
-plump rabbits hanging outside,
-furry rags, shot to pieces, inside the barrels;
-piles of soup greens and mounds
-of cabbages; cries of “Everything
-cheap! Only a few more left!” Paddy’s
-Market! Then the second-hand
-furniture store, with bed springs and
-pillows outside it; stoves with covers
-and legs in the ovens; rolls of matting;
-everything second-hand, even crockery
-and tea-kettles. Clara went into the
-store, Mrs. McGibney having paused
-to dig a thumb-nail into potatoes to see
-whether they were frozen, McGibney
-lingering with her, because he would
-have to carry the potatoes.</p>
-
-<p>Clara came back to the sidewalk.
-Again her eyes were unseeing. “The
-hat-rack,” said Clara, staring at nothing
-visible, “is sold. I ain’t been gone
-from here ten minutes. It’s sold.
-Everything I got my heart on is sold.
-I don’t know who’s doing it, but they’ll
-never have a day’s luck for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what could I do, lady?” The
-furniture man came cringing out to her.
-“You know you didn’t leave no deposit.
-Would you like to look at some
-mats for your front hall? You didn’t
-leave no deposit, so what could I do?
-I got a very heavy, rich and elegant
-mat here for your front hall; though
-the number of a house is onto it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Jack,” said McGibney.
-“Who’s buying up all the things this
-lady looks at? Is it any particular
-party?”</p>
-
-<p>“Come to think of it, it is,” answered
-the furniture man. “He’s the gent
-took the unfurnished rooms upstairs.
-‘What’s he look like?’ Well, he bows
-most polite every time my wife waits
-on him and I see his head was some
-bald——”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait for me!” said Clara. “Up on
-the next floor, you say? Just only
-wait one minute for me, Mrs. McGibney,
-and I’ll only go to tell him what I think
-of this latest meanness he’s playing me.
-Then I’ll be through with him forever.
-This is the last trick he’ll play me!”
-And she went to the stairs leading to
-the rooms over the store.</p>
-
-<p>“It must be Tommy,” said McGibney.</p>
-
-<p>“And I always took him for such a
-perfect little gentleman,” was Mrs. McGibney’s
-comment.</p>
-
-<p>“Just wait a minute!” Clara had
-said; but, after several minutes, McGibney
-became uneasy.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go up and see,” he said. “It
-maybe ain’t Tommy, and Clara may
-start mixing it with some stranger
-that’s got as much right to the furniture
-as her.”</p>
-
-<p>But it was Tommy, for, as the McGibneys
-went up the stairs, Clara’s
-words, plainly audible, told them so.</p>
-
-<p>“Never!” they heard—“Was it my
-dying day, I’d never forgive you. It
-was too cruel and I’ll never forget it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t she the stubborn thing!”
-snapped Mrs. McGibney.</p>
-
-<p>“Did I live to be as old as Mickthusalem,
-I’d not forgive you for it! Oh,
-Tommy, how could you go up the
-street when I went down? To treat
-me so! Don’t never mind nothing
-else; play me tricks and scold me and
-don’t do right nor anywheres near
-right, but how could you do that? Oh,
-Tommy, how could you go up the
-street when I went down? Me expecting
-your feet after me every second,
-me looking back at the corner. You
-going up, and me going down! Rob
-me of them portcheers I see you got
-there, and play me tricks with that
-mirror, and do like you want to about
-all the hall-racks in the world, but you
-never come to find me when I was hiding
-away! Have the red portcheers
-and welcome to everything my heart
-was set on, but you never come to me
-when I was hiding, and how could I
-tell you where I was hiding away? Oh, I
-been so unhappy without you, Tommy;
-there’s nobody got any sympathy for
-a deserted wife, but just a jeer at her
-and say, ‘No wonder he left, if you take
-one look at her big platter face’—but
-my eyes is nice and my hair is lovely,
-I was always told. Take away the red
-portcheers my heart was set on, Tommy,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span>
-and I know you don’t love me, but we
-belong to each other, just the same, but
-don’t—oh, if you ain’t looking to break
-my heart—don’t never again go up a
-street when I’m going down!”</p>
-
-<p>The McGibneys saw them standing
-in the centre of the room, arms about
-each other, hands patting each other’s
-shoulder-blades.</p>
-
-<p>Tommy began to whimper. Arms
-mothered him. Steady tapping away
-on his shoulder-blades. Then Tommy
-blubbered outright:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Clara, I been missable! I been
-missable something fierce, living alone!
-I ain’t ate nor slept, but been working
-straight along and got a good job and
-doing pretty good, and so much as a
-day’s work you’ll never have to do.
-No! not if it’s your longest day!” A
-bow and a bob and a scrape, for he had
-discovered the McGibneys standing
-irresolute in the hall. He continued
-to blubber and he continued to tap
-away at shoulder-blades.</p>
-
-<p>“But why didn’t you come to find
-me, Tommy, when I was hiding away?
-I told the Finnigans and everybody,
-so you must of known where I was hiding
-away!”</p>
-
-<p>Clara would not have seen a hundred
-McGibneys. Clara was tapping most
-mightily with both hands upon shoulder-blades.</p>
-
-<p>“On account of the brass lamp!”
-blubbered Tommy. A bob and a bow
-and a scrape! “I done fierce bad
-spending our savings that was for the
-brass lamp, and I couldn’t go find you
-where you was hid till I had that here,
-in this new home, for you to see, and be
-complete, and then you’d know I was
-sorry and it would prove I was going
-to do right. But it wasn’t tricks,
-Clara! Honest, it wasn’t tricks! Me
-standing on the other side of the street,
-and looking in the store window at you,
-and no overcoat, because I needed
-every cent to show I was going to do
-right. And you look at the mirror. I
-say, ‘Clara likes that mirror. Then
-Clara must have that!’ Me standing
-with my toes all pinched up, as my
-shoes is bad, and you looking at them
-red portcheers. Then Clara must
-have red portcheers! Me jumping
-up and down, like I’m froze, but
-standing there every Saturday night
-to see what Clara likes and Clara’s going
-to have that!” Bobbing, bowing,
-and scraping toward the hall, from
-Tommy; from Clara, rather a look of
-resentment toward the hall.</p>
-
-<p>A final tap on shoulder blades and:
-“Why, come in and see where we’re
-going to start up again!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t it strange!” said calm, stolid
-Clara. “He found me, after all!”</p>
-
-<p>And from all four of them, and all
-four meaning every word:</p>
-
-<p>“In all the world, there ain’t nobody
-like your own! If it ain’t but big
-enough to hold a trunk, there’s no
-place like your own!”</p>
-
-<p>“And,” said supremely happy Tommy
-and Clara, “now we’ll celebrate!”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/footer3.jpg" width="500" height="175" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 575px;">
-<img src="images/illus17.jpg" width="575" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Will It Keep Them Off?</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Carter, in New York American</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Money_Power"><i>The Money Power</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“All things come to him that
-waits.” Fifteen or sixteen
-years ago, when the Farmers’
-Alliance was flourishing throughout
-the West and South, it was a matter
-of common occurrence to hear some old
-horny-handed farmer, on a Saturday at
-the county seat, disputing with his neighbor
-about existing conditions. Almost
-invariably the Alliance man blamed the
-“money power” for causing things to
-go criss-cross. Occasionally the country
-merchant or small banker would
-butt into the discussion. “The money
-power,” he would say, with infinite
-scorn, “Humph! Why, you poor fool,
-there ain’t any such thing as ‘the money
-power.’ Might as well talk of the
-agricultural power, or the mercantile
-power. There are rich bankers and
-rich farmers and rich merchants—but
-that don’t make them a ‘power’ in the
-sense you use that term.”</p>
-
-<p>For a number of years the “money
-power” has been given a much needed
-rest in the West and South. Most of the
-pioneers there have substituted the term
-“plutocracy.” But in the East reformers
-are just now beginning to sit
-up and take notice. One hears the
-term frequently. “Roosevelt,” said
-Jacob Riis, in a recent interview in the
-<i>New York Herald</i>, “is fighting the
-greatest tyrant of them all. Slavery
-affected only the South, but the
-Money Power means the enslavement
-of all human beings and all homes.”
-Many an old, long-whiskered farmer
-said the same thing just as well fifteen
-years ago—and the <i>Herald</i> called him
-an anarchist.</p>
-
-<p>“The Senate,” says Ernest Crosby
-in the March <i>Cosmopolitan</i>, “is now the
-agent of the Money Power—the representative
-of Wall Street.” Absolutely
-true; and no one can doubt the
-sincerity of either Mr. Crosby or the
-<i>Cosmopolitan</i>; but when the farmers of
-the West and South said the same thing
-fifteen years ago, they were greeted
-with hoots and jeers from the East. I
-don’t say that Messrs. Riis and Crosby
-joined in the hooting and jeering; I am
-quite sure they did not; but they are
-accorded a respectful hearing in making
-statements for the making of which
-thousands of respectable men fifteen
-years ago were branded as anarchists,
-wild-eyed fanatics, lunatics, and so
-forth.</p>
-
-<p>The world <i>do move</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="right">L. H. B.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/footer4.jpg" width="500" height="125" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Russian_Apostle_of_Populism"><i>The Russian Apostle of Populism</i><br />
-<span class="smaller">BY THOMAS C. HUTTON</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Fifty years ago a grayheaded
-prisoner, neglected, gaunt, unbefriended,
-died in the dungeons
-of Schlüsselburg, and today a
-thousand Russian cities are ringing
-with the name of Mikal Bakunin, the
-apostle of Populism, one of the many
-reformers who were stoned by a contemporary
-public and sainted by its
-descendants.</p>
-
-<p>Russia spurned the impassioned
-orator; Germany exiled him, after a
-few months of toleration, and now his
-projects are discussed by millions who
-seem determined to give them a fair
-trial.</p>
-
-<p>“A pack of knout-serving flunkeys,”
-Bakunin called the German officials
-who enforced the frontier-laws in the
-interest of the Czar, and soon after a
-messenger in uniform served him with
-a copy of the Prussian press-laws, and
-a hint at the expedience of making himself
-invisible.</p>
-
-<p>His virulent tongue hurt him a good
-deal, and his popularity was somewhat
-modified by his social radicalism;
-but the long neglect of his revenue
-plan is one of the strangest facts
-in the literature of political economy.
-One might as well reject Kepler’s
-solar hypothesis, because the
-great astronomer got a little cloudy on
-the question of witchcraft.</p>
-
-<p>And, after all, Bakunin only whispered
-his matrimonial theories, but
-shouted his tax-protests before multitudes
-who ought to have known better
-than to class them with his chimeras.</p>
-
-<p>Briefly stated, his main reform plan
-is this: That governments ought to
-earn their own revenues as they cast
-their own cannon and build their own
-battleships.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at your great Government
-stud-farm of Trakehnen,” said he, in
-a speech on the old Breslau market-square.
-“Model stables, model granaries,
-fine pastures, all more than self-supporting,
-monthly auctions of forage
-and surplus horses. Oats are barreled
-in airy magazines, and, for greater security,
-the granary warden breeds
-cats, and hires two boys to take care
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>“All lovely, so far. But now suppose
-those boys were to break in a
-private cottage and snatch away a
-poor youngster’s kitten, on the pretext
-that the Government might have need
-of it? At sight of a club, the little
-lad would have to let his pet go, but
-could you blame him for growling?—Why
-don’t you get oats of your own?
-And let my little kitten alone?—And
-that is exactly what I am growling
-about when I see tax-collectors confiscate
-a poor man’s last milch-cow or
-nanny-goat.”</p>
-
-<p>The orator then described the estate
-of Prince Gorkas, a semi-independent
-land-magnate near Tiflis, in the southern
-Caucasus. The Prince’s tenants
-pay a moderate rent; freeholders keep
-his good will by buying his cattle and
-coal. Free schools, fairly good, and
-no tax-collectors—a pattern of what
-an empire ought to be on a large scale.
-Foreseeing the eventual need of money
-for the purchase of a neighboring
-estate, the Prince had a mountain-side
-planted with plum trees, to sell the
-dried fruit. His engineers opened a
-mine of cannel-coal, and soon had a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span>
-large market. Their master hoarded
-and was thought capable of driving a
-sharp bargain, but gossips would have
-risked the lunatic-asylum if they had
-spread a report that Prince Gorkas had
-broken into the little crossroad store
-and helped himself to a share of the
-old storekeeper’s savings.</p>
-
-<p>Fruit plantations are also managed
-by the Shah of Persia, and mines of vast
-values by the Russian Government.
-Prussia and Austria own extensive
-timber forests and realize a handsome
-profit after paying reasonable wages
-to thousands of wardens, rangers and
-woodcutters.</p>
-
-<p>Saxony operates national mines and
-large national glass-works.</p>
-
-<p>Do kings need ordnance? Let them
-hire foundries to cast it for them. Do
-they need gunpowder? Hire chemists
-to mix it for them.</p>
-
-<p>Do they need money? Why, let
-them hire business-men to earn it for
-them. Not the faintest ghost of a
-doubt but it can be done.</p>
-
-<p>A little more difficult than raising
-royal race-horses? Perhaps so. But
-does that give His Majesty the right to
-race down a peddler and take his money
-away from him? Now reflect, and do
-not let your verdict be biased by the
-idea that might makes right, or that
-a long-established absurdity becomes
-reasonable.</p>
-
-<p>Why collect revenues by Government
-highway robbery, by Government
-hold-up methods, by harpies in Government
-uniform, when the test of practical
-experience proves that revenues
-can be raised by Government industries?</p>
-
-<p>Would you bring the State in unfair
-competition with individuals? “Don’t
-for one moment,” says Bakunin, “believe
-that lie of lazybones. Secretaries
-of Finance find it easier to hire marauders
-than to hire skilled mechanics,
-that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>Who is hurt by the great stockfarm
-at Trakehnen? It could be enlarged
-twenty times, and still give private
-enterprise a chance to raise prize-horses
-at a considerable profit. Who
-complains about Government forestry?
-It gives bread to hundreds of thousands;
-it protects the fountains of fertilizing
-streams; it prevents droughts,
-but does not prevent individuals from
-conducting timber-plantations at a
-profit exceeding that of grain farms.</p>
-
-<p>The Belgian Government owns coal-mines,
-but private mine-owners will
-continue to prosper till they exhaust
-the supply of the mineral. No glass-worker
-has ever objected to the Government
-glass-works of Saxony. They
-invite co-operation; the demand for
-artistic glass products exceeds the
-supply.</p>
-
-<p>If Government mines and factories,
-why not Government commerce, and,
-above all, Government real estate
-transactions—Government landlordism
-to an extent that will hurt no other
-landlord, and benefit millions of tenants?</p>
-
-<p>Found new communities on the plan
-of reserving a certain percentage of
-building lots for state purposes, and
-lease those reservations for five to ten
-years to the highest bidder. If the
-Government erects buildings, let them
-be models of their kind—fire-proof
-storehouses, sanitary tenements.</p>
-
-<p>Government plantations ought to be
-drained till gnat-plagues are no more;
-equipped with improved machinery,
-with airy cottages; a blessing to all concerned,
-and yet an undoubted source of
-revenue, since experience proves that
-wholesale farming operations are the
-most profitable.</p>
-
-<p>One tobacco plantation of the French
-Government yields a yearly net revenue
-of 2,000,000 francs, and the only objection
-is the nature of the crop;
-national agriculture could raise profitable
-harvests without catering to a
-stimulant habit. Government commission
-houses should import Jamaica
-bananas, rather than Jamaica rum.</p>
-
-<p>On the Bakunin plan, national revenue
-industries should, as a rule, select
-their ground where the strain of competition
-is the least likely to be felt.
-After that, objectors should be referred
-to a chronicle of such alternatives as
-trust despotism.</p>
-
-<p>“No governments,” he asks, “decline
-to dirty their hands delving for boodle?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span>
-Oh, ye prayerful pirates! Lineal descendants
-of the bushwhacker princes
-who preferred clubs to spades! Below
-their dignity to cut wood, but did cut
-purses and throats. Too highborn to
-clean out a pig-sty, but did clean out
-peddlers and often whole caravans.</p>
-
-<p>“And now the descendants of those
-beautiful buccaneers, too proud to
-mine or farm, but not ashamed to fall
-upon a poor farmer’s homestead and
-confiscate his last horse! Not too
-dignified to hold up a crippled huckster
-and collar two-thirds of his hard earned
-pennies. Too sensitive to work the
-windlass of a silvermine, but rough-handed
-enough to wring silver from a
-consumptive shopkeeper. Our grandiose
-rulers, I should say, are in small
-business when they break in to snatch
-a widow’s kettle and cot-bed.</p>
-
-<p>“Yet that’s done every day in the
-year. Statistics claim that somewhere
-on earth a child is born every second.
-And at least every minute sees the
-birth of a child that will have to die of
-hunger, because its mother’s bread
-has been filched by tax-collectors.</p>
-
-<p>“Have Governments a right to supply
-their needs at the expense of widows
-and orphans, while thousands of
-able-bodied young men stand ready to
-earn revenue for them?”</p>
-
-<p>High tariff bullies, says the Russian
-reformer, are marine highway robbers.
-At first sight, the burden of spoliation
-seems shifted to the shoulders of foreigners,
-but, look closer, and you find
-natives obliged to buy imports at extortion
-rates.</p>
-
-<p>Passengers, waiting to be examined
-by custom-house officers, says Bakunin,
-always remind him of travelers, lined
-up to be searched by footpads.</p>
-
-<p>“How commerce revives,” he says,
-“wherever those shackles are partly
-removed! How would it flourish if
-they were altogether abolished? Traffic
-that now obliges skippers to starve
-their sailors could be made abundantly
-profitable.”</p>
-
-<p>A hundred years before the birth of
-Henry George, a revenue system,
-closely resembling the “Single Tax”
-plan, was recommended by the father
-of Gabriel Mirabeau, and by the Roget
-School of French Communists.</p>
-
-<p>“It <i>would</i> relieve some classes of our
-wage-earners,” says Bakunin, “but
-would burden others, and why harass
-them, if we can undoubtedly find ways
-to get along without direct taxation?”</p>
-
-<p>Why make land the scapegoat of a
-sin that might be avoided?</p>
-
-<p>In 1849 the Russian Government got
-its clutches on the bold reformer, and
-silenced him by the usual argument of
-despots. The voice that had entranced
-mass-meetings in a hundred cities of
-southern and western Europe was
-stifled in the catacombs of Schlüsselburg.</p>
-
-<p>But Time, the All-Avenger, has made
-the martyr’s name a rallying cry of
-East-European reformers, and America
-should honor the memory of Mikal
-Bakunin as that of a hero and pioneer
-of reform—a man whose marvelous
-gift of intuition had recognized all the
-ideals of Populism, all its principles
-and promises, but who succumbed to
-the superhuman task of effecting its
-progress under the handicap of a monarchical
-government.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h2><i>Naturally</i></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Knicker</span>—There goes a man who would rather fight than eat.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bocker</span>—Soldier?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Knicker</span>—No, dyspeptic.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="LUCIANNAS_KEEP">
-<img src="images/heading4.jpg" width="700" height="175" alt="" />
-<h2>LUCIANNA’S KEEP<br />
-<span class="smaller">BY ELLIOT WALKER.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“I’ve got twenty dollars for the
-rent an’ fifteen more for what’s
-likely to come up,” observed
-Enos Matchett cheerfully, as he put
-down his teacup. “There’s nothin’
-to worry about this first of month,
-anyhow. Eh, Martha?”</p>
-
-<p>His wife fingered her napkin in a nervous
-way, usual to her when the appalling
-call of their landlord was due, not to
-mention others who fished from pockets
-soiled packages of rubber-banded slips
-to draw out tentatively and none too
-expectantly those alarming accounts
-marked at their tops with the discredited
-name of Enos Matchett.</p>
-
-<p>Poor Martha. The “Oh! Yes. I’ll
-speak to my husband about it,” and
-the hundred other subterfuges were
-growing gaunt with repetition. She had
-a regular repertory of excuses to apply
-as conditions demanded. For a first
-presentation a fixed and nonchalant
-smile and a “come ’round next
-month,” caused quick riddance of
-the unwelcome. “Next month,” it
-was, “I declare, I guess Mr. Matchett
-overlooked that little bill. Perhaps,
-you’d better leave it so he’ll
-keep it in mind.”</p>
-
-<p>From then on, rang the changes of
-high prices, hard times and honest intentions
-until at last came the sharp,
-bullying threat of the collection lawyer
-and the crawling process of paying
-by small installments.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes she tore up the bills,
-sometimes they went into the fire,
-never, until her last bridge had collapsed,
-did she worry Enos.</p>
-
-<p>He worked, hopefully, from morning
-to night at odd jobs and occasional bits
-of carpentry. A fortunate month might
-fatten their attenuated exchequer to a
-bulge of sixty dollars, but the months
-were not all fortunate and there was
-seldom a penny came in that remained
-over a fortnight. To meet the rent
-was imperative. That had to be met.
-For the rest—wits, hopes, and a somewhat
-shattered faith in the Lord’s
-providence.</p>
-
-<p>However, when the Lord endowed
-average femininity with a high scorn of
-bills and an abnormal intelligence in
-the evasion of payment much was done
-for man.</p>
-
-<p>Enos, undoubtedly, would have become
-as flighty and irresponsible as was
-Lucianna, upstairs, had he been obliged
-to face the shafts which his worried better
-half so successfully foiled to the last
-ditch.</p>
-
-<p>Now, Martha gazed across the table
-at him, with the smile of one temporarily
-relieved from anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s good,” she answered. “It’s
-queer how we’ve kep’ along.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t it?” responded Mr. Matchett.
-“I was consid’rable pestered ten days
-ago as to how we’d come out this month,
-but Miss Joslyn paid me, an’ I had a
-week steady on Doctor Bullen’s fence.
-No one in particular a-hurryin’ us jest
-now, I s’pose?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t think of any special tormentor,”
-returned Martha, biting her thin
-lips. Indeed, no obvious projection in
-the wall of torment occurred to her
-at the moment. Their creditors were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-“lined up,” in equal aggression. One
-was as bad as another.</p>
-
-<p>Enos tugged at his gray mustache—a
-sparse adornment, getting white at the
-ends.</p>
-
-<p>“Guess we’ll blow a dollar on something
-for Lucianna then,” he ventured
-generously.</p>
-
-<p>“Guess not!” exclaimed Martha, with
-decision. “The child’s got toys enough.
-Feedin’ her is more to the point. I
-never see such an appetite. She’s
-happy. Let her alone and put your
-money where ’twill be appreciated.”</p>
-
-<p>Lucianna, now a child supposed to
-have attained twenty-five years, and a
-very queer one at that, had employed
-most of her day in making faces at such
-of the passers who did not meet her approval,
-and smiling at those who did.
-These courtesies were accentuated by
-taps on the window panes.</p>
-
-<p>The poor harmless creature could be
-allowed little liberty as she ran away
-and sat on doorsteps, proclaiming herself
-a burglar of kittens. Given a
-kitten, or stealing one, Lucianna would
-go home delighted.</p>
-
-<p>The influx of kittens became too trying.
-Enos, a soft-hearted man, would
-do no murder. Martha, steeled to crime
-through desperation, had disposed of
-several, really unfit to exist, and found
-homes for more. Lucianna forgot them
-over night. Therefore, it had lately become
-necessary to confine her to her
-room, where she was allowed one kitten
-during the day.</p>
-
-<p>This satisfied Lucianna completely.
-Besides, she possessed six dolls, toys galore,
-and when these joys palled there
-was the window.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever possessed the Matchetts to
-make a home for the unfortunate girl
-was a mystery to their acquaintances, as
-she was no kin. Years before, when
-life was younger and brighter, with Enos
-at a paying job, and Martha ambitious
-for a servant yet unable to afford a regular
-domestic, Lucianna, then a pretty
-child of about thirteen, had appeared
-and asked for something to eat.</p>
-
-<p>She was well grown and seemed
-strong, although exhausted by walking
-and hunger.</p>
-
-<p>Martha took her in, and an idea
-seized the good woman, after certain
-questions had been put and answered.</p>
-
-<p>It was their plain duty to keep this
-little stranger until somebody claimed
-her, and in the event of no one turning
-up for the waif, why not train her for
-service?</p>
-
-<p>Lucianna was reticent about her past
-career. Enos thought she lied. Martha
-said she was too young to remember.
-It seemed a case of no mother, a
-father who had gone away leaving her
-with unkind people who did not love
-her.</p>
-
-<p>In corroboration of this last statement
-Lucianna exposed a plump arm
-decorated with small bruises of various
-ages and colors.</p>
-
-<p>“Pinches,” she explained, snuffling.
-This settled Enos, who went down cellar
-and split more kindlings than he had
-ever done at one bout.</p>
-
-<p>When he came up, perspiring and
-still glaring, Lucianna had been fed and
-put to bed. Martha was washing the
-soiled socks, and singing thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Seems nice to have a child in the
-house,” she remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll keep her along,” returned
-Mr. Matchett. “Good little thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“As gold,” affirmed his wife.</p>
-
-<p>This was the advent of Lucianna.
-Beyond the fact of her surname being
-Crowson, her clothes plain, her eyes
-blue, her light hair cut short, and that
-she bore marks of abuse, the worthy
-couple knew nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Neither did they go out of their way
-for information. Lucianna proved affectionate,
-willing and useful, with a
-passion for cats.</p>
-
-<p>In a year she had become almost as
-their own. Enos worshiped her. Martha
-did, too, but made Lucianna work,
-as befitted her position as helper.</p>
-
-<p>Another year and the girl developed
-peculiarities that worried them. She
-eyed them shyly. She grimaced at
-Enos most impertinently when he trod
-on her cat’s tail. Martha spanked
-her. Lucianna laughed.</p>
-
-<p>A few months more and she became
-erratic, irresponsible and useless, but
-always good natured. As Enos expressed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
-it, “Lucianna had gone back to
-bein’ a kid.”</p>
-
-<p>Some money went for medical advice.
-There was but one opinion. “Weak-minded.
-The patient might grow
-worse, but hardly probable if kindly
-treated. With great care under expert
-treatment she might improve. Such
-cases were outside the regular practice.
-Would recommend a sanitarium, or an
-asylum. Of course, if they wished to
-have her remain at home, no objection
-could be raised; but a burden—a
-burden.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll keep her along,” announced
-Enos. “We’ve got hands and hearts
-yet, hain’t we?”</p>
-
-<p>“God forgive me for spankin’ her,”
-wept Martha. “The poor thing
-couldn’t help her actions, an’ she never
-held it against me. Jest laughed, she
-did, takin’ it all in good part.”</p>
-
-<p>“She sha’n’t go to no asylum,” cried
-Mr. Matchett, rising to the occasion.
-“Sanitariums an’ expert doctors ain’t
-for our pockets. She come to us for
-carin’, growed to be our little girl, an’
-by Josh! Lucianna will be kep’ along.”</p>
-
-<p>She was; and always reported to be
-“about the same.”</p>
-
-<p>Ten years of it—ten long, trying,
-down-hill years, but neither Enos Matchett
-nor his wife had ever wavered in
-loyalty or love to their charge. Indeed,
-the worse things got, the more they
-thought of Lucianna.</p>
-
-<p>Her daily airing (on the wiry arm of
-Martha), her whims, her playthings,
-were all attended to, religiously.</p>
-
-<p>If, as frequently happened, she made
-a bright remark, her devoted keepers
-nodded sagely, saying, “She’s gettin’
-better.”</p>
-
-<p>As for the expense, whatever their
-thoughts in secret, both kept a guarded
-silence. Only this evening had Martha
-for the first time deprecated the failing
-of Enos to “blow a dollar for Lucianna.”</p>
-
-<p>He stared at her, curiously, and
-grunted.</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh!” said he, recklessly. “Got
-fifteen ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>Martha’s tongue uncurbed at this unseemly
-boast. Her long nose twitched.</p>
-
-<p>“Ahead!” she snorted. “You stay
-in my place tomorrow, Enos Matchett.
-You mind the door for one mornin’
-and see how much you’re <i>ahead</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” returned Enos, his placid
-features animating resentfully. “I
-can spare the time till noon. No need
-of snappin’ at me as I see. No sense in
-deprivin’ Lucianna of a little pleasure,
-neither. There’s nobody pressin’ us
-hard—said so yourself. What’s a dollar,
-anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>Alas! to the contempt of Mr. Matchett
-for the single dollar was due much
-of their financial tribulation.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going up to visit with the girl,”
-he added. “<i>She</i> won’t be snappy.”</p>
-
-<p>This parting thrust rankled in Martha’s
-bosom, and the supper table was
-cleared with rather unnecessary clatter.
-The improvident, easy-going Enos
-always let her have her own way. He
-turned over his earnings to her more
-careful hands, spending very little on
-himself, and trusted implicitly to wifely
-wisdom in all household matters. A
-real quarrel between them had never
-occurred.</p>
-
-<p>Responsibility, shifted from his fat
-shoulders to her narrow ones, was both
-agreeable and natural to Enos. His
-make-up was that of the man who
-never “troubled trouble,” until cornered.
-Then he became actually belligerent
-and invited war. Up to this
-rare point Mr. Matchett bluffed good-humoredly.</p>
-
-<p>When assailed by creditors on the
-street he was invariably in a hurry to
-perform some important and paying
-job—a fictitious pleasantry.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t bother about that now,” he
-would grin. “Drop ’round to the
-house an’ see Mis’ Matchett. She
-’tends to the finances, an’ if she hasn’t
-spent all I give her lately, you’ll get
-something.”</p>
-
-<p>This ingenious disposition of duns
-was not meant to be unkind.</p>
-
-<p>“Martha’ll fix him,” Enos would
-chuckle, trotting along. “She don’t
-mind.”</p>
-
-<p>So the brunt fell on Martha, and it
-was patiently borne.</p>
-
-<p>But nerves grow irritable under constant
-pricking until they are ready to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-snap. Martha did mind. Of late she
-had felt like hiding whenever the door-bell
-rang. It took a long breath, a determined
-effort, a clutch at her quick
-beating heart for an appearance of unconcern,
-and her poor brain quivered
-with apprehension at its dearth of
-successful excuses.</p>
-
-<p>“Let him have a turn,” she muttered,
-wiping the dishes. “The rent collector
-won’t be ’round ’till afternoon, but
-there’s a-plenty of others likely to show
-up. His fifteen dollars will get melted
-fast enough. <i>I</i> could sprinkle it right,
-but he don’t know how. The first
-feller will get it all, an’ then——”</p>
-
-<p>Martha paused to laugh, dismally.
-There was another side. How about
-future calls from those turned down
-by Enos? He might lose his temper.
-All the worse for her.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m most hopin’ nobody’ll come,”
-she faltered. “I ain’t so sure of gettin’
-the best of this.”</p>
-
-<p>However, the following morning saw
-her marching off smilingly, with Lucianna
-in high feather at the prospect of
-a long stroll.</p>
-
-<p>Enos regarded their departure with
-complacence, expecting an undisturbed
-session. At the most, some small bill
-might be presented. He knew just
-how he would pay it; carelessly, with a
-jaunty, indifferent air, as if the amount
-was a trifle. This was his unvarying
-attitude of settlement—when he settled.</p>
-
-<p>With newspapers and a pipe, it would
-be quite a holiday. He established
-himself comfortably, soon forgetting
-indebtedness in perusing the details of
-late murders.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after nine o’clock came a ring
-of the bell—a feeble peal—Enos went
-to the door.</p>
-
-<p>The caller was a stranger to him,—a
-dapper, gentlemanly man whose pleasant
-face bore an embarrassed expression.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I wish to see Mrs. Matchett,” he
-began.</p>
-
-<p>“Out for a walk,” said Enos, a bit
-pompously. “Any message? I’m Mr.
-Matchett.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” the man pursed his lips and
-hesitated. “I—I wanted to speak with
-your wife about an account. Something
-of her own, you know—er—wearing
-apparel. If I could get the money
-today it would be a great convenience.”</p>
-
-<p>Enos laughed indulgently.</p>
-
-<p>“Clothes, eh? You needn’t be modest
-about that. I don’t rec’lect her
-havin’ any new ones for years, but it’s
-all right, I guess. I’m payin’ the bills.
-Trot it out an’ I’ll settle right now an’
-glad to.”</p>
-
-<p>The man looked relieved. “If it’s
-perfectly convenient?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Perfectly,” puffed Enos. “I’ve got
-the stuff ready for any little thing that
-may come up.”</p>
-
-<p>He unfolded the paper and glanced
-at the total under a short list of items.
-It was just thirty-five dollars.</p>
-
-<p>Matchett gazed at the figures, too
-appalled to change countenance beyond
-a drop of the jaw.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly, he pulled out his precious
-roll, and counted the money into the
-other’s hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Receipt that bill!” he grunted.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m ever so much obliged,” said the
-man glibly, his eyes on the paper as he
-signed the long name of a well known
-dry goods house, “and I wish you
-would explain to Mrs. Matchett.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will,” returned Enos shortly.</p>
-
-<p>“You see, we’ve sold out recently,”
-pursued his caller. “We are collecting
-all old accounts. This, as you perceive,
-is very old. We have never bothered
-Mrs. Matchett. I hated to come, really
-I did, but the present conditions made
-it imperative. Before your wife purchased
-the goods, she went to Mr. Morley—head
-of the old firm, you know, and
-told him so honestly that she couldn’t
-tell when she would be able to pay,
-and her reasons for buying, that it quite
-tickled the old gentleman. He came to
-me—I have charge of the dress goods
-department—Parker is my name.</p>
-
-<p>“Says he, ‘Parker, wait on this lady
-and I’ll speak to the bookkeeper as to
-the bill.’ He gave orders to keep it
-back, so it’s never been presented.
-Very unusual and unbusinesslike, of
-course, but Mr. Morley had peculiarities.
-Pity he died. Our new head is a very<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span>
-different sort. Very strict. So I felt
-it was my place to see Mrs. Matchett,
-as I sold her the goods and she would
-remember. Ladies are apt to forget
-their little bills if not reminded. I
-think your wife will remember.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think so,” said Enos. “Well, the
-thing’s paid and that’s all.” His voice
-was steady, but deeper than usual.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all. Yes, sir. Sorry to
-trouble you, and very many thanks.
-I’m much relieved to find it was no inconvenience.
-So many people complain
-of hard times. Good day.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Parker skipped down the steps.
-Mr. Matchett locked the door.</p>
-
-<p>He went to the most remote room in
-the house and sat for two hours in a
-state of apathetic despair, broken only
-by short bursts of wrath. Oh, Martha
-should long recollect this day!
-Several times the bell rang insistently,
-but Enos paid no heed.</p>
-
-<p>At last he settled on a plan of action
-and went wearily down to unlock the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>The two women came in, shortly before
-noon. In the sunshine and freedom,
-Martha had cast care to the winds.
-Her eyes were bright. In her thin
-cheeks played a faint color. Lucianna
-had behaved beautifully. Now, she
-giggled at sight of Enos, and clamored
-for dinner.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll have some soon,” said Martha,
-stirring about. “Had a quiet morning,
-husband?” mischievously.</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t seen a bill against me,” replied
-Mr. Matchett, calmly. “I’ve set
-still till I’ll be glad to get into the air.
-Let’s eat, an’ I’ll be startin’.”</p>
-
-<p>The eye-brows of his wife lifted in
-wonder. After all, she was glad of the
-news. It would have been too bad to
-have Enos upset.</p>
-
-<p>He ate in silence while she chatted
-volubly of her outing, not remarking
-his lack of attention.</p>
-
-<p>“Through?” he asked, as Martha
-rolled her napkin and sat back.</p>
-
-<p>“All through,” she smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, <i>I</i> ain’t,” said the man, leaning
-forward, his eyes stern and reproachful.
-“Nor you, neither. We’ve
-a bit of dessert to chew on, Martha
-Matchett. I told you I hadn’t seen a
-bill against <i>me</i>. I’ve seen one against
-you, an’ I’ve paid it! Yes, marm.
-Paid it! Here!” he thrust the paper
-at her.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear God!” moaned the woman,
-after a lightning glimpse. “It’s come
-on to me at last. Oh! Enos, husband,
-don’t look so at me. It was for Cousin
-Minna’s weddin’—four years ago;—I
-wanted to go. I didn’t have no dress,
-nor fixin’s. You was away. I went
-to Mr. Morley’s store an’ had ’em
-charged. He said I could pay when I
-had the money. I’ve never had it.
-The dress I’ve never worn since. I—I
-hid it away till I could pay for it, Enos—oh,
-dear, oh, dear.”</p>
-
-<p>She sobbed, piteously, staring wildly
-at him through her tears.</p>
-
-<p>“An’—you—paid—it,” came her
-horrified gasps. “Every—cent—we
-had.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can attend to the rent, Martha,”
-the voice of Enos was unmoved
-as he arose. “I’m goin’ to rake
-lawns.”</p>
-
-<p>He went out without another word
-or look, leaving her weeping and rocking
-to and fro.</p>
-
-<p>From the outside he gazed at the
-house. It was a pretty cottage of a
-cheap kind. They had lived there for
-three years, and Martha’s vines had
-grown. Her flower bed, so carefully
-tended, how pretty it was! On the opposite
-side of the road lay a great vacant
-lot—a pasture on the city outskirts.
-Trees were there—and cows. In summer,
-children played among the grasses.
-In winter, they coasted. It was just
-the place for Lucianna—for Martha—for
-Enos, too.</p>
-
-<p>“Got to leave it,” groaned the man.
-“No use talkin’. It’s pay or get out.
-Plenty wants it—and old Craddock
-won’t wait again. Third time we’ll
-have moved. Confound Minna’s weddin’
-an’ a deceivin’ woman. If I’d
-known it—oh! if I only had—but I
-said I’d pay an’ I did. Now, <i>let</i> her
-do some payin’.”</p>
-
-<p>Lucianna tapped on the window and
-beamed at him. His answering smile
-was a ghastly farce. Tears were on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
-the round cheeks of Enos as he hurried
-away. Last night he had been so confident
-and happy. He stumbled, walking
-on.</p>
-
-<p>No suspicious moisture showed on
-Martha’s cheeks, as she marched over
-her doorsill twenty minutes later.
-Her tears had dried. A hard determination
-glittered in the black eyes.
-Under her hastily arranged bonnet,
-Mrs. Matchett’s face, strained and set,
-was tense with resolve.</p>
-
-<p>Lucianna did not witness her departure,
-else there would have been
-wailing and much pounding on the
-window. Fortunately the girl had
-fallen asleep. Only on occasions of
-great moment was she left alone.
-This was one of them.</p>
-
-<p>Martha hastened along.</p>
-
-<p>The old sign of “Morley, Cowperthwait,
-Rensellaer and Company” still
-remained over the entrance of the great
-department store—but the kindly old
-founder was gone.</p>
-
-<p>Martha knew that—she had read of
-his death, and the passage of the business
-into new hands. But that old
-bill wouldn’t be a worry. She had a
-whole string of excuses and explanations
-for the lingering liquidation of her
-debt in the case of the resurrection of
-this buried but haunting ghost. Now,
-Enos had “gone and paid it,” to the
-ruin of them all.</p>
-
-<p>Through the throng she pushed and
-elbowed. How changed everything
-was. How busy and big. Martha had
-not entered that growing emporium
-since the date of her reckless purchase.</p>
-
-<p>For a second her heart failed at the
-enormity of her mission. Then she
-clenched her teeth and grabbed a passing
-bundle boy by the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Say!” she exclaimed, hoarsely. “I
-want to see the head of the firm, the
-man who is attendin’ to Mr. Morley’s
-work. Where is he?”</p>
-
-<p>The startled lad pulled away, blinked
-and grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“Guess not,” he retorted. “He’ll
-take yer skelp off. He won’t talk to
-nobody this time o’ day.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s important, I tell you,” cried
-the woman, fiercely. “It’s a money
-matter an’ I <i>will</i> see him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gwan ter trouble, then!” said the
-boy, pointing a mischievous finger at
-a closed door marked “No admittance.”
-“I’ll call de ambulance. He
-ain’t no Mr. Morley. I see you come
-out a flyin’ in jest two seconds.”</p>
-
-<p>But Martha was past him, her grasp
-on the knob, and the door closed behind
-her as he stared.</p>
-
-<p>“Here! Here!” ejaculated a stout,
-bald man, turning impatiently from
-his desk with a twist of his revolving
-chair. “You’ve made a mistake, madam.
-Go right out, please.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t,” said Martha. “I’m here
-on important business—an’ I’ll state
-it before I move one step. You’ve
-taken Mr. Morley’s place. You’re the
-head of things, an’ I’ve come straight
-to you.”</p>
-
-<p>A queer smile crossed the broad face.
-The man took out his watch. “I’ll
-give you just one minute,” he said,
-coolly. “What’s the trouble. Talk
-fast, now.”</p>
-
-<p>Martha talked fast.</p>
-
-<p>“I got thirty-five dollars worth of
-stuff here most four years ago,” she began,
-excitedly. “Mr. Morley said I
-could pay when convenient. Now
-you’ve sent to my house when I was
-out, an’ my husband paid it. I want
-that money back.”</p>
-
-<p>Her listener laughed outright.</p>
-
-<p>“Why! Why!” he coughed. “My
-dear woman, you have a very accommodating
-husband; that’s evident. Four
-years! What were you thinking of?
-Madam, the account should never have
-run so long. You owed it. It’s been
-paid. The transaction is closed. We
-cannot give you back the money.
-What a ridiculous request!”</p>
-
-<p>The woman drew in her breath,
-shudderingly.</p>
-
-<p>“People must settle their obligations,
-you know,” pursued the man
-patting his fat leg. “That is the rule
-of business. If <i>I</i> owed you anything
-I should pay it. If you owe me, you
-have to pay also. Such a demand as
-yours is absurd. Can’t you see that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can see me an’ Enos turned out<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span>
-of our little home.” Martha’s voice
-was stony. “The money for that bill
-of mine was every penny we had. The
-rent’s got to be met before night. My
-husband’s an honest man—too honest
-to have any credit. I can see him
-growin’ old an’ gray in some shanty.
-I can see a poor half-witted girl cryin’
-for the room she loves. These are the
-things I can see. Yes, sir, that’s the
-worst of it. Lucianna won’t understand——”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh!” interrupted the merchant
-sharply. “Who?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lucianna, sir. Not our own daughter,
-but most the same, poor thing.
-We’ve been glad to have her, an’ make
-her a home, an’ never minded the cost.
-She was so little when she came to us
-for shelter, smart an’ bright as anybody
-with her blue eyes an’ yellow hair, winnin’
-us like she was our born baby.
-’Twasn’t her fault she got queer.
-We wouldn’t put the child where she’d
-be abused again, so we kep’ her. Now,
-to root her out from comfort into the
-Lord knows what—I can’t bear to
-think of it. Me an’ Enos might get
-along somehow, but there’s Lucianna.
-I want that money back!”</p>
-
-<p>Martha’s tone became sharp as she
-remembered her errand. Tears had
-blinded her eyes during the rapid explanation,
-quite forgetful for the moment
-of all save the coming deprivations
-of her loved ones.</p>
-
-<p>Now, she winked them away to glare
-at the man in the chair. His ruddy
-face had gone to a dreadful whiteness.
-His hands were working. A strange
-sound came from the thick throat before
-he stammered feebly:</p>
-
-<p>“I—I—lost—a little girl. Her—this—one—do
-you know the last name?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve most forgot—she’s had ours
-for so long.” Martha began to tremble.
-“Let’s see? Yes. Say, it can’t be,
-your name is Crowson? That’s hers,
-Lucianna Crowson.”</p>
-
-<p>“My God!” the stout man sprang
-up. “It is! It is! Everything points
-to her being the same. It must be so.”</p>
-
-<p>He seized Martha’s hands with such
-vehemence that she recoiled with a
-startled, backward step.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t act so crazy!” came her
-alarmed exclamation. “You let go an’
-be careful. The blood’s clean to the
-top of your head. Set down an’
-behave.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! Yes!” cried Crowson, releasing
-her, to pace the small room
-with a broken laugh and a fierce curse.
-“Wait! I’ll be myself in a minute.
-She’s my girl—I tell you. They wrote
-me she was dead—the people I left her
-with—after the child was cured. I’m
-her father, my dear woman. Don’t
-mind me, I’ll pull up directly. Wait!”</p>
-
-<p>Martha shrank against the wall, as he
-laughed wildly and growled imprecations.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he steadied, tightening his
-muscles and breathing deep.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m all right,” said he, huskily.
-“You must excuse this, Mrs.—Mrs.—”</p>
-
-<p>“Matchett,” answered his caller.
-“Certainly! ’Tain’t no wonder you felt
-shook up, if you’re really Lucianna’s
-father.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is no doubt about it;” the
-man sat heavily in his chair. “Listen!
-She was eleven years old when she fell
-off her pony and injured her head. I
-was a comparatively poor man then,
-but I got the best surgeons. For
-months my little one lay in a hospital.
-We had no settled home. My wife died
-long before. Business called me away.
-When I returned Lucianna was pronounced
-cured. At least it was deemed
-safe to place her with some family
-where she would have every care, and
-no excitement. Should the trouble
-recur, an operation would be necessary.</p>
-
-<p>“I found a home for her. Matters
-were arranged. Again I went West.
-Letters reached me regularly for many
-months. All seemed to be going well,
-in fact so satisfactorily that I, immersed
-in the starting of a business, ceased to
-worry. Yes, it must have been two
-years before I stopped my remittances,
-although those crafty letters had grown
-infrequent.</p>
-
-<p>“I wrote the Harpinsons that I
-would be East soon and intended to
-take the child back with me.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I received the shocking news
-of her death. Diphtheria, they said,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span>
-and very sudden. A malignant case,
-and—well—the burial had been at
-night. Everything was done as if she
-belonged to them. As soon as quarantine
-was over they were going to move
-and would inform me of their location.”</p>
-
-<p>Martha stood with her mouth open.</p>
-
-<p>“Did they?” she hissed. “We must
-have had Lucianna for a good while before
-those critters said she was dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Crowson, frowning.
-“They bled me as long as possible. I
-received one more letter, postmarked
-Boston—a few details of no importance,
-but I had no suspicions. Since then,
-my letters have come back stamped,
-‘no such party at address.’”</p>
-
-<p>“But—” broke in Martha.</p>
-
-<p>He held up an appealing hand.</p>
-
-<p>“I know, I know,” he interrupted.
-“I should have gone on at once. Yet
-what could be done? The quarantine—the
-detention from business—the
-added grief. My child was gone. All
-was over. Nothing seemed left to me
-save strenuous work and the making of
-money. I own three stores like this, the
-result of losing Lucianna. Now I have
-found her, I’ll not work so hard.”</p>
-
-<p>“She won’t know you from Adam,”
-said Martha, jealously.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps—in—time,” replied Crowson,
-stroking his forehead. “Thank
-God! I’ve the means to find out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have we got to give up Lucianna?”
-quavered the woman. “If—if it’s for
-her good, I s’pose I could stand it, but
-what will Enos say? She won’t want
-to go, neither.”</p>
-
-<p>The man turned his head suddenly,
-and coughed.</p>
-
-<p>“We will fix everything right,” he
-said, gently. “I’ll take no step without
-your consent. Let’s see! To get
-back to business—” he smiled, whimsically.
-“You mustn’t think a personal
-matter can influence our regulations.
-That bill of yours must be settled.”</p>
-
-<p>Martha jumped. In her excitement
-she had quite forgotten the landlord,
-the house and the gravity of the Matchett
-situation.</p>
-
-<p>Speechless, she drew herself up.
-Could this hard-headed man be so devoid
-of humanity, after what had happened,
-as to refuse her assistance?</p>
-
-<p>“Still,” he went on in his matter-of-fact
-tone, “I’ll give you a little more
-time on it. Till next week, say. Here
-is the money, but say nothing about it.
-Quite against rules, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>He pulled out a wallet and handed
-her four bank notes, three tens and a
-five.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks!” said Martha, counting
-them mechanically. “I s’pose you
-want this;” she held out the receipted
-bill.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes—I must have that.” He
-put it carefully in a pigeon-hole.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m ever so much obliged,” murmured
-the woman, “an’ I’ll try to
-scrape up something by next week. I
-s’pose you’ll be ’round to see Lucianna—an’
-talk with Mr. Matchett.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very soon.” Crowson’s mouth
-trembled at the corners. “How long
-have you had Lucianna?”</p>
-
-<p>“Twelve years come Saturday. Enos
-was sayin’ so night before last. We
-call it her birthday, an’ most always
-give her something. Not this year,
-though. Can’t afford it.”</p>
-
-<p>The merchant figured on a pad.
-“Twelve. Six hundred and twenty-four,”
-he whispered. Then aloud.
-“The Harpinsons charged me ten dollars
-a week for Lucianna’s keep. It
-was none too much.”</p>
-
-<p>“They skinned you,” said Martha,
-adjusting her bonnet. She felt dazed
-and tired; quite bewildered at the prospect
-of losing Lucianna, uneasy regarding
-Enos, yet thankful for the temporary
-financial respite.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got to hurry home,” she announced.
-“There’s nothing more to
-say except that I’ll do my best to settle
-my bill and I’m obliged to you. I’m
-mighty glad for you, sir, but the thought
-of what we’re losing makes me fairly
-sick. It ain’t right to say so, but I
-most wish I hadn’t come.” She turned
-with a choke.</p>
-
-<p>“One moment,” said Crowson. “I
-want your address. What is your full
-name, Mrs. Matchett?”</p>
-
-<p>“Martha.”</p>
-
-<p>“Any middle name?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Hum! Lupkins,” returned Martha
-reluctantly. “We live at 462 Goodland
-Avenue—used to be Squash Street.
-You’ll find us easy enough—good
-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“One thing more. It will take only
-a minute. You have arranged your old
-account. There’s another you seem
-to have overlooked.” He touched a
-button on his desk.</p>
-
-<p>“There ain’t another!” declared Martha,
-defiantly. “I don’t owe a cent here
-besides this.”</p>
-
-<p>The door opened quickly. A young
-man bustled in.</p>
-
-<p>“Hinkley,” ordered Mr. Crowson, and
-his eyes twinkled, “draw a check at once
-to the order of Martha L. Matchett for
-six thousand two hundred and forty
-dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>When Enos crawled into supper, he
-was a weary, conscience-smitten person.
-His anger had dissipated. What should
-come he knew not, but Martha’s feelings
-must be considered, first of all. He pictured
-her in the depths of despair—forlorn,
-distracted, possibly “packing.”</p>
-
-<p>An appetizing odor filled the house.
-Enos sniffed.</p>
-
-<p>“Beefsteak an’ onions an’ coffee,”
-he commented, gratefully. “Jest my
-likin’s. She wants to make up. Where
-did she get the meat?”</p>
-
-<p>Drawing his chair to the table, Mr.
-Matchett gazed at his spouse with a dismayed
-visage.</p>
-
-<p>Surely there was something wrong
-here. The display of luxuries, Martha’s
-unnaturally bright eyes, her compressed
-lips, the new black dress, her air of
-superiority.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” said Martha.
-“Pitch in. I’ve got a nice supper an’
-dressed up to show you how smart I can
-be under afflictions.”</p>
-
-<p>Enos took a mouthful.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I guess Craddock didn’t come
-for the rent,” he essayed. “Never
-knew him to skip us before.”</p>
-
-<p>“He come,” replied Martha, loftily.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ you—” the man’s fork shook
-against his plate.</p>
-
-<p>“Paid him, of course,” said Martha,
-airily. “You told me to attend
-to it.”</p>
-
-<p>Her husband half rose from his seat.
-“You ain’t right, my dear,” he said,
-soothingly—“what’s affected you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Set down!” commanded the woman,
-laughing. “We’ve found a friend, an’
-our girl’s found a father. It’s all straight,
-Enos. In case you want a bit of spendin’
-money, I’ve endorsed this over to you.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Matchett did sit down. His countenance
-underwent many changes as he
-fingered the check. “Wh—what’s it
-for?” he stuttered.</p>
-
-<p>“Lucianna’s keep,” said Martha.</p>
-
-<p>On the pleasant days, when the roads
-are fine, an automobile stops before the
-Matchett’s door. Presently it rolls
-slowly away. Martha sits very erect by
-the side of a golden-haired companion,
-and an Angora kitten nestles between
-them. There is a good deal of laughing
-and talking, and sometimes passers
-stare, but no one in the big car minds.
-The stout man in front with the chauffeur
-turns, smiling at the women.</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty distressing for us all, the
-removal of that lesion,” he says, “but
-she’s reading little books, now.”</p>
-
-<p>And when Enos asks a question with
-his eyes, upon Martha’s return from
-these trips, he gets the same old words:
-“She’s gettin’ better.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/footer5.jpg" width="500" height="150" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Who_Pays_the_Taxes"><i>Who Pays the Taxes?</i><br />
-<span class="smaller">BY WILLIAM H. TILTON</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The residents of a small New Jersey
-village were recently called together
-for the purpose of considering
-the advisability of incorporating
-the village into a borough; and the Philadelphia
-newspapers reported that an
-application for incorporation had been
-signed by a large number of “taxpayers
-and citizens.” What is meant
-by this dividing of the people into two
-distinct classes? This question becomes
-of more than passing importance
-in view of the fact that the case cited
-is not an isolated one. For instance,
-during the political campaign of 1905,
-in New York City, a prominent newspaper
-spoke editorially of the candidacy
-of William R. Hearst for Mayor
-on a municipal ownership platform as
-an “appeal to the <i>untaxed</i> and an attack
-upon the <i>taxpayers</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The Secretary of the National Reciprocity
-League, in an address at
-Chicago, is reported to have said that
-“Municipal ownership and operation
-of street railways had become a craze;
-that people who do <i>not pay</i> taxes are
-the most enthusiastic supporters of the
-craze, as those who <i>pay</i> taxes are opposed
-to the idea.”</p>
-
-<p>The late Charles T. Yerkes, in reference
-to the election of Judge Dunne
-as Mayor of Chicago on a municipal
-ownership platform, said: “The city
-will run heavily in debt. Will the poor
-man suffer? No; because the poor
-man does not pay taxes. Men with
-property pay taxes; these will suffer.”
-Mr. Yerkes did not say just what kind
-of <i>property</i> was meant; but as the returns
-of personal property in Chicago
-are said to be less today than they
-were twenty years ago (although the
-city is three times as large, with six
-times the wealth), it is evident that the
-owners of that kind of property—stock-owners
-of that kind of property—stocks,
-bonds, mortgages, paintings,
-jewelry, silver services, etc.—are not
-going to suffer to any great extent if
-they can help it. Then it must be the
-real estate owner, again, who is expected
-to do the suffering, because of
-the increase of taxes, should there be
-any such increase.</p>
-
-<p>Day after day we read in the newspapers
-communications in reference
-to public questions which are signed
-“Taxpayer,” or “Property Owner,” as
-if that fact should give more weight or
-influence to their opinions or suggestions.
-Others go still further. A
-Pittsburg preacher in a recent sermon
-denounced universal suffrage, saying,
-“Only property owners should vote and
-all others should be disfranchised.”
-Numerous other instances could be
-cited which tend to show a growing
-tendency to consider the real estate
-owner as the only person who pays
-taxes.</p>
-
-<p>Now the great majority of our people
-have probably not looked upon these
-signs of the times with any apprehension
-as yet; but “great oaks from little
-acorns grow,” and this increasing disregard
-for the rights of men, as men,
-this creating of class distinctions with a
-tax-bill as a line of demarcation, on the
-theory that one small class pays all the
-taxes and is, therefore, entitled to
-rights and privileges that are denied to
-others, is dangerous and contrary to
-all principles of Democracy.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to the inherent defects of
-human nature, no doubt there will
-always be those among us who will
-expect and demand more than they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span>
-are entitled to, but the average American
-is satisfied with a square deal.
-When deprived of what he considers
-his just rights, however, he is, like most
-other people, inclined to become indifferent
-to the rights of others. Sooner
-or later he helps to swell the large army
-of the discontented; and history
-teaches that discontent is not only the
-mother of progress, but the mother of
-trouble. “On the contentment of the
-poor rests the safety of the rich.”</p>
-
-<p>It is not intended to discuss in this
-article the justice or injustice of any
-particular tax, but simply to consider
-the question of taxes—how they are
-paid and who pays them—in the hope
-that we may thereby the more intelligently
-render unto Cæsar the things
-that are Cæsar’s.</p>
-
-<p>Let us consider first the tax on real
-estate, one of the most important illustrations
-of the so-called “direct” taxation
-which Mill has defined as “that
-which is demanded from the very
-person who, it is intended or desired,
-should pay it.” Now it is, of course,
-true that this tax is levied against the
-property and the tax-bill is rendered
-in the name of the nominal owner, who
-is, naturally, expected to pay it; but
-whence comes the money with which
-he discharges this debt against his
-property? If the premises are rented
-or leased, are not the taxes, insurance,
-cost of repairs, interest on investment,
-etc., all added to the rental which is
-asked of and paid by the tenant?
-There are leases drawn today which
-contain a clause providing “that any
-increase in the taxes shall be added to
-the rental.” And yet, during the late
-struggle in Philadelphia over the attempted
-lease of the gas works to a
-private corporation for seventy-five
-years, a gentleman appeared before
-the committee of councils on behalf,
-as he said, of the taxpayers <i>and</i> rent-payers.</p>
-
-<p>During the passage of the mortgage
-bill through the 1905 session of the
-New York Legislature, a member of the
-committee appointed by the real-estate
-owners to oppose the measure said:
-“The result, should the bill pass, will
-be for the real-estate owners to raise
-the rents. It is the public who will
-have to bear the burden, not the real-estate
-owners.” So we appear to have
-very relevant testimony to the effect
-that the man who receives the tax-bill,
-the man “on whom the tax is levied
-and who is expected to pay it” really
-acts as an agent, collecting the tax from
-his tenant and passing it on to the authorities.
-Is the tenant then a <i>taxpayer</i>
-or a <i>citizen</i>? As more than
-eighty per cent. of the people of the
-United States occupy rented houses,
-the sooner this question is satisfactorily
-answered and each of us understands
-his own individual responsibility, the
-better for all concerned.</p>
-
-<p>Would not the rent-payer hesitate
-to cast his ballot for corrupt municipal
-government—with its accompanying
-reckless and dishonest expenditures
-of the public money—would he not
-hesitate to strike or riot, if he knew that
-the expenses (the teamsters’ strike
-in Chicago, in 1905, is said to have cost
-the city $100,000 a month for special
-policemen) and losses would eventually
-have to be paid by increased taxes
-<i>added to his rent</i>?</p>
-
-<p>The United States Steel Company
-is said to have done much to eliminate
-strikes at its different plants by selling
-a portion of the capital stock of the
-company to its employes. Every man
-who owns even one share now feels
-that he is a part of the organization,
-that its interests are his interests, its
-losses his losses; and he is not inclined
-to do anything that will injuriously
-affect himself. When property owners
-understand and admit it, and rent-payers
-realize that they are a part of the
-municipal corporation, of the state and
-of the republic, that the public interests
-are their interests, the public losses
-their losses, that we must all rise or fall
-together, a great deal will have been
-accomplished toward the creation of
-better feeling and a consequent improvement
-in existing conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Adam Smith says of taxation that
-“the subjects of every state ought to
-contribute toward the support of the
-Government as nearly as possible in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
-proportion to their respective abilities;
-that is, in proportion to the revenue
-which they respectively enjoy under
-the protection of the states.”</p>
-
-<p>Montesquieu defined taxation as
-“that portion of a person’s property
-which one contributes to the state in
-return for protection in the enjoyment
-of the balance.”</p>
-
-<p>Both these eminent authorities look
-upon the payment of taxes as a duty
-which the citizen owes to the state in
-return for something which he receives
-from the state; but neither says in just
-what manner that duty must be performed,
-and there are undoubtedly
-numerous ways in which the obligation
-of the citizen may be discharged.</p>
-
-<p>A very important phase of the tax
-question to be considered here (owing
-to its being the source of almost the
-entire income of the United States
-Government) is what is known as “indirect”
-taxation, or the tax on commodities,
-processes, etc. This is more
-easily collected than a direct tax, because
-the consumer hardly realizes
-that he is being taxed when paying for
-articles which he may use his own
-discretion about purchasing; but it
-bears most heavily upon the poor, as
-only articles in general use will yield the
-necessary revenue.</p>
-
-<p>For instance, the tariff on imports,
-for the fiscal year ending 1905, produced
-more than $260,000,000. This
-enormous amount was, of course, paid
-at the custom house by the importer
-of the goods, but it was then added to
-the cost of the goods and finally paid
-by the consumer. This tax is great
-or small, depending entirely upon the
-necessities or desires of the people.</p>
-
-<p>The higher the social and economic
-development of a people, the greater
-will be the burden of this tariff tax; as
-what were once considered luxuries
-eventually become necessaries of life,
-and a larger proportion of income is
-consequently expended for food, wearing
-apparel, household goods, etc.
-Under such circumstances, a man who
-is in receipt of a fair-sized income
-(even though possessing little or no
-taxable property), if he buys freely for
-the wants of himself and his family,
-may contribute more toward the support
-of the Government than his
-wealthy landlord, who buys sparingly,
-swears off his personal taxes, and collects
-his real estate taxes from his
-tenants.</p>
-
-<p>The internal revenue tax on spirits,
-fermented liquors and tobacco produced
-in 1905 about $230,000,000,
-which, while also paid primarily by the
-manufacturer or distiller, is then added
-to the cost of production and included
-in the selling price, which is paid, of
-course, by the consumer. Not only
-the man who smokes or drinks, but
-everyone who uses spirits in the manufactures
-or arts, in patent medicines
-or drugstore prescriptions (many of
-which contain large quantities of
-liquor), is contributing a share of this
-tax. Oleomargarine produced during
-the same period over $600,000, and
-playing cards about $425,000.</p>
-
-<p>Another very important source of
-income, levied in times of emergency,
-as during the war with Spain, is the
-stamp tax, which produces millions of
-dollars. The man with a small bank
-account pays as much for a stamp
-when issuing a check for one dollar, as
-does the man who issues a check for
-$100,000 or more; and each pays the
-same when purchasing an article of
-manufacture which is sold under a
-stamp.</p>
-
-<p>Again, we should not overlook such
-items as license fees, financial, mercantile
-and franchise taxes, which, while
-levied by the city, state or national
-governments upon some particular
-person, firm or corporation, are really
-added to the cost of production or
-operation and ultimately paid by the
-general public. For instance, during
-the political campaign of 1904 in New
-Jersey, when equal taxation of railroad
-property was the burning issue, the Republican
-candidate for governor, in a
-speech at Trenton, stated: “No matter
-how high the tax on railroad property
-is made, the people who pay the
-freight rates and passenger fares will,
-in the end, pay it.” As a railroad director,
-he undoubtedly knew whereof<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span>
-he spoke. Like the salesman’s expense
-account—which included an
-overcoat, although it didn’t show—the
-freight and passenger rates also include
-the franchise taxes, which tend to increase
-the cost of everything we eat,
-everything we wear, every article of
-use or adornment in the home, every
-portion of the material required in
-building the house, which ultimately
-has its effect on the rent the tenant
-must pay. In the light of these facts
-it would seem that, instead of there
-being question as to “who pays the
-taxes,” the problem is to discover the
-man who does not pay taxes in some
-form.</p>
-
-<p>Again, there are thousands of Americans
-who do not own one dollar’s
-worth of real estate, and many of them
-very few household goods, but who
-have a birthright in this free land by
-reason of descent from the heroes who
-pledged their lives, their fortunes, and
-their sacred honor for the liberties we
-now enjoy; who fought and bled and
-died for the principle of equal rights,
-no taxation without representation,
-and who established upon this continent
-a “government of the people, by
-the people, for the people.”</p>
-
-<p>And the men of ’61! Have they not
-as much right to a voice and vote in the
-affairs of the nation as those who remained
-at home and laid the foundations
-of a fortune during that critical
-period? Had the soldier remained at
-home, perhaps he too might now be a
-heavy taxpayer, or tax-dodger. But
-he answered the nation’s call in the
-hour of need, he sacrificed his opportunities
-and offered his life upon the
-altar of his country. And, if he escaped
-with his life, he returned home,
-after years of privation, suffering and
-hardship, probably ruined in health
-or crippled for life, compelled to make a
-new start. Has he not discharged his
-obligation to his country?</p>
-
-<p>Who are the men who would rob an
-American of his birthright, who insist
-that none but property owners should
-vote or hold office while all others—the
-payers of rents, of the tariff, of the internal
-revenue, of franchise and stamp
-taxes, etc.—should be disfranchised?
-Can they show a better title than the
-men, or their descendants, who do the
-work in time of peace and the fighting
-in time of war, but who may not have
-been able to secure any real property—honestly
-or otherwise?</p>
-
-<p>The Constitution of the United
-States provides that no man shall be
-deprived of his right to vote on account
-of race, color or previous condition of
-servitude. What right have we to
-attempt to deprive any man of that
-privilege because he does not own
-property and pay “direct” taxes?</p>
-
-<p>Mettius Curtius said that “Rome’s
-best wealth was her patriotism.” Yet
-that patriotism was deadened and
-destroyed by privilege and class distinction,
-and Rome fell. Patriotism
-is unquestionably the best wealth of
-any nation; but it cannot be aroused
-or fostered in a republic by dividing the
-people into classes, the rulers and the
-ruled, on the basis of ownership of
-property.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Ill fares the land, to hastening ills a prey,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Where wealth accumulates and men decay.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The success, progress and safety of
-this republic rests upon the contentment
-of the <i>whole</i> people, and that
-contentment depends upon justice and
-fair dealing. And every citizen, “unless
-he goes naked, eats grass, and
-lives in a hole in the ground,” is a taxpayer
-to a greater or less extent, according
-to the benefits he derives. He
-has the same interests in the national
-welfare; the same responsibilities; is
-entitled to equal rights and privileges
-before the law; and when we have fully
-realized the fact we will have established
-a higher standard of citizenship,
-we will each have more respect for
-ourselves and for one another, and
-a deeper, truer love and higher regard
-for our country and its institutions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus18.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Their Joke on the President</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Davenport, in N. Y. Evening Mail</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
-<img src="images/illus19.jpg" width="450" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Our Uncommon Carriers</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Bart, in Minneapolis Journal</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 575px;">
-<img src="images/illus20.jpg" width="575" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Sick ’em!</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Macauley, in N. Y. World</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="Letters_From_The_People">
-<img src="images/heading5.jpg" width="700" height="200" alt="" />
-<h2><i>Letters From The People</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Our readers are requested to be as brief as possible in their welcome
-letters to the <span class="smcap">Magazine</span>, as the great number of communications
-daily received makes it impossible to publish all of them or even
-to use more than extracts from many that are printed. Every effort,
-however, will be made to give the people all possible space for a direct
-voice in the <span class="smcap">Magazine</span>, and this Department is freely open to them.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>J. D. Steele, Charleston, W. Va.</i></p>
-
-<p>I have been a reader of your Magazine
-since its first issue, and while I partly agree
-with Mr. George H. Steele, Rockham, S. D.,
-that none of us are perfect, I admire you for
-having the courage of your convictions, and
-it would be impossible to estimate the good
-your publication has all ready done.</p>
-
-<p>As a remedy for the evils existing, as set
-forth by Mr. Bert H. Belford, Widners, Ark., I
-would suggest that our poor, ignorant, down-trodden
-farmers in the South get posted.
-There certainly is no reason for any grown
-up man of the present generation not being
-able to read, and almost every daily and
-weekly newspaper would put the most
-ignorant backwoodsman in possession of the
-facts which Mr. Belford states the farmers
-are ignorant of.</p>
-
-<p>I believe I have never seen a letter from
-this state, but West Virginia hasn’t waked
-up yet. She is always behind in everything
-except graft.</p>
-
-<p>May you live long and continue the good
-work you have undertaken!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>A. J. Jones, Parlier, Cal.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span> is one of the
-greatest educators of the age, stands prominent
-in its class, is fearless, bold and decisive,
-is just what the people want. Every
-Populist should read it and give it the
-widest circulation possible.</p>
-
-<p>Watson’s editorials are great and to the
-point. The Letters from the People are
-very interesting. Would be pleased to hear
-from our workers throughout the United
-States every month through the columns of
-<span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span>. In regard to the
-work in California, we are preparing our
-petition for a place on the ballot, and will
-have a People’s Party ticket in this State
-this coming election. Our slogan is: “The
-middle of the road now and forever!” We
-take no part in any other party in existence,
-or coming into existence. Let us profit
-by past experience. The people here, regardless
-of party, are ready to accept our
-principles. You may hear something drop
-in California in 1908. We have a press
-ready to join us at once. Let us get busy
-at once. Brothers, the fields are white for
-harvest.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>G. S. Floyd.</i></p>
-
-<p>The lucid manner in which you expose the
-evils of our banking system should convince
-any one not blinded by ignorance or prejudice
-of the evils lurking therein, even as at
-present conducted, but if they secure the
-additional special privileges that they seek,
-what may we expect?</p>
-
-<p>Brother Starkey of Nebraska who writes
-discouragingly in the December number
-should take heed, as the worm has turned in
-Pennsylvania and Ohio, and one may hope
-and believe that your efforts have helped to
-produce that result.</p>
-
-<p>I was in Kansas in the early seventies
-when the horde of bogus Greenback editors,
-shipped out from New York and New England
-with rolls of Wall Street money, bought
-up the Greenback press throughout the West,
-pretending loyalty to the principles until
-secure in possession, when the hireling
-traitors came out in their true colors and the
-Greenback press vanished like mist before
-the noonday sun.</p>
-
-<p>The President’s eulogy of the pension
-office is worth no more than his certificate of
-character to Paul Morton. To judge from
-observation and the star-chamber methods
-of that bureau one would conclude that it is
-run primarily as a factor in politics, and that
-the only criterion for the grade and tenure of
-a pension is the whim or discretion of an
-irresponsible official. Evidently the system
-is rotten and needs overhauling or
-revolutionizing. From the nature of the
-service it is doubtless true that irregularities
-are inherent therein, but certainly
-there is room for improvement.</p>
-
-<p>Conventionality, a parent of aristocracy,
-is responsible for the misfortune of Midshipman<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span>
-Meriweather; herein we see one of the
-evils of militarism; the discipline they recommend
-so highly is the discipline of an underling,
-and this is mainly why they desire it.</p>
-
-<p>Hurrah for Hearst!</p>
-
-<p>You give Henry George, Jr., a severe prod
-in the current number. The single tax is
-sprung by the plutocrats when they wish to
-confuse and demoralize the reform forces.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Nelson D. Stilwell, Yonkers, N. Y.</i></p>
-
-<p>The non-appearance of the February number
-of your magazine caused me genuine concern.
-I stand by you, every inch, in what you
-advocate and teach, and wish the circle of
-your readers might be extended many fold. I
-first had my attention called to the present
-evil condition of things by reading Lloyd’s
-“Wealth vs. Commonwealth,” and that but
-paved the way for further reading and investigation
-until my present condition of freedom
-from the bondage of ignorance has been
-attained.</p>
-
-<p>I have observed the trend of things for ten
-years last past and confess that instead of
-improvement and reform, I see a steady
-progress towards further enslavement. What
-will be the end of it all? I am beginning to
-doubt the maintenance of society and law
-and order if the entrenched forces attempt
-to maintain their control. God forbid that
-our country should be baptized again with
-blood. But upon the heads of these “fools
-and blind” men be it, who cannot see the
-handwriting on the wall.</p>
-
-<p>Your articles on finance and money interest
-me and absorb all my attention and edify
-me very much. Your Magazine has a purpose
-back of it, and no one will give a more
-ready acquiescence than the writer.</p>
-
-<p>To be a reformer is to align oneself with
-the noblemen of bygone days whose hearts
-throbbed for the people. No greater example
-could be found than Christ, whose
-kingdom is called “the times of Reformation.”</p>
-
-<p>Permit me to bid you God-speed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Horace C. Keefe, Wallula, Kan.</i></p>
-
-<p>I have somewhere said “this is the decade
-of the three Toms”—Tom Watson, Tom
-Johnson, and Tom Lawson. They are each or
-all likely to leave lasting footprints on the
-century, and I’m anxious that my Tom’s
-shall not be the least. I say “my” because
-Tom Watson stands for all that the country—if
-not the world—must come to, to have
-peace and answer the daily Christian pleadings—that
-“Thy will be done on earth as it
-is in Heaven”; to be His will it must embody
-all that the doctrine of brotherly love contemplates;
-that is ideal, that is Populism.
-The other Toms stand for that part of the
-whole they contemplate or are willing to concede
-from a more or less selfish standpoint.
-Your Magazine is startlingly convincing in its
-arguments and facts—but, my dear fellow, it
-lacks that dignity that a Presidential candidate
-for a great principle should command.
-I know your excuse will be that your appeal
-to the masses must be in such style—DON’T
-DO IT.</p>
-
-<p>It is the aggressive intelligent few that
-shapes the destinies of countries, and that will
-be so with ours; if the reverse were true,
-why does not the labor class have 50 or more,
-the farmers 100 or more, the socialists a like
-number of members in Congress? Such a
-result would show intelligence and a hope
-that something would result. Cut out such
-queries as—Why the negro maids? Deductions
-and conclusions are debatable but
-not style. The writer is one of the martyrs
-for the cause and has been your ardent
-admirer and well wisher. There is no question
-as to the ultimate outcome—though you
-and I may not be permitted to enter in.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>W. E. Arrant, Alto, Tex.</i></p>
-
-<p>I read and will say that your Magazine is
-interesting and entertaining in many respects,
-and I admire your ability and style in showing
-up the evilness and corruption of this age,
-which no doubt is doing good in the way of
-educating the readers thereof on the main
-cause of the present economical and industrial
-conditions that now confronts the
-whole people and oppresses the poor that
-labor and toil that they may share a small
-portion of their labor: while the rich revel in
-riches and the poor live in poverty.</p>
-
-<p>I have been a student for several years,
-studying the economic conditions, the causes
-and effects of present conditions. The more
-I read and learn of the causes and effects, the
-more I wonder how and why the masses of
-the people have been so completely deceived
-so long.</p>
-
-<p>I have been a Populist for several years.
-Was discouraged and disgusted with the
-fusion act in 1896, and since that time I
-began to read and study the Socialist doctrine
-to find out what they had to offer as a
-remedy for the whole people. Through this
-search for knowledge I found that the Populist
-Party was only a reform measure dealing
-with the effects and only a national movement,
-while the Socialist Party is international,
-and goes to the root of the cause of
-the unjust system of exploitation, and means
-the emancipation and freedom of the whole
-human family—a plan and system by which
-one can not rob another by a plan of legalized
-system of robbery. It means a system
-to be established upon earth by which one
-can live for all and all for one. It means
-that we shall establish a righteous system by
-which one nation shall not have its hands at
-another’s throat for pelf. It means a system
-by which it will be possible for all Christians
-to live a pure Christian life and practice the
-Golden Rule in fact and truth.</p>
-
-<p>I realize the error of having more than one
-party representing the interest and prosperity
-of the whole laboring and working
-people; therefore, judging between the two,
-the Populist and the Socialist, have cast my
-lot with the Socialists, and expect to make<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span>
-the fight for justice and emancipation for
-wage slavery in the Socialist Party.</p>
-
-<p>I appreciate your position and hope that
-you will accomplish much good with your
-valuable Magazine in the way of educating
-the people. I fail to see how you can ever
-expect to help to finally free the laboring
-people from economic bondage of slavery,
-without joining the Socialist Party. You
-have asked the people to give their ideas as
-to what they think about the existing conditions.
-I have given my views as I see
-them. I can realize no permanent hopes
-for relief outside of the Socialist and the co-operative
-commonwealth.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Harry Partington, City.</i></p>
-
-<p>I took the publication since the first number
-and today I have in the house only the
-December copy, as I want to get everybody
-to read them that will and thereby have persuaded
-several to buy them, and you can
-depend on me to continue to do so, and will
-try and get others to do so. I look at it that
-I am in the city and can get it at the news-dealers
-with more certainty than as a yearly
-subscriber.</p>
-
-<p>What I think of <span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span>
-can never be told. I would like it semi-monthly,
-but I know I shall have to wait
-possibly some time before that comes. Dear
-sir, believe me, I am a very sincere believer
-and practicer of his doctrine and have been
-since the Democratic party undertook to
-carry the 16 to 1 doctrine under the auspices
-of W. J. B. of Nebraska. Sorry Billy failed
-then and 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Hurrah for W. R. Hearst, but the money
-power is too strong yet. But hammer at
-them and teach us to be steadfast.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>David Meiselas, Brooklyn, N. Y.</i></p>
-
-<p>I have at last determined to congratulate
-you upon the success you have made with your
-Magazine. It is, beyond any doubt, good
-work. In reality I can hardly think to write
-all the praise the editorials are worth. I enjoy
-them as I would some classic by Shakespeare,
-or some scientific work by Darwin.
-The more I read them, the more I like them.
-They are digestible; and talk about brain
-food—it is the best.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, Thomas E. Watson should be well
-considered as a champion for the cause of the
-people. Either he is a second Hearst or
-Hearst is a second Watson. They are so
-much alike in their fights for the people you
-can hardly tell which is which.</p>
-
-<p>Over here in New York we are having a
-grand time, viz:</p>
-
-<p>Murphy telling things about McClellan and
-vice versa. The big insurance grafters howling
-for more. Mr. Ivins telling things about
-the “reform grafter,” Mr. District Attorney,
-etc., etc.</p>
-
-<p>Abraham Lincoln said we should have a
-“government of the people, by the people
-and for the people.” I must say we are living
-up to it, in New York—nit. We are having
-“a government of McCarren, by McClellan
-and for Murphy.” Great government, is
-it not?</p>
-
-<p>If this is not the age of wonder, I don’t
-know what. But, Mr. Watson, keep up your
-steady work; don’t forget the Hon. Platt and
-Depew, the former our Chinese advocate and
-president of the largest express company; the
-latter the champion lobbyist of them all.
-Don’t forget our generous Senator Knox
-(with his generous rate bill). There are
-many more whom you should prey upon.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>G. White, Enloe, Tex.</i></p>
-
-<p>Yes “I will help”; it is one of the very, very
-few papers and magazines that I can heartily
-indorse from the old Liberty Bell to the last
-sheet of its reading matter; the gags and
-brakes that are applied to other editors, or a
-great majority, at least, disqualify them as
-editors.</p>
-
-<p>The things that we most need to know are
-suppressed and the reading public are kept
-in the background on the most vital questions
-of the day. There is a mighty storm
-gathering in this once glorious republic; its
-muttering thunders can be distinctly heard.
-The glaring, forked tongues of wrath can be
-plainly seen over the tops of the distant hills
-that hedge in our eighty million people.</p>
-
-<p>The old ship on which we have sailed thus
-far is out of repair; the pilot asleep, or
-cares nothing for the safety of his passengers;
-the captain has bought most of the crew; the
-breakers are just ahead.</p>
-
-<p>I know not how my fellow-countrymen
-may feel over the affair, but for your humble
-Texas farmer it’s a sad picture. The light
-that once burned so bright not only lit up
-North America from Alalch Mountain to
-the Rockies, but crossed both oceans and
-gave to the world an object lesson of what a
-free people could do.</p>
-
-<p>The same light guided Prescott at Bunker
-Hill. It was the never-setting star at Valley
-Forge that led Washington to the gate of
-glory at Yorktown. Is it true that the territory
-bequeathed to us (“and it was paid in
-blood”) is to be betrayed into the hands of
-the enemy for the small pittance of thirty
-pieces of silver? Is the money-bag of America
-to rule or ruin? Or will those who think
-and yet have a chance to act demand a settlement?
-<span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span> is one
-that is asking for a settlement. May the
-day soon come.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>N. M. Hollingsworth, Terry, Miss.</i></p>
-
-<p>I see that you contemplate enlarging and
-improving the Magazine. I can see the place
-for enlarging, but not improving in the subject
-matter, except by enlarging and perhaps
-improving the material, etc. It is as good as
-human agency can make it. I only wish it
-could be read by every man, woman, boy and
-girl in the land. It is such an educator as we
-need, and it is being read by a great number.</p>
-
-<p>I was at our county cotton-grower’s meeting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span>
-last Saturday and was delighted to find
-so many reading your splendid Magazine.
-I secured a subscriber and have promise of
-several more which I will forward in a day or
-two. I have seen your letter to the <i>Atlanta
-Journal</i> in which there is enough exposure of
-Clark Howell’s perfidy, etc., to consign him
-to the garbage heap.</p>
-
-<p>If you think it worth while in the Educational
-Department of the next number of
-your Magazine, tell us what effect bucket
-shops and trade exchanges have on the price
-of such produce as are dealt in.</p>
-
-<p>Wishing you and your Magazine all the
-good that can come to a mortal and a great
-publication, I remain your devoted friend
-and admirer.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>S. T. Z. Champion, Sterrett, Pa.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am a constant worker and reader of this
-great reform movement and have been for
-the past twelve years, and have voted the
-ticket straight till they got me to straddle
-W. J. B. one time and I got such a fall I fear
-I will never live to get over it. I am getting
-old. I am one of Robert E. Lee’s old web-foot
-boys and stacked my old Enfield rifle at
-Appomattox Court House on the 9th of
-April, 1865. It looks like a miracle to see
-the fingers pushing a pen that pulled the
-trigger 40 years ago, and yet when I think of
-the blood that was shed for this great nation’s
-freedom and to see it being stolen away from
-us by those money knaves it makes me feel
-like I am just 16 years old. I have nine boys,
-all Populists. Oh, how I want us to live to
-get at least one more vote for that grand and
-noble boy, Thomas E. Watson, for our next
-President. Don’t you all feel me rejoicing
-over New York’s election, but I fear they
-will not let Hearst have his seat as mayor
-of New York. I have just read Watson’s
-answer to Hoke Smith’s letter. It is a grand
-reply.</p>
-
-<p>You can count on me when the last roll is
-called. I’ll be there. Yours for reform.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>W. H Thomas, Fairhaven, Mo.</i></p>
-
-<p>After spending 25 years in the thickest of
-the fray I could hardly go back to the “wallowing
-in the mire.” No, my brother, I
-never say die, but am still pegging away.
-Yes, I am a Populist. I am a rampant Socialist
-and I think that most of my old comrades
-have followed my example and I can
-see no reason why all Populists should not do
-the same. You know, my brother, that the
-Socialists are growing as no other party ever
-grew and they are bound to become a dominant
-factor in politics in the near future. It
-is evolution. Reforms do not go backward.
-The Populists have done a grand work, but
-Socialism is inevitable and I would rejoice to
-see all old Populists get aboard the band
-wagon. You are doing a noble work and to
-show you that I appreciate it I am going to
-send you a dollar for the magazine and 50
-cents for that fountain pen, although I can
-illy afford it, as I am 65 years old and dependent
-on my labor for the support of my family.</p>
-
-<p>Don’t Teddy, the Trust-buster, make you
-tired? I think he is the biggest fraud that
-ever sat in the Presidential chair.</p>
-
-<p>Wishing you long life and abundant success,
-I am with you till the battle is won.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>James A. Logsden, Moline, Ill.</i></p>
-
-<p>I have read with great interest the editorial,
-“Tolstoi and the Land,” in the
-October number of <span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span>,
-and while I cannot agree with you in
-the position you take upon the land question,
-I accredit you with sincerity and honesty of
-purpose. In common with many others of
-us, you are giving of your time, energy and
-substance, to bring remedial justice and
-economic truth to human society.</p>
-
-<p>Being fair-minded and in earnest pursuit
-of economic truth and equity, you will, I am
-sure, accept honest criticisms of your
-opinions.</p>
-
-<p>In the outset you propound three questions,
-which are as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Is it true that the real grievance of the masses
-is that the land has been taken away from them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Will no reform bring them relief until the land
-has been given back to them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Will universal happiness be the result of putting
-an end to private ownership of land?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To negate these questions you call upon
-history to bear witness:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“As a guide to our footsteps the past must always
-be to some extent our light, our guide.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>With this I am heartily in accord. It has
-been rightly said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“History keeps the grass green upon the graves
-of former civilizations, and stands as a beacon
-light to future ones. It is the ever-living Janus,
-peering both into the past and into the future.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But history does not prove, as you assert,
-that civilization exists as a result of private
-ownership of land. These are your words:</p>
-
-<p>In passing upon this and statements
-appearing in subsequent paragraphs, I
-think I shall have fully answered your three
-previous questions. When it “became a
-matter of <i>self-interest</i> for some <i>individual</i> to
-improve the land” was it because of his
-ownership or of his <i>security of possession</i>?
-When you admit that “as long as each
-individual felt that his parcel of land might
-go out of his possession at the next regular
-division there was no incentive to improvement,”
-you have admitted the latter.
-“Not until the individual became assured
-that the <i>benefit of his labor</i> would accrue to
-himself did the waste become a farm and the
-hovel a house.” What was his assurance—private
-ownership or security of possession?
-That it was not private ownership is proven
-by the tenant system in vogue in every
-civilized country in the world. Obviously
-it is not private ownership that impelled the
-landless tenant to go upon land owned by
-others, clear away the forest and “make the
-land a farm.” Then what is his assurance?
-Security of possession—the knowledge that
-he will be left unmolested to enjoy the “product
-of his labor.” This tenant enjoys his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span>
-security of possession because of the <i>tribute</i>
-he has been compelled to pay to the owner to
-leave him unmolested in his possession and
-enjoyment. Could he not be as secure in his
-possession if the land were owned and the
-exaction made by all the people?</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, “if the history of the world
-shows anything at all, it shows <i>this</i>,” that
-civilization has developed and progress has
-gone forward, not by reason of private
-ownership of land, but in spite of it.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“If, what is manifestly impossible,” says Mr.
-George, “a fair distribution of land were made
-among the whole population, giving each his
-equal share, and laws enacted which would impose
-a barrier to the tendency to concentration by
-forbidding the holding by any one of more than
-a fixed amount, what would become of the increase
-of population?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Your assertion that there would be no
-improvement under such a condition as you
-mention is self-evident. But this, instead
-of being an argument against the Henry
-George philosophy, is, in fact, an argument
-in its favor.</p>
-
-<p>What Mr. George <i>does</i> propose I shall endeavor
-to make clear in subsequent paragraphs
-when I touch upon your hypothesis
-regarding the primitive tribesmen.</p>
-
-<p>Before passing to this, however, I desire
-to direct your attention to your observation
-that “the right of each citizen to hold as his
-own began with the laborer who claimed the
-product of his labor.” The convincing
-power of this statement is lacking, because
-you have failed to prove to us that without
-private ownership of land man can not
-“claim the products of his labor.” As a
-matter of fact, you can not furnish such
-proof because it is manifestly untrue. Before
-the savage, wandering in the primeval
-forest, ever dreamed of laying claim to any
-parcel of the soil as his own, did he not so
-lay claim to the fish and game he took? Did
-he not so lay claim to the fruits and berries
-he gathered? Did not the tribesman who
-followed his flocks and herds over the plains
-so lay claim to them as the product of his
-labor? Without ever a thought of the
-private ownership of the soil, he had produced
-them as truly as the stockman of today
-produces the cattle he sends to market,
-and he valiantly disputed the right of any
-person to any share of them. Most truly he
-who labors is entitled to labor’s product,
-but to say that in order to claim such product
-it is necessary to privately own
-land is to fly into the face of obvious fact.
-How many of the wage earners of today are
-land owners? How much is added to the
-wages of those few who are, by reason of this
-fact? You yourself raised the point that it
-is not necessary to own land in order to
-fleece the public, laborer, land-owner and all
-out of their earnings. If this be true how
-do you harmonize it with your former claim
-that it was private ownership of land that
-first made it possible for the laborer to
-claim and retain the product of his labor.</p>
-
-<p>I come now to the case of the “score of
-tribesmen” of whom you speak. While the
-score were fishing, hunting, drinking or
-gambling, the one cleared the wild land,
-fenced out the rest and claimed it as <i>his
-land</i>. But, in fact, did this make it his
-land? By virtue of what did it become his
-land? You doubtless had this question in
-mind when you attempted to answer it in
-the following:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Having put his labor into the land, having
-changed it from a waste into a farm, it was the
-most natural thing in the world that he should
-claim it as his own. Why shouldn’t he? <i>He</i>
-made it a farm.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>What was his ultimate purpose in putting
-his labor into the farm? Was it not the
-products which his labor, applied to the land,
-would bring forth? You say “he made it
-a farm.” He found it a farm awaiting
-his efforts. You will agree that he was
-entitled only to the result of his own labor.
-In fact, this is the truth for which you are
-contending. What were the results of his
-labor, the farm or the products? Manifestly
-the latter. These he enjoyed. Upon
-what possible ground, then, could he go still
-further and claim also the soil as belonging
-to himself and his heirs forever?</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, you will concede that before
-this tribesman determined to abandon the
-spear and the rod and become a farmer, this
-piece of ground could have been taken by
-any of the other twenty men; in other words
-it was common. It must be further conceded
-that in casting about to find a suitable
-location for his farm, he chose the site which
-offered the best natural advantages relative
-to fuel, water, fertility of soil, and proximity
-to the tribal bartering place. At this point let
-us carry your illustration still further and
-assume that all or part of the other twenty
-tribesmen decided to become farmers also.</p>
-
-<p>In the same manner as their forerunner,
-they look about for the best location, and the
-one offering the best advantages. But it is
-taken, and the others must take second,
-third or fourth place, according to who gets
-located first. But these men have equal
-rights. Why should some of them enjoy
-the exclusive ownership and possession of
-those sites which give them natural advantages
-over the others? Manifestly, they
-should not. But how can they equalize
-these advantages? Just to the extent that
-farmer number one holds advantage over
-farmer number twenty-one—just to that
-extent should number one compensate the
-little community as a whole for the privilege
-which he enjoys. And so with all the
-others. A community is forming, with its
-<i>natural</i> demand for revenue for <i>common
-purposes</i>. Here is the <i>natural revenue</i>. Here
-lies the fundamental principle which political
-economists call the Law of Rent. Here
-reposes the very essence of the law of compensation.
-Here also is found the basis
-principle of economic justice, which, traced
-to its last analysis, as civilization advances,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
-is capable of developing the highest expression
-of human society. Here is the
-answer to your question,</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Will universal happiness be the result of putting
-an end to private ownership of land?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was not “just that the twenty idle
-tribesmen should take away from the one
-industrious tribesman that which his labor
-had created.” Neither was it just that he
-should rob the other twenty when they
-came to exercise their equal right to the use
-of the land, as he manifestly would if he were
-left to the exclusive use of the soil, or the
-best portion thereof, without compensating
-those he has excluded.</p>
-
-<p>Let him retain possession of the farm and
-his products under these conditions, and you
-have, not private ownership of land, but
-common ownership.</p>
-
-<p>Another point that you have obviously
-overlooked, and one that goes to the heart
-of the social problem, is the element of land
-monopoly. Your tribesman was not satisfied
-with selecting the best land, and fencing
-so much thereof as he could till by his own
-exertion, but he fenced in vast areas that he
-could not use, and also claimed that as “his
-own.” By so doing he not only enjoyed the
-fruits of his own labor, but forced the other
-twenty to share their products with him as
-a tribute for using that part of “his land”
-which he himself could not, or did not, care
-to use. You may say that they had equal
-opportunities with him to get first choice.
-Even if this were granted, it makes no difference
-in principle. The fact still remains that
-he has the power to wring unwilling tribute
-from them. Only one could have the best,
-and though his contemporaries may have
-been justly punished for their lack of foresight—which
-I do not admit—there is yet
-another side to the question. What is the
-status of future generations in relation to
-this proposition? Are they guilty of sleeping
-upon their rights when all the land has been
-taken before they were born, or are they
-born into conditions which they have had no
-voice in making?</p>
-
-<p>If your lonely tribesman, for whose welfare
-you manifest such solicitation, had been content
-with the amount of land he could
-utilize to good advantage, had he been willing
-to contribute his just share to the common
-expense, and had he been sufficiently
-just to recognize and respect the equal rights
-of his compeers, the common would yet have
-remained after all had been supplied. What
-was true of the primitive state is true today
-in our highly organized society. Shifting
-conditions make no changes in universal
-principles.</p>
-
-<p>“Society” (did not) “as a matter of self-preservation
-admit the principle of private
-ownership of land.” It admitted it because it
-did not know a better plan—because it did not
-know the Laws of Rent and of Compensation.</p>
-
-<p>You deny that “great estates were the ruin
-of Italy.” “Before a few could buy up all
-the land there must have been some great
-cause at work, some advantage which the
-few held at the expense of the many.”
-“What was that advantage?” you ask. No
-better answer can be given to this query than
-to refer you back to your own illustration of
-the farmer tribesman. Did he buy the land?
-You say he “fenced it in and claimed it as
-his own.” In like manner did all land pass
-into private control, each individual claiming
-far more than he could use. After all
-the land of Italy had been “claimed” and
-enclosed, or that of any given community
-thereof, the power that these land <i>claimers</i>
-held over subsequent comers is obvious.
-The only asset of the individual without
-material wealth is his labor, which is only
-one—the active—factor in production.
-Under circumstances such as the foregoing,
-he is debarred from the passive factor—land—and
-can apply his labor to it only by paying
-tribute to those who have <i>claimed</i> it.</p>
-
-<p>In the circle of the human family, those
-endowed with keen, unerring foresight are
-comparatively few. It cannot be gainsaid
-that those few, knowing that land is fixed in
-quantity—which cannot be expanded as
-population increases, and as demand for it
-increases—saw in the early periods, as they
-see today, what a powerful advantage they
-could wield over their fellows by “fencing
-in” all the available land—by fencing out,
-not only the cattle, as you put it, but also
-their fellow-men. Is it not plain that this
-was the source of the power of which you
-complain? Was it not this that furnished
-the advantage you name? Can you not see
-the stream of unearned tribute wrung from
-the hands of honest labor constantly flowing
-into the coffers of these land owners? And
-seeing it, can you then maintain that great
-estates were not the ruin of Italy?</p>
-
-<p>What made the “ruling class of Rome,
-that had concentrated into their own hands
-all the tremendous powers of the State?”
-What gave them the power to “fix the
-taxes” and enact the “infernal laws” which
-you rightly contend ought to have been
-repealed? “Ah!” you say,“they <i>controlled
-the money</i>.” By what power did they come
-to control the money? Was it by a power
-inherent within themselves, or was it not the
-power which they derived from the corner
-which they held upon the <i>natural revenue</i>
-which they diverted from the public treasury
-into their own coffers, thus making it
-necessary to provide for the common expense
-by unjust taxes upon the products of labor?</p>
-
-<p>“They controlled the money.” But
-what is money? Is it the means or the end?
-Is it not merely a labor-saving invention to
-facilitate trade? Is it not money only by
-common consent? Is it not merely a commodity
-converted for convenience into a
-medium of exchange? You make the point
-that by controlling the money, they controlled
-commodities. But if they had not
-controlled the land, which is the source of all
-commodities—even the money itself—how
-could they have controlled the money?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span></p>
-
-<p>Can you not see that men divorced from
-the toil and permitted to produce only on the
-terms of some other person are forced into
-the labor market, to vie with each other in a
-competition that grows keener and more
-vicious as a population increases?</p>
-
-<p>You say that “the power to fix taxes is
-the power to confiscate.” The very opposite
-is true. The power to confiscate is the
-power to tax. Give that power to one class
-and what more does it want? Let that class
-confiscate land values, which you agree are
-naturally common property, and you give it
-the power to rob its victim, not merely to the
-“limit of their capacity to pay,” but to
-literal starvation, if they choose to carry the
-principle of private ownership of land to its
-logical conclusion. For certainly to recognize
-the right to private property in land is
-to recognize the owner’s right to do with <i>his
-land</i> what he pleases. To recognize this is
-to recognize the land-owner’s right to deny
-to the landless either the use of <i>his land</i>, or
-any of its products, on any terms whatsoever.
-Thus, in carrying the principle of private
-ownership of land to its logical conclusion,
-and recognizing it as a just principle, is to
-sanction literal murder. Can a system that
-has this for its ultimate, be other than a
-vicious system, even though it may never be
-carried to that extent? It is by means of
-this vicious system that human sufferings
-are augmented by a thousand fold and the
-sum of human happiness is correspondingly
-diminished.</p>
-
-<p>Do not the foregoing facts prove to you
-that your statement that “<i>usury</i> is the
-vulture that has gorged itself upon the vitals
-of nations since the dawn of time,” is economically
-untrue? Is it not clear that
-usury is only an effect of a deeper-seated
-cause inherent in land monopoly?</p>
-
-<p>As proof that the universal condition of
-inequality is <i>not</i> inherent in land monopoly,
-you say that the Rothschilds and other
-“kings of high finance” do not “buy up vast
-domains that they may be served by a lot
-of tenants.” But when touching upon this
-phase of the question, you should always
-bear in mind that all land is not farm land.
-The power of the coal barons to exploit does
-not arise so much from the fact that they
-own large tracts of land, as from the fact
-that it bears large deposits of coal. Nor
-does their power to exploit affect merely the
-miners of coal. Coal is a public necessity,
-and the ownership by these barons of a comparatively
-small area of land places them
-in a position to place—by reason of unreasonable
-prices—a tax upon every user of
-coal.</p>
-
-<p>What is the basis of the railroad’s power
-for unrestrained exploitation? Unquestionably
-it arises from its exclusive franchises,
-inherent in its rights of way.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan and others of his
-class do not derive their unearned revenues
-from their power to tax. But whence this
-taxing power which affects every user of their
-several products?—Monopoly of franchises,
-monopoly of mineral resources, such as
-mines, quarries, etc.? What is the source of
-the Standard Oil monopoly?—Its ownership
-of oil land or enough thereof to force independent
-owners to sell on the company’s
-terms, and its consequent power to force
-railroad discriminations in its favor? Where
-did the beef trust and other industrial corporations
-derive their monopoly power?
-Railroad rebates—“the big pistol”—railroads
-with their monopoly franchises. And
-the railroad monopoly and these other
-breeds will be extinct in an instant. End
-land monopoly and make railroad franchises
-common property and the railroad monopoly
-will be at an end. Had not the Amalgamated
-Copper Co. controlled the majority
-of the copper-bearing lands of the world,
-“The Story of Amalgamated” would never
-have been told.</p>
-
-<p>Referring again to the railroads, was it not
-largely the great land grants donated to
-them by our Government that were the beginning
-of their power? These grants operated
-in two ways to the advantage of the
-railroads. First, they greatly increased the
-wealth of the railroads, and, second, they
-diminished the power of the people by diminishing
-the area of land open to settlement.</p>
-
-<p>“Land is plentiful and it is cheap. The
-country is dotted with abandoned farms that
-can be had <i>almost</i> for the asking.” You
-say “almost for the asking.” This implies
-that he who takes these farms must pay
-something to him who has “abandoned”
-them. Why <i>almost</i>? Why not take them,
-as in the case of the primitive tribesman,
-without asking? You state that they have
-been abandoned because the owner could
-not make a decent living upon them. Then
-why make the condition of the next owner
-more hopeless by levying tribute against him
-for the use of a worthless farm?</p>
-
-<p>Make land common property, safe-guard
-the interests of all by assuring to each land-holder
-perpetual use, providing he pay his
-equitable share into the common treasury—which
-in each case would be the increment
-of value. Then “<i>abolish all other forms of
-taxation</i>.” This will secure every one in the
-enjoyment of his labor’s product, will abolish
-monopoly and the individual or corporate
-taking power, vicious tariffs, and all. This
-is all you have demanded.</p>
-
-<p>Your demand is a just one, but—as I
-trust you may be brought to see—your
-remedy is superficial and cannot be made
-effective. You must dig in deeper soil, else
-your laudable efforts are vain. The abrogation
-of offensive legislative enactments and
-the enactment of other statutes dealing with
-effects will avail nothing. Nothing save the
-rooting out of the mother of evils can possibly
-accomplish the end for which you are so
-courageously and manfully striving.</p>
-
-<p>Your work is a noble one, and its power
-for good is measured only by the number of
-people whom you can reach. I admonish<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span>
-you to give the land question thorough and
-painstaking investigation. I trust you will
-bear with me for what may seem excessive
-frankness. But you are not looking for
-bouquets, but simple, unembossed truth.
-When I say to you that in my opinion you
-have not familiarized yourself with the philosophy
-you are attempting to refute, you
-will accept this criticism in the broad view
-of public interest.</p>
-
-<p>I have gone into greater detail in my
-comments upon your editorial than I expected
-to go in the outset, but it has seemed advisable,
-in order to get a clear view of all the
-points raised by you. However, I trust
-I have not gone beyond the limit of the space
-that may be available.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center">A VETERAN REFORMER HITS THE TARIFF
-HARD</p>
-
-<p>E. S. Gilbert is close to ninety years old but
-uncommonly well preserved, having been interested
-in every Presidential campaign since he was a
-boy of sixteen, and has acquired a vast fund of political
-knowledge, of which he still has a firm grasp.
-He has seen and remembers nearly every President
-from Andy Jackson down—nineteen of them—and
-talks interestingly. He says as he sees things
-now the political situation is just as it was in the
-early fifties. Then two minor parties were dying,
-and the leading party—the Democratic—was
-undergoing disintegration. Today, as he sees it,
-Democracy and Populism are dying, and the Republican
-party is undergoing disintegration.
-The Republican Party sprang up in the fifties,
-and he looks for a new, strong party to come out
-of the present chaos in a few years. Following is
-a thoughtful article, from Mr. Gilbert’s pen, which
-recently appeared in the <i>Lincoln Independent</i>:</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Editor Independent: Here are a few figures
-for men who think.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1901 there was manufactured
-in the United States thirteen billions of dollars’
-worth of goods. Authority, Secretary
-Shaw.</p>
-
-<p>The average rate of duties upon imported
-merchandise is 52 per cent. Authority,
-Walter Wellman.</p>
-
-<p>Now, fifty-two per cent of thirteen billions
-of dollars is $6,770,000,000, which the present
-tariff of duties authorizes the manufacturers
-to collect of the American people
-each year, if they can. It actually enables
-them to collect a large portion of it—but not
-all. The probabilities are they collect about
-two-thirds. They collect nothing for goods
-exported.</p>
-
-<p>There is honest competition on some
-classes of goods, such as flour and the cheaper
-cotton fabrics, and perhaps some others,
-that prevents them from collecting it of the
-people. So, in order to be fair, we will cut
-this sum in halves.</p>
-
-<p>We then have the sum of $3,385,000,000,
-which is considerably less than is probably
-collected. In order not only to be fair, but
-to be absolutely safe, we will cut off the $385,000,000,
-and we have the sum of three billions
-of dollars—three thousand millions—collected
-by the manufacturers and paid by
-the people as the result of the Dingley tariff
-bill.</p>
-
-<p>Bear in mind, that this is over and above
-what is collected in duties for the support of
-government. Bear in mind, this money is
-paid to the manufacturers, the capitalist
-and not to the laborers. Bear in mind that
-if this three billions of dollars were divided
-among the employees of the manufacturers,
-it would give to them something less than six
-millions of laborers a little over $500 apiece.
-Bear in mind, that this would pay the entire
-labor bill of all the manufacturers of the
-United States.</p>
-
-<p>Then ask yourselves: Is this state of things
-the result of the intelligence or genius of the
-people? Or is it the result of misinformation
-or stultification?</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">E. S. Gilber.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>W. F. Short, Eurekaton, Tenn.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am well pleased with the Magazine and
-think it is superior to any other magazine
-that I ever read. It is just what I expected
-our brave and noble Tom to get up. Yes,
-the Magazine is all right. The language is
-beautiful, forcible and courteous. I was a
-subscriber from the first issue and have sent
-in my renewal for this year. I have more confidence
-in Tom Watson than in any man who
-has tried to right the wrongs of the people.
-I believe him to be so conscientious that he
-would not sacrifice principles for any office
-in the gift of the people, and I do wish we had
-one thousand men like our true and honest
-Tom to battle for justice and rights of the
-people. I stand for the principles advocated
-by Jefferson, Jackson and Lincoln.</p>
-
-<p>I can make but one suggestion for the
-Magazine, and that is to place it in a better
-wrapper, so it will not be lost in the mail.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>R. Brown, Buck Knob, Ark.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am no writer and no scholar, but I write
-a few lines to you in order to congratulate
-you on your Magazine. I think it the best
-magazine on earth and the <i>Missouri World</i>
-the best paper and the most patient publishers
-on earth. I could not have the patience
-to publish a paper and send it out
-among so many prejudiced block-headed
-farmers and laborers and get so little return
-for my labor. I live in the mountains of
-Arkansas and I have been lashing with my
-tongue and knocking at these old Mossbacks
-with <span class="smcap">T. E. Watson Magazines</span> and the
-<i>Missouri World</i> for one or two years. Some
-of them won’t read a reform paper when it
-is given to them, but I give <span class="smcap">T. E. Watson’s
-Magazine</span> and the <i>Missouri World</i> to them
-all the same. On some of them the moss
-I see is loosening. I am going to try to
-organize a club in our township shortly.
-I am for government ownership of all the
-railroads, coal mines, oil fields and all manufactures
-that take a company to run and
-government money, and no one man to own
-more than one hundred and sixty acres of
-land and not that unless he lives on and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span>
-cultivates the same. I will fight for all this
-and more as long as I live and have a dollar
-that my family can get along without.</p>
-
-<p>I am nearly sixty-four years old and have
-eight sons, all of whom will vote the Populist
-ticket and all be old enough in 1908 to
-vote, and will vote the Populist ticket.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Stephen Lewis, Martin’s Ferry, O.</i></p>
-
-<p>Your article in the January issue of your
-Magazine in regard to the high-handed methods
-of the U. S. <i>Steal</i> trust in obtaining property
-from defenceless people has been read
-with much interest, and I approve of your
-bold and fearless manner in attacking unlawful
-corporations and lawless promoters.</p>
-
-<p>That part in your article on the <i>Steal</i> trust
-where you raise the point as to whether the
-men who demolished the widow’s home were
-union men or not was noted in particular and
-I venture the opinion that they were not,
-because Pittsburg, with all its much vaunted
-prosperity is and has been recognized by
-union workmen as the cradle from which
-that disreputable class of workmen known
-as <i>scabs</i> have come. Pittsburg harbors more
-scabs than any other city in the country, regardless
-of size. The man who made the
-<i>Steal</i> trust possible operated his mills at
-Homestead with scabs at the sacrifice of
-human life and forced a lower scale of wages
-upon the men with the state militia. Yet
-this man is regarded by a great many so-called
-respectable people as a philanthropist
-because he is erecting monuments to himself
-in the form of libraries in different parts
-of the country.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>M. G. Carlton, Zolfo, Fla.</i></p>
-
-<p>I appreciate the Magazine and feel that
-it is one of the best. I am a Populist and
-took great pleasure in casting my vote for
-you at the last election, knowing at the time
-that the chances for success were bad. Yet
-I cast the vote with as great pride and satisfaction
-as if I had known you would be
-elected. I know how to sympathize with a
-defeated candidate as I myself ran on the
-Populist ticket for Representative against
-the noted Zuba King—the wealthiest man
-in De Soto County and one connected with
-one or more of the best banks of the country,
-and got beaten, of course, but I was not
-whipped but beaten by the money crowd
-and I believe as strongly in the principles of
-the Populist Party as I ever did. I am just
-the same today.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>W. Scott Samuel, Pawhuska, Okla.</i></p>
-
-<p>Thinking that <span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span>
-might like to hear from a locality where
-politics “rules the court, the camp, the grove,”
-I relate this little incident. A few weeks
-ago, when the town sites of the Osage reservation
-were to be opened for sale and an
-auctioneer appointed to sell the lots, the
-news was published that a certain man, Amos
-Ewing, had received the appointment of
-auctioneer. Now, the reputation of this
-man, Ewing, is a stench in the nostrils of
-every honest man in Oklahoma. From
-petty defalcations to embezzlement of trust
-funds, which he was forced to disgorge, comes
-the reputation of the versatile and oleaginous
-Amos. And so, when it was known
-that our great “square deal” bear hunter
-had through his secretary named Amos for
-this promotion of trust and emolument, it
-was not long before the mails were loaded
-with protests from different localities in
-Oklahoma where the seductive Amos had
-exercised his peculiar grafts. Did it do any
-good? Alas for the square deal! When the
-sale of lots commenced at Pawhuska this
-creature, Ewing was in the position that
-should have been filled by some one at least
-not a self-convicted grafter, and <i>he’s there
-yet</i>, and all the protests, charges, etc., filed
-against him are as though they never happened.
-How’s that for the “square deal”?</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion, permit me to compliment
-<span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span> for its fearless
-<i>exposé</i> of moral rottenness in high places.
-Hoping the good work will go on, I desire to
-share in the glory of the time when its principles
-shall prevail.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Malcolm B. Webster, Atlantic City, N. J.</i></p>
-
-<p>I have been an interested and delighted
-reader of your Magazine for some time past,
-and feel that I am getting from it a political,
-social and economic education such as I
-should not have known where to look for else.</p>
-
-<p>While still but very young, I have long
-felt that I could say upon the above subjects:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Myself, when young, did eagerly frequent</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Doctor and saint, and heard great argument</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">About it and about—but evermore came out</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">By the same door wherein I went.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Now I begin to feel that there <i>is</i> a <i>back</i> door
-used by the “powers behind the throne,”
-and that your Magazine leads one to it to
-observe the edifying spectacle of the manipulation
-of the puppets by the powers.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>James Porges, Chicago, Ill.</i></p>
-
-<p>Keep up the good work. You have the
-support of thousands in your efforts to
-awaken the lethargic American public to the
-fact that they are being robbed with the aid
-of our corrupt laws and the special privilege
-Government.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>T. B. Rogers, Logansport, Ind.</i></p>
-
-<p>I don’t know how to praise that book
-enough. I think it is the strongest political
-document we have. Surely, if we could get
-the voters of the nation to read it, we would
-have reform, for if any reasonable person
-reads it he can’t help but endorse those
-principles. I have been loaning those magazines
-I received to my neighbors, and they
-all acknowledge that the book tells the truth.
-I think I can get up a club in the near future,
-for those that read them promise me they
-will subscribe for it.</p>
-
-<p>As for myself, I don’t need any literature
-on the subject, for I have been in the front<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span>
-ranks of the movement ever since 1872. I
-was a Peter Cooper man and have marched
-along in that line ever since. Never voted
-for anything else. When I cannot vote the
-Populist ticket, I don’t vote at all. There
-were a few of us that started the movement
-here in Cass County, Indiana, and we worked
-hard and spent a good deal of money. We
-had some of our best speakers here to help us.
-We had the Hon. Jesse Harper of Danville,
-Ill., N. H. Motsinger of Sholes, Ind., Judge
-S. W. Williams of Vincennes, Ind., and a
-number of other good speakers, and the result
-of our work was that we cast over 900
-votes for the Populist county ticket. We
-felt very much encouraged, but when the
-next campaign came—well, you know what
-happened to our Party.</p>
-
-<p>We are right and all we can do is to keep
-on fighting. I am in favor of staying in the
-fight until the last ditch is taken.</p>
-
-<p>I will close by wishing you great success.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Thomas Knox, Bennett, Neb.</i></p>
-
-<p>I appreciate reading your Magazine. I
-also appreciate your manly and courageous
-way of putting the truth before your readers.
-My only hope is that I would like to have the
-pleasure of knowing that the writings of as
-strong a reasoner and clear thinker could
-enter every home of the common herd so that
-reason could displace prejudice or party insanity.
-We all regret the disconnection of
-that able defender of the common people,
-Mr. T. H. Tibbles, from the editorial columns
-of the <i>Nebraska Independent</i>. We hope for
-his health and his early return to Nebraska,
-to continue the battle for us common people.
-In conclusion I hope for Mr. Charles Q. De
-France’s health and happiness. May his
-labors be a power for good and light to the
-people. I also hope Thomas E. Watson’s
-health and life may be spared for many
-years in the good cause.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>H. L. Fagin, Kansas City, Mo.</i></p>
-
-<p>Is it not good to feel that the present wave
-of civic, economic and industrial righteousness
-seems practically certain to sweep every
-thing before it? There is a quiet, studious
-earnestness and determination everywhere
-existent, that portends certain and tremendous
-results. The best part of it is that the
-masses have largely been educated to the
-point where they no longer expect to accomplish
-everything in a day, but rather realize
-that to get even a large share of what they
-insistently demand they must begin in the
-primaries and conduct a continuous campaign.</p>
-
-<p>You are doing a great work and you have
-your reward and will have it. Every honest
-and ardent spirit everywhere communes
-with and strengthens every other such. No
-more honest, open, fearless man than you is
-on earth today. That might be better expressed,
-but the meaning is there—I will let
-it pass.</p>
-
-<p>The universal spirit of righteousness encompasses
-and permeates you—you are
-surely a part of the divinest essence. Being
-a man, you must like to know that other men
-appreciate and approve—and to the utmost.
-And that they do in an ever expanding circle.
-The days of sophistry, of deception, of
-class and special privileges, of municipal,
-state, and national corruption are rapidly
-passing. The people are becoming wise.
-They know their friends. They know who
-is true, despite the tremendous efforts of a
-press, largely subsidized to mislead and deceive.
-But there are newspapers and newspapers,
-just as there are magazines and magazines.</p>
-
-<p>I need not tell you to keep on straight
-ahead. You couldn’t stop if you wanted to.
-Tell the truth just as you are doing, and as
-much of it as you have space for, in allopathic
-doses. I cannot agree with all your conclusions,
-nor will any thoughtful student; but
-in most I do most heartily concur, and I do
-know that all your influence is for good.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>John McFord, Sheridan, N. Y.</i></p>
-
-<p>I like your Magazine very well, but I would
-like it much better if you and your Magazine
-would come out flat-footed for Socialism. If
-public ownership or collective ownership of
-the railroads, telegraphs, etc. is a good thing
-for the people, why not have public ownership,
-or rather collective ownership, of the
-lands, the machinery, etc.? Political democracy
-without industrial democracy is futile
-and amounts to nothing. I had the pleasure
-of voting for you in ’92, and it is a matter of
-profound regret to me that you cannot see
-your way clear to step forward into the
-Socialist Party, where all true middle-of-the-roader
-Populists logically belong. Populism
-is a compromise, a half way measure.
-Socialism is the whole cheese.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>John P. Thorndyke, Canaan, N. H.</i></p>
-
-<p>You publish more <i>real stuff</i> than any magazine
-I have ever read in my life. I am
-sixty years of age, and we take seven other
-magazines, and without any exaggeration it
-is but justice to your efforts to say that there
-is by far more real, good, well-seasoned, relishable
-food for the digestion of the average
-brain, than is afforded in any other magazine
-I have seen. Having practiced medicine for
-a number of years, I have sometimes volunteered
-my diagnosis of the disease troubling
-some of our great (?) men and I flatter myself
-that an observance of that particular
-case has proven the correctness of my examination
-at a distance. For instance, I
-think the main trouble with our great Senate
-is constipation of the brain, which invariably
-forbids the entertainment of honest thought.
-Now I hope that some one with sufficient
-“sand” in his gizzard will see that every
-member of the present Congress and Cabinet
-receives a copy of your very valuable Magazine.
-It will be worth more to them than
-a post-graduate course in the schools of
-Rockefeller and Morgan.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>John B. Bott, Grant, Pa.</i></p>
-
-<p>To a constant and appreciative reader
-of <span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span> (purchased
-monthly at the Union News Co.’s stands) it
-does seem strange that so great and good a
-man as “Tom” should, under the stimulus of
-praise and success or the twittering of a pert
-maid, really become ashamed of his familiar
-cognomen and his old clothes.</p>
-
-<p>For two days I have been searching, here
-and there, high and low, for <i>Tom</i> <span class="smcap">Watson’s
-Magazine</span>: always explaining that “<i>Tom</i>”
-has gone into “innocuous desuetude” and
-“<i>Watson</i>” has stript himself of his old
-clothes and donned <i>full regulation uniform</i>,
-but all to no effect.</p>
-
-<p>Am hoping the new clothes won’t make
-<i>Mister</i> Watson too vain, and that at least his
-relations, Populist friends and host of well
-wishers will not fail to recognize him in his
-docked designation and fine regimentals.</p>
-
-<p>I wish to add that it was the “Tom” that
-appealed to me, above all things else, when
-the news agent showed me No. 2 of Vol. I.
-and asked me if I had seen <span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s</span>.
-I replied that I had not, but that “Tom”
-had the true flavor and I’d take a dose.</p>
-
-<p>There are, I am sorry to say, Watsons big
-and Watsons little; Watsons wise and Watsons
-foolish; Watsons mediocre galore, but
-only one “<i>Tom</i>” Watson, and he seems to
-be, God forbid, going to the bad.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Robert L. Cooper, Savannah, Ga.</i></p>
-
-<p>I have been, previous to the last year, what
-may be termed a “Tom Watson hater.”
-Like a lot of other “pig-heads,” I have heard
-the other side all the time, declining to read
-or look upon with reason anything you wrote
-or said. I was prevailed upon to read your
-“Napoleon.” I followed it up with “France”
-and “Jefferson,” together with a number of
-your speeches, letters and magazines. I
-have arrived at the conclusion that of the
-very few sincere men of the day, WATSON
-STANDS IN THE FRONT RANK.</p>
-
-<p>You have my unbounded admiration and
-very best wishes for the splendid fight you
-are making for improvement of conditions
-in our country—especially our beloved
-state, Georgia. I may add that there are a
-great many other young men in this community
-who are of the same opinion.</p>
-
-<p>That your books are being read is attested
-by the frazzled-out copies in our public
-library, and the difficulty one has in securing
-the use of them even for the short time allowed
-for the use of a popular book.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Aaron McDonald, Galveston, Ind.</i></p>
-
-<p>I received a copy of the old guard news
-letter some time back, and was not in shape
-to respond at that time, and when I got in
-shape to, I took sick and was not able; but
-now as I am able and in shape I will send one
-dollar to help pay expenses of organizing.
-It seems that through this part of the country
-Populists are dead. There are lots that are
-sick on account of the rascality of the
-officers of the old parties, but speak to them
-about Populists and you can seldom get a
-grunt out of them. It may be a calm before
-the storm. Hope it is, for I think there are
-Independents enough in this neighborhood
-to cut things short when they do get at it.
-The hardest pull seems to be in giving up the
-old name. They seem to think that reform
-must come through their party. I have
-asked several how they expect to get reform
-when Wall Street owns the Cabinet and Senate.
-That is like putting the devil in the
-pulpit to preach the gospel.</p>
-
-<p>Hoping you will meet success.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>H. B. Paxton, Wheatland, Mo.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am 66 years old, and have been in the
-reform movement from Cooper to Watson,
-except once for Bryan. Everything is
-being quiet with us—politics as well as everything
-else. We had at one time 500 Populist
-voters in this Hickory Co., about one-fourth
-of the voting strength of the county.
-As we haven’t any organization in the
-county, I haven’t much idea what our
-strength is at this time, but there are quite a
-number of true blues yet.</p>
-
-<p>Your Magazine is all right. Will send my
-renewal soon and I assure you I will try to
-get others to subscribe.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>T. T. Mattox, Hope, Ark.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am still a Populist and read <span class="smcap">Watson’s
-Magazine</span>. Think there are no words nor
-figures to enumerate or define the good effect
-it is having on the one big National party
-made up of the new parties, Democrat and
-Republican. There are but two National
-parties now—the Watson and the Swollen-tails.
-Good news gone to Canada and the
-nations of the globe.</p>
-
-<p>Dear Watson, you are doing more good
-than if in office.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>H. E. Pomeroy, Mason, Ill.</i></p>
-
-<p>I think you are fooling away time and
-money. Look at William J. Bryan in the
-last National convention. See Judge Parker
-now. This nation is too wealthy to be ruled
-by patriots. Wall Street is the government.
-You can’t do anything with Wall Street.
-The masses have no principle above whiskey
-and tobacco, and the churches are in the
-hands of priestcraft. If you have a copy of
-Æsop’s Fables read about the fox and the
-flies.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>J. A. Dahlgren, Bradshaw, Nebr.</i></p>
-
-<p>I cannot let this opportunity go by without
-telling you what I think of your Magazine.
-It is undoubtedly the very best reform
-magazine now published. Your editorials
-certainly have the right tone. Your
-article on the situation in Georgia gives us
-Northerners new light on the subject. While
-we do not have the negro problem to contend
-with here in Nebraska, we nevertheless have
-the railroad question to fight over from year
-to year. We must pay tribute to Harriman<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
-and Hill, and other Wall Street kings, besides
-countless two-by-four politicians who
-apparently have no other aim in life than
-to serve the railroads and betray the
-people. I am glad to see that grand old
-man Tibbles writing for <span class="smcap">Watson’s Magazine</span>.
-Before I close I must ask you to give
-us another story something like “Pole
-Baker.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>George Chapman, East Cleveland, O.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am prompted to write you from the fact
-that I believe you to be the right man in the
-right place, and I honestly think that the
-seed that you are now sowing will take root
-and bear fruit, as they are being sown in
-fertile soil.</p>
-
-<p>No party, or parties, can long withstand
-your bombardments, no matter how well fortified
-they may be, as your guns are loaded
-with facts.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>W. S. Stanley, Logansville, Ga.</i></p>
-
-<p>I feel it my duty to express that in my
-estimation, which I take from a national and
-reasonable standpoint, Tom Watson is one of
-the greatest Americans living and his Magazine
-the best I ever read.</p>
-
-<p>I earnestly hope that some day not far
-distant, Tom Watson will be our Commander-in-Chief
-of our National Government.</p>
-
-<p>How any honest and patriotic man can
-oppose the principles advocated by Tom
-Watson, I cannot see.</p>
-
-<p>Tom Watson is a great man. Why?
-Because he is honest, brave, fearless and
-aggressive. Because he is standing for the
-rights of the great mass of people at large,
-leading them onward and upward from a
-Government of the privileged few to a Government
-of the unprivileged many.</p>
-
-<p>For the last fifty years our Government
-has been leading more and more toward
-anarchy.</p>
-
-<p>Tom Watson, may you live long to voice
-the principles of Jeffersonian Democracy!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>J. J. Hall, Hutchinson, Ark.</i></p>
-
-<p>Tom, why don’t you knock that “intrinsic
-value” rot into a cocked hat? I think that
-policy is one of the greatest barriers to
-progress of the masses in studying finance.
-The sooner they learn that value does not
-exist in substance but in the mind, the better.
-This is the first and most important fact to
-be learned by the student of monetary
-science, and when once understood all the
-relative facts are easy. Take a shot at it,
-Tom. You can make it both instructive
-and readable.</p>
-
-<p>Yours for success.</p>
-
-<p><i>Of course I like the Magazine.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Alfred French, Washington, D. C.</i></p>
-
-<p>I look forward to the arrival of your
-Magazine every month with a great deal of
-interest. Other magazines I give away, but
-yours I do not care to part with.</p>
-
-<p>I shall speak for it, have spoken for it, and
-very likely shall continue to stand by it so
-long as you condemn the discrimination
-made by officials in favor of the bankers.
-I have said for years that the men who own
-the railroads and the bankers rule the country.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>L. R. Green, Spottsville, Ky.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am proud of being one of the “old
-guard,” having marched without halting in
-the “middle of the road,” without ever
-lowering our colors or ever thinking of surrender.</p>
-
-<p>Am proud of our matchless leader, Tom
-Watson, and his Magazine, his two-edged
-sword. Friends of popular government,
-let’s give the Magazine a million subscribers
-and make its editor President in
-1908!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Arthur F. Mann, Brooklyn, N. Y.</i></p>
-
-<p>The Magazine is O. K. The February
-number is strictly 100%. It would be cheap
-at 25 cents. Thank you for the sample
-copy received today. I’d already purchased
-mine of my news-dealer. However, I’ll see
-the sample copy is put into good hands and
-hope it will “work.” Mr. Watson, you are
-doing “<i>us plain Americans</i>” a world of good.
-Keep it up. May your life be spared to us
-for many years to come!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>F. F. Gordy, Richland, Ga.</i></p>
-
-<p>Aside from the fact that both Howell’s
-and Smith’s friends claimed the victory at
-the joint debate, was the further fact that
-Tom Watson got the greatest ovation of any.
-The first half of Howell’s speech brought out
-your name, which caused the audience to
-rise en masse and the applause shook the
-building. While I am for Smith, still I am
-looking beyond him to something better.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>C. Will Shaffer, Olympia, Wash.</i></p>
-
-<p>The Magazine is all right and is on the
-right track.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>M. W. Henry, Waelder, Tex.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am a reader of your most excellent and
-truly demo-republican Magazine. Our adversaries
-assumed the garb of angels to
-serve the devil in. There is not a single
-fundamental principle contended for by our
-patriotic democratic-republican forefathers
-contained in either the democratic or republican
-party platforms, but both parties
-are thoroughly Hamiltonized and irretrievably
-committed to the aristocratic British
-Banking and Bonding System which financiers
-know to be absolutely incompatible
-with the perpetuity of democratic institutions.
-All of the enemies of our free
-institutions are in one or the other of these
-parties and their bosses are engaged in making
-dupes of the common voters. The
-interests of the capitalists are the same
-whether North or South, and as they have
-complete control of both the old parties the
-people have no reasonable hope of relief from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span>
-oppression from either. Direct legislation
-is essentially democratic and is what the
-enemies of our free institutions most fear.
-Its triumph will be the triumph of human
-liberty over plutocratic despotism. It will
-restore the Government into the hands of
-our people, from whom it has been wrested
-by the boodlers and grafters, prompted by
-conscienceless greed and avarice. A victory
-along this line will be a greater victory for
-humanity than that of Yorktown or Appomattox.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Thomas S. East, Anderson, Ind.</i></p>
-
-<p>One of the very best magazines that I
-have ever read. I want to say to you that
-the good seed you are sowing will live long
-after you and I and others of the “Old
-Guard” have passed to the other side. And
-just as soon as my business matters will
-permit, I want to send you a large subscription
-list and in this way help on the good
-work. For I truly believe all who have the
-cause at heart will at this time lend their
-influence to the work, so that Plutocracy and
-all the attending evils that flow out from the
-corrupting influences that spread and grow
-like vile and obnoxious weeds in a corn field,
-may be rooted out.</p>
-
-<p>Ever yours for the cause of humanity, I
-am in the fight to the finish.</p>
-
-<p>I have every number of the Magazine
-up to date.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Fred Diehl, New York.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am very sorry to hear that you are not
-well and permit me to send you all the good
-health wishes I can give. We need you in
-our struggle for progress. You should be
-preserved for our work in the coming crisis
-that I believe will soon take place in the
-world, especially in this country.</p>
-
-<p>This article on the Chinese question I send
-you contains my innermost convictions on
-that problem and I believe should be listened
-to before we create another problem almost
-impossible to solve. I do not want to impose
-upon your good nature, but if you find
-it possible to publish in your Magazine,
-would you kindly do so?</p>
-
-<p>If not, then kindly send it back to me.</p>
-
-<p>My mind is for what is right. I would
-like to work for the betterment and right adjustment
-of all conditions in need of improvement.</p>
-
-<p>There are, to my mind, many reasons why
-Chinamen should be restricted from coming
-to the United States. The Chinese are not
-eligible to citizenship. It is not good policy
-to encourage immigrants to come here in
-great numbers that cannot become citizens.
-Every man (and let us hope every woman, in
-the near future) should bear his portion of
-responsibility to the government. Chinamen
-do not seem to grasp the idea of freedom
-as do the people of Anglo-Saxon and
-Latin origin, nor do they appreciate our
-rights and privileges for which we struggled
-for centuries. Chinamen would, perhaps
-could, not use these rights intelligently nor
-enthusiastically.</p>
-
-<p>They bring to us peculiar oriental vices
-from which we are yet free, but they would
-contaminate us and undermine our lives.</p>
-
-<p>Economically and socially they are impossible;
-economically, because they would undersell
-the American workman and destroy
-our standard of living; socially, because they
-lack the necessary elements to make a congenial
-race. It is not true, to my mind, that
-a race is superior because it can undersell another
-any more than a herd of rats is superior
-over man or tiger and lions over man because
-they can overcome man by numbers
-and ferocity. The Chinese themselves protected
-and preserved their civilization from
-invaders by building that huge wall around it
-thousands of years ago. It was Chin, it is
-said, the great reformer, as he was called,
-that did it and the great land today bears his
-name. The Huns invaded Germany and
-robbed the unprotected peasants. The fact
-that the Germans could protect themselves
-from endless invasions through fortifications
-and armed resistance showed the superiority
-of the Germans over the Huns.</p>
-
-<p>I believe I am a friend of humanity and
-that is the reason I believe in the restriction
-of the Chinamen (our brothers) from coming
-here. One of the reasons (and I think it is
-the greatest of all) should be sufficient,
-that is that they are in great danger of being
-massacred through the economic struggles
-and competition and the inevitable crash is
-sure to come. We had already symptoms of
-such massacres in the West. The killing of
-the Jews in Russia will look mild in comparison.
-Chinamen coming here in great
-numbers would result in greater disasters
-than we can imagine. We would create another
-race problem. Have we not enough
-with our negro problem? There is an excuse
-for people coming here whose homelands are
-overpopulated and who can easily and naturally
-assimilate. China has vast unoccupied
-lands with unopened resources and its population,
-great as it is, is not actually compelled
-to seek foreign territory. The Chinamen
-should pioneer their own great land. Let
-them stay at home and open their unworked
-national wealth. We cannot blame the
-ignorant peasants for coming here. They
-do not know the possibilities of their own
-country and if they did it would do them no
-good. It is the so-called intelligent, progressive
-Chinese that are to blame. The
-people of China are hampered and restricted
-by their own ancient customs fatal to themselves.
-Chinamen are coming to the United
-States to reap the benefit of civilization of
-another race with which they have little in
-common. It does not seem that the Chinese
-come here to become actual settlers, and such
-immigrants are not beneficial to the land in
-its present state of development.</p>
-
-<p>May the time be not far distant when all
-can go where they wish without any barrier
-or restriction. When that time comes we<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span>
-must free first ourselves and within our own
-countries. We must not endanger another
-land with our own shortcomings.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Joel B. Fort, Adams, Tenn.</i></p>
-
-<p>In your valuable Magazine you hit the
-“Rascals,” who have combined in violation
-of law and good morals to rob the producer
-and consumer, to suit me exactly.</p>
-
-<p>If it should come in the way of your comments,
-the good people of the Dark Tobacco
-District of Tennessee and Kentucky would
-rejoice with “exceeding great joy” if you in
-your inimitable style would hit the infernal
-Tobacco trust a <i>jolter</i>. This, the most heartless
-of all, took possession of this District,
-composed of about twenty-two counties, and
-laid it off in territories and appointed an
-agent to buy the tobacco (the only money
-crop) at his own price. No one was allowed
-in his territory, and consequently there was
-no opposition or competition. They took
-the tobacco at two dollars less than the cost
-of production. The condition became pitiable
-and laborers who were unable to support
-their families left the country and went
-to the cities, railroads and mines. The people
-became angered, and on the 24th of
-September, 1904, organized “The Dark Tobacco
-Protective Association.” This association
-controlled 75% of the tobacco, and
-in six months raised the price to double the
-former price. Now tobacco is selling for
-more than twice its price under the Trust rule.
-We appealed to the law, but had we waited
-for the law to protect us we would have
-starved. We went after the thieves red-hot
-and for more than a year hell would have
-been a good cooling place for them. Any
-help you can render us in your excellent
-Magazine, which is largely read in this section,
-would be greatly appreciated.</p>
-
-<p>Before I close let me pay you the tribute
-you richly deserve by saying that any heart
-breathing the gentle and ennobling sentiment
-found in your pieces “In the Mountains”
-and “A Day in the Autumn Woods” lives
-close to his God and fellow-man, and a man
-who could write the “Widow Lot” can
-never die, and is a national benefit. Great
-men have always had the misfortune to die
-before their works were appreciated and admired:
-I sincerely hope you may be spared
-to fight the battle of the people against
-Snobbery, Shams, Hypocrites, Grafters, and
-the Robber Barons of the Trusts.</p>
-
-<p>I send you a copy of a speech against the
-Tobacco Trust; if you have time to read it
-you will see why it is that I so eagerly await
-the issuance of every number of your Magazine.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>James Griffith Stephens, Valdes, Alaska.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am reading every number of your Magazine
-with great interest. I notice that you
-never touch on subjects pertaining to Alaska;
-have you forgot that we are on earth? Listen
-to this tale of woe.</p>
-
-<p>Alaska cost the United States seven million
-five hundred thousand dollars in the
-year 1867. Since then Alaska has paid into
-the treasury the sum of one hundred and
-fifty million. Note the interest on the purchase.
-Still we have no means of representation.
-There are today in the District of
-Alaska 60,000 population who stand in the
-same place that our forefathers stood when
-the tea-party took place. It is a shame that
-in this land of the free we are denied ANY
-means of representation. There is a mistaken
-idea that Alaska has a territorial form
-of government. It has no voice from the
-people whatever. We are peoned. And
-why? <span class="smcap">Because Alaska affords one of
-the choicest trees in the orchard of
-graft.</span> And its political plums are distributed
-among the carpetbag grafters who
-enforce their presence upon the pioneers
-who are fostering and fathering the country.
-There is not an elective office in the District.
-Our mining laws are obnoxious and afford
-the greatest chance for official graft. Did
-you ever stop to consider what a great
-country Alaska is, and how it is controlled?
-If I may, without taking too much of your
-valuable time, I will call your attention to
-the following facts.</p>
-
-<p>Alaska is one-third as large as the United
-States.</p>
-
-<p>It is not an iceberg, but affords future
-homes for millions.</p>
-
-<p>Alaska is in the same latitude as England,
-Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Russia.</p>
-
-<p>Alaska has the greatest fisheries on earth.
-These fisheries are controlled by the beef
-trust. GRAFT!</p>
-
-<p>Alaska has great beds of finest anthracite
-coal, now being gobbled up by the Pennsylvania
-coal barons. GRAFT!</p>
-
-<p>Alaska is covered by fine forests now being
-taken up by means of soldiers’ fractional
-script. GRAFT!</p>
-
-<p>Alaska has the largest stamp mill on earth.
-The mine has produced over $22,000,000 in
-gold, more than three times the cost of the
-District. This mine is not timbered and
-there is an average of one man killed a day
-by caving. GRAFT!</p>
-
-<p>Alaska has the only fur-seal islands in the
-world. These islands are leased to a big
-corporation. GRAFT!</p>
-
-<p>Alaska has a navigable river twenty-eight
-hundred miles in length, a reservation at the
-mouth controls the harbor and permits are
-issued for warehouses to two big corporations
-only, so Alaskans again have to stand
-for GRAFT!</p>
-
-<p>I could go on giving cases of graft for a
-month, but time is limited. An article by a
-well informed writer in Appleton’s <i>Booklovers’
-Magazine</i>, entitled “The Looting of
-Alaska,” is well worth reading.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>S. C. Le Baron, Smiley, Tex.</i></p>
-
-<p>Three numbers of your Magazine received,
-for which I am truly thankful inasmuch as
-it stands for the principles which have been
-my political platform ever since the Greenback<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
-party was organised. It is only financial
-inability that kept me from becoming a
-subscriber at the start, for I felt very certain
-it would be a powerful educator, and the
-copies at hand prove my hopes fully realized.
-If it could be gotten into the hands of those
-who feel the need of a change in conditions
-but still can’t be made to understand the
-cause of these conditions, it would indeed be
-a powerful factor in the reform movement.
-The copies received are out doing missionary
-work; there is enough strong and conclusive
-argument in any one of them to set an unprejudiced
-mind to thinking seriously
-whether these things are so. I have been in
-this movement over thirty years, and having
-passed my eighty-first birthday, feel that I am
-not destined to work much longer, but when I
-see the circumstances which inevitably tend
-to an enthrallment of the masses, I feel like
-doing my best to avert the coming disaster.
-My hope lies in the integrity of an intelligent
-citizenship and it is through outspoken literature
-that intelligence can be acquired.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>E. J. Whelan, Tipton, Mich.</i></p>
-
-<p>I like the way you write and the way you
-put it, but I am discouraged. It doesn’t seem
-as though the rank and file will ever see the
-point. The most of them will agree with me
-about the condition of the country, but when
-they come to vote, they vote the same old
-ticket. That is the way they do. Some one
-gets hold of them before election and they
-vote it straight. Only a short time ago a
-friend of mine said to me that he thought we
-as a Government were getting right where
-Russia is, and it would take the same internal
-revolution to get rid of the monopolies and
-trusts that are holding us down. Now I
-will venture anything that that same man
-will vote with the old G. O. P. and vote a
-straight ticket too. Now it makes me sick,
-but I think if they can stand it, I can, and
-have made up my mind to let the whole
-thing go to the devil. It looks as though the
-men with Hon. before their names were
-thieves. It is called “graft” now.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>F. A. Jeter, Alto, Tex.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am on your side, never have been on any
-other way and I know that if the laboring
-people do not get some relief, and that soon,
-we are gone. Your Magazine has done good
-here. Has changed hot-headed Democrats
-to Populists.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>A. C. Shuford, Newton, N. C.</i></p>
-
-<p>In a letter some time back you stated
-that you believed the “Money Question” to
-be infinitely more important than any other
-before the American people. You are undoubtedly
-correct in the view you take of the
-matter. People take the same superstitious
-view of money that they do of religion, and
-how to reach the reason of the average man
-through all this thick covering of superstition
-is quite a problem. I have thought
-over this problem for years and am not much
-nearer the solutions of it now than when I
-first began. I have practiced caution in my
-contact with men, and to look back for twenty
-years I can see quite a change has taken
-place in my own neighborhood as well as
-elsewhere. I have been a great admirer of
-Jefferson and have read everything he has
-written which I could get my hands upon.
-His boldness in attacking the church is a
-marvel to me. Here is the power which
-enslaves the minds of the people and keeps
-them from using their thinking machines.
-The result of such methods is that the average
-man is afraid to think for himself. No
-step of progress can be made until this vast
-machine is shattered, and yet care must be
-used in doing so, because man must have
-some foundation upon which to stand. Do
-not misunderstand me, please. I am a believer
-in Christian principles as I understand
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The money power and other monopolies
-are allowed to maintain their grip through
-the church largely. How best to expose and
-open this organisation to attack is a problem
-I wish you or some other man would solve.
-The average politician knows well how to
-play upon this feeling which the Church
-creates and as long as the organisation is
-allowed to continue its process of enslaving
-the minds of our children, just so long will
-the crop of “Grafters” be an abundant one.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Sallie T. Parrish, Adel, Ga.</i></p>
-
-<p>I believe your Magazine is more eagerly
-awaited than any other publication extant,
-and I think the people read what you write
-first. I am sure I do. You are the only
-writer who has ever made politics more fascinating
-to me than romance.</p>
-
-<p>I used to read your paper when I was a
-child almost as ardently as I read the Magazine
-now. Some of the editorials appealed
-to me so strongly that I preserved them in
-my scrap book, not because I understood
-them then, but because I felt intuitively
-that there was something sublime in them.</p>
-
-<p>Not long since I showed one of those
-selections—The Highest Office—to a young
-man—a Democrat and a teacher in the same
-school that I was. He finished reading it
-just as the bell rang for the morning session.
-The moment the opening exercises were
-over he sprang upon the rostrum, shook his
-black hair out of his face and exclaimed:
-“Children, I have found a gem! Let me
-read it to you.”</p>
-
-<p>Your Magazine is being read by many
-honest Democrats who a few years ago
-thought the Democratic party was all it
-claimed to be and that you were wrong.
-Now they frankly endorse your principles
-and praise your courage, honesty and brilliant
-intellect.</p>
-
-<p>I must thank you for a clearer knowledge
-of political questions, public affairs and
-economic conditions than I ever would have
-had had it not been for you.</p>
-
-<p>Your “Bethany” I consider one of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-treasures of my modest collection of books.
-Not long ago one of those reasonable, broad-minded,
-intelligent Democrats was telling
-me how much he liked your Magazine. He
-said he read everything in it—“Pole Baker”
-and all the rest—that he didn’t think you
-had ever written an uninteresting sentence
-in your life and that he thought you the
-purest, most upright man in public life today.</p>
-
-<p>I asked him if he had read “Bethany.”
-He had not, but when I told him about it
-he was anxious to do so. I sent him mine.
-He is a man near sixty and he read it with
-all the intensity and abandon that a sentimental
-girl of sixteen would devour one of
-Laura Jean Libbey’s novels. He and I
-were alternate day watchers at the bedside
-of a convalescent patient—one very dear to
-us both—but I had it all to myself that day
-until late in the afternoon, when the blessed
-trained nurse decided to forego a part of her
-nap and relieve me awhile.</p>
-
-<p>I think you have done and are doing the
-world more good than any other man in it,
-and I hope that you may be granted many
-years of life and strength to champion the
-cause of humanity and labor for justice,
-truth and equity, and I know that some
-time your noble life will be rewarded.</p>
-
-<p>I am very glad you have added the department
-of “Books” to your Magazine.
-I don’t think it could be improved now, unless
-you were to add an amateur or young
-writer’s department.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Mrs. B. C. Rude, Lyons, N. Y.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am getting <span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span>
-from the news-stand and like it very much.
-It is refreshing to see one man who <i>dares</i> say
-what he believes.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Halley Halleck.</i></p>
-
-<p>I have read every issue of your Magazine
-up to and including December publication.
-It is certainly the greatest publication of the
-kind in existence. As an educator it has no
-equal. It expresses more opinions and
-views and in the most fearless manner of
-any paper in the world. Long may it live
-and reach all parts of the globe!</p>
-
-<p>The question which you are so ably advocating
-is taking root and spreading and
-arousing public opinion so as to bring the
-monarchical money-kings to justice. May
-God speed the time when they will be handled
-as other criminals, to wear the stripes, balls
-and chains!</p>
-
-<p>That local state government is no exception
-I got from that ex-representative of
-the Legislature, the King Lobbyist, Hamp
-McWhorter. He has an office in the Equitable
-building, and any senator he thinks he
-can use he simply ’phones one of his henchmen
-at the Capitol, telling him to send such and
-such a senator to his office, where he gets
-in his dirty work.</p>
-
-<p>In another instance, when a member a
-few years ago introduced a resolution to
-have the Governor appoint a committee to
-investigate the merging of railroads, the
-vice-president of the Southern Railroad was
-soon in a seat beside him, making inquiries
-as to what would satisfy him. Well, the
-member was appointed local attorney at a
-salary of five hundred per annum for a
-number of years. The motion was quickly
-withdrawn and if this individual ever represented
-the road in a case I never heard of it.
-However, he drew the salary and rode on a
-free pass.</p>
-
-<p>This lobbyist is for suing. He commences
-with his free pass on probable
-candidates. As I remember, at a station a
-man who was a country merchant, farmer
-and mill owner presented a pass to the agent
-and asked if it was valid. The agent informed
-him it was genuine. Sure enough,
-he was a candidate and elected as senator
-the next race.</p>
-
-<p>Don’t you think the Texas law should be
-applied, which is that the guilty party is
-taken out and given a good thrashing the
-first time and for the second offence double
-the dose?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>W. D. Wattles, Winchester, Ind.</i></p>
-
-<p>Permit me to express my appreciation of
-the February number of <span class="smcap">Watson’s</span>. It is
-the best Magazine I have seen, and I have
-seen most of the good ones. I like your
-practice of publishing short, pointed articles,
-and your cartoons are of the best. Your
-educational and news summary departments
-seem to me to be especially valuable. I
-shall take it into my pulpit Sunday
-evening, and read from your editorial.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>D. C. Pryor, Uvalde, Tex.</i></p>
-
-<p>When I was a boy I saw a carpenter place
-side by side three pieces of lumber which he
-was pleased to call “dimension timber.”
-These pieces were something like forty feet
-long and were two inches wide and eight
-inches deep. He took iron spikes and nailed
-the three pieces together until they looked to
-be all in one piece. He told me it was “a
-girder” for the “warehouse” he was constructing.
-I wanted to know why he did not
-use a solid piece of timber of the same measure.
-He answered by saying that the three
-pieces united together with the stronger part
-of the one fitting opposite the weaker part
-of the others would give the girder a greater
-strength in the power of resisting the immense
-weight that would have to be borne than if
-the girder had been made of just one piece
-of lumber.</p>
-
-<p>In connection with the foregoing incident
-I wish to draw a pen picture of a scene which
-is passing before my vision: At Washington,
-within the shadow of the Capitol, standing
-side by side facing the west upon the
-steps of that magnificent structure, are three
-of the greatest men of renown the world has
-ever known. In the centre of the group
-stands the “Immortal Lincoln,” to the right
-of Mr. Lincoln stands the “Irreproachable
-Jefferson,” and to the left stands the “Irrepressible<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span>
-Watson”—whose mind is the very
-incarnation of Jeffersonian principles. Above
-this scene on either side, hanging toward the
-centre at half mast, are our national colors,
-beneath which is a life size portrait of “The
-Father of Our Country.” Above the portrait
-in raised letters I read “Eternal vigilance
-is the price of liberty.”</p>
-
-<p>Now I wish to impress upon those who
-may care to read this article and who are
-tired of living under the present system of
-“graft and greed,” and to those of us who
-have always believed in party lines and are
-more or less prejudiced in favor of our political
-tendencies, that there can be no reformation
-ever made in either of the old parties
-that exist at the present time. I therefore
-believe we should endeavor to secure the
-very best “dimension timber” that can be
-had out of the now scattered ranks of the
-Republican, Democratic and Populist parties,
-and with the nails of iron and bands of
-steel bring them together and make of them
-a girder for our country that the gods of
-ancient Greece could not knock asunder!
-And why not at an early date advertise this
-new party and organize party clubs throughout
-the land and let the watchword be
-“Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty”?</p>
-
-<p>I would suggest that we name this “new
-party” Demo-Re-Polican or so word the
-name that each member from an old party
-may not feel that he had lost all of his former
-identity. I have not the least hope of electing
-as the chief magistrate of the nation a Southern
-man for years to come, and it is useless
-to put one at the head of the ticket to be
-slaughtered just to make a Roman holiday.
-But Mr. Watson can be our leader, and when
-we win “There will be glory enough for us
-all.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Conckalochie.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">(This is an Indian word for encampment,
-or a bringing together of the tribes for the
-exchange of commodities.)</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Edwin Hyde Nutt, Dresden, N. Y.</i></p>
-
-<p>I think you are on the right track exactly,
-and will do all I can to get you some new subscribers.
-I live in a land of Gold-bugs, and
-if there is a place on earth that needs a missionary
-it is Yates County, N. Y. We have
-lost our interest in Mr. Bryan. How could he
-stultify himself to vote for Parker, we can’t
-see. Think he will have a hard time to make
-Democrats out of old Greenbackers. He
-knows the greenbacks are the best money in
-the world. Why does he try to break up
-the Populist Party?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>R. N. Crowell, Rob Roy, Ind.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am on the down-hill of life; nearly sixty-four
-years old. Have been a student of history
-for twenty-five years and would love to
-do something to free us from the slavery and
-tyranny of boss rule. When I go hence I will
-leave a posterity behind me and would love
-to know that I have done a little something
-to make our country a free and independent
-and a Christian people in deed and in truth.
-Have traveled in fourteen states, been
-through the Indian Territory and have had
-some opportunity of learning something of
-the situation that we now are in both
-religiously and politically.</p>
-
-<p>I glory in the principles of Washington,
-Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln and the People’s
-Party. I admire Thomas E. Watson because
-he stands square to the front for right and
-justice for the common people against money,
-greed and selfishness for place and power.
-Brother American, wake up and help shake
-off the shackles that our money lords are
-binding us with before it is too late!</p>
-
-<p>Yours for liberty, peace and righteousness,
-for God and a common brotherhood of man.
-Let us unite and tear down the walls of sin
-and selfishness and bring in the millennial age
-of peace and righteousness that we may be
-called the children of God in deed and in
-truth.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>T. M. Barton, Butler, Ky.</i></p>
-
-<p>You evidently have mistaken me for my
-deceased brother, William, who was an ardent
-Populist, while I am a good Republican
-“from away back.” I am not with you in
-public ownership, free silver, etc., but with
-you heart and soul in downing the great
-trusts, monopolies, etc. Now it seems to
-me this can be done in no better way than by
-standing right at President Roosevelt’s back.
-We can hardly hope to find an abler, more
-courageous and more earnest champion of
-the people than he. Personally, Mr. Watson,
-as I have measured you, mentally and morally,
-by your speeches and writings, I like
-you, just as I do many a good Democrat and
-Populist, without agreeing with them politically.
-The fact is that the late elections
-have given us a great lesson in free thought
-and free action—in placing principle and
-patriotism above party allegiance. As we
-witness the aggressive greed, the intolerable
-impudence, the great power of the great corporations,
-we may well remember “Eternal
-vigilance is the price of liberty.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Peter E. Cooper, Dover. N. J.</i></p>
-
-<p>Like very much your arrangement of having
-only four numbers to a volume, as four
-will make a convenient size to handle when
-bound. Hope you will continue that feature.</p>
-
-<p>In making changes, spoken of in January
-issue, I hope you will not change the size
-(you can add as many pages as you like) as
-present size is very convenient and, when
-bound, will look much nicer if of uniform
-size.</p>
-
-<p>I am going to have mine bound in full law
-sheep, as I consider them a valuable addition
-to any library.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>William Hamilton, Cleveland, O.</i></p>
-
-<p>I am interested in the success both of your
-Magazine and its ideas and would be pleased
-to know how you are coming on and what
-the prospects are.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="Educational_Department">
-<img src="images/heading6.jpg" width="700" height="175" alt="" />
-<h2><i>Educational Department</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="center">A STORY CONCERNING GENERAL GEORGE
-WASHINGTON</p>
-
-<p>A correspondent, in the course of a private
-letter, reports a very interesting tradition
-which illustrates the character and bearing
-of The Father of his Country.</p>
-
-<p>I give it in the language of the writer:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“To return to General Washington. Your picture
-of him makes me want to repeat to you a
-piece of tradition that was handed down to me
-by my father.</p>
-
-<p>“My father’s uncle, Governor George R. Gilmer,
-of Georgia, told my father that <i>his</i> father,
-Thomas M. Gilmer, of Virginia, <i>told him</i> that General
-Washington was the most extreme type of the
-aristocrat that this country had ever produced.
-That he had seen him drive up in his coach and
-four to a country court house at election time to
-vote that he would alight, and with head erect
-and neither looking to the right nor the left, as the
-crowd uncovered, parted and almost prostrated
-themselves to the ground, would march up, deposit
-his ballot, and without the slightest acknowledgment
-to the crowd or to any individual, without
-even so much as a nod or turn of the head, he
-would march in state through the path made by
-obsequiousness and reverence and love back to
-his coach, where he would sit the picture of rigidity
-and indifference as he rode away.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Georgetown, Pa.</span>, Jan. 17, 1906.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Hon. Thomas E. Watson, Thomson, Ga.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>: Can you direct me where I can get
-Alexander Stevens’ “War Between the States”?
-I would like to purchase this book.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Yours truly,</p>
-
-<p class="right">⸺ ⸺.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">ANSWER</p>
-
-<p>The book is out of print, but is easily
-obtained through the old book dealers.</p>
-
-<p>The price ranges from $5 to $10.</p>
-
-<p>Try Joseph McDonough, Albany, New
-York, or The Americus Book Company,
-Americus, Ga.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">San Saba, Tex.</span>, Feb. 5, 1906.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Hon. Thomas E. Watson, Thomson, Ga.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>: I see in the newspapers that Mr.
-So and So’s seat in the New York exchange is
-worth nearly $100,000. What is meant by that?
-Why is it worth so much and what do they do?
-Thanking you in advance for the information,
-I am.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Very truly yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right">⸺ ⸺.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">ANSWER</p>
-
-<p>The New York Stock Exchange is simply
-an exclusive gambling hell where very rich
-gamblers bet on the rise and fall of the stock
-of the big corporations.</p>
-
-<p>The “nearly $100,000” is the entrance fee.</p>
-
-<p>The reason why the price is so great is because
-the operations and the opportunities
-are so vast.</p>
-
-<p>Compared to the colossal stakes and winnings
-of the Stock Exchange, the gambling
-which goes on at Monaco, or at Tom Taggart’s
-place at French Lick Springs is puerile.
-Since the world was created, no such gigantic
-gaming has been known as the mad speculations
-in the New York Stock Exchange.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, the losses are as large as the
-gains, but those on the inside of the Exchange
-have an enormous advantage over
-those on the outside. Those on the inside
-are generally the masterful fellows who shear
-the lambs outside.</p>
-
-<p>The organized, experienced and expert
-players within the Exchange have the same
-point of advantage over the gullible, unorganized
-public that the cool dealers at the
-gaming tables have over the men and women
-who buck against the bank.</p>
-
-<p>For the privilege of <i>getting on the inside
-of the game</i>, Mr. So and So pays nearly
-$100,000.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">New York</span>, Jan. 7, 1906.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Hon. Thomas E. Watson, Thomson, Ga.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>: Will you kindly answer the following
-questions in your <i>Educational Department</i>?</p>
-
-<p>(1) What is the difference between Single Tax
-and Populism?</p>
-
-<p>(2) Is it true that Grover Cleveland is to receive
-$12,000 per year from the “Big Three,”
-and, if so, why?</p>
-
-<p>(3) Why was not the Prudential Company
-investigated? Their premiums are about the
-same as the others. In talking with their agents
-I find them the same as agents of the “Big
-Three.”</p>
-
-<p>(4) Is Paul Morton treating the policy holders
-justly when he <i>takes</i> $80,000 per year as his salary?</p>
-
-<p>Your Magazine is a God-send to the people at
-large and I trust it will be read by men and women
-throughout the country. Thanking you in
-advance, I am.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Very truly,</p>
-
-<p class="right">⸺ ⸺.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">ANSWER</p>
-
-<p>(1) Single Tax puts all the burden of
-supporting the Government on one form of
-wealth, viz.: the value of land.</p>
-
-<p>Populism equalizes taxation, and would
-compel each owner of property to pay in
-proportion to his wealth.</p>
-
-<p>The Single Taxer would put all the load
-on land, leaving money, stocks, bonds and
-personal property of every sort untaxed.</p>
-
-<p>Populists cannot see any justice in taking
-the value out of the land of the farmer,
-while twelve billion dollars of railroad stocks
-and bonds go untaxed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span></p>
-
-<p>Carnegie holds about three hundred million
-dollars in the bonds of the Steel Trust.
-Those bonds are as good as gold. They pay
-Mr. Carnegie a regal income. Why should
-my land have the value taxed out of it and
-Carnegie’s bonds go free? There is no justice
-in this scheme. It does not measure up
-to the Populist dogma of “Equal rights to all.”</p>
-
-<p>(2) Yes. To cloak insurance rascality
-with his respected name. The robbers who
-run those insurance companies simply
-bought the use of Mr. Cleveland’s name.
-He consents to play the humble but useful
-part of decoy duck for $1,000 per month.</p>
-
-<p>Gen. Robert E. Lee, just after the Civil
-War, was offered $50,000 per year by one of
-these very companies. He refused to sell
-the use of his name. He was a poor man,
-and went to teaching school for a living. In
-this quiet, modest, but noble way “the greatest
-soldier that the Anglo-Saxon race ever
-produced” (see Theodore Roosevelt’s “Life
-of Thomas H. Benton”) was supporting his
-family at the time of his death. Mr. Cleveland
-is not a poor man. His income is
-$5,000 per year, over and above what silly
-magazines pay him for occasional articles
-which are valueless. Therefore Mr. Cleveland
-need not have sold his name to the life
-insurance rascals. But the $12,000 tempted
-him, and he sold out.</p>
-
-<p>(3) Dryden’s Prudential was investigated
-and very rotten it was shown to be.</p>
-
-<p>(4) No. He is simply stealing the
-money. Calling it “salary” does not keep
-it from being loot.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Chicago</span>, Feb. 7, 1906.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>Hon. Thomas E. Watson, Thomson, Ga.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>: Will you please give me the information
-as set forth in the following questions?</p>
-
-<p>(1) How many years must an alien live in this
-country before he can take out his final papers?</p>
-
-<p>(2) Can an alien, on declaring his intentions to
-become an American citizen, exercise the voting
-franchise before getting final papers?</p>
-
-<p>(3) I have been nine years in this country and
-never bothered about taking out my papers as a
-citizen. If I were to declare my intentions of
-becoming a citizen now, how long would it be
-before I could exercise the vote franchise?</p>
-
-<p>Thanking you in anticipation of an early answer,
-I remain,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Yours respectfully,</p>
-
-<p class="right">⸺ ⸺.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">ANSWER</p>
-
-<p>(1) The conditions under and the manner
-in which an alien may be admitted to
-become a citizen of the United States are
-prescribed by sections 2 and 165 to 174 of the
-revised Statutes of the United States. The
-alien may, immediately upon landing in this
-country, declare upon oath before a Circuit
-or District Court of the United States, or a
-District or a Supreme Court of the Territories,
-or a Court of Record of any of the
-states having common law jurisdiction and
-a seal and clerk, that it his bona fide intention
-to become a citizen of the United States.
-He cannot take out his final papers until
-after he has resided at least five years continuously
-within the United States, and
-within the State or Territory where such
-Court is at the time held, one year at least.
-He cannot take out his final papers until
-the lapse of two years after declaring his
-intention. Accordingly, if the alien should
-immediately declare his intention upon landing,
-it would be necessary for him to wait
-until the expiration of five years before
-taking out his final papers. However, if he
-had resided three years in the United States
-before declaring his intention, then he could
-secure his final papers at the end of two years.</p>
-
-<p>(2) The right to vote comes from the
-state. Naturalization is a Federal right.
-In nearly one half of the states of the Union
-an alien who has declared his intention has
-the right to vote equally with fully naturalized
-or native born citizens. In the other
-half, only citizens vote.</p>
-
-<p>(3) In your case, living in the State of
-Illinois, it would be necessary for you to declare
-your intentions and take out your final
-papers inasmuch as only citizens of the
-United States can vote in that state.</p>
-
-<p>In Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana,
-Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, Oregon,
-South Dakota, Texas and Wisconsin,
-an alien who has declared intention is permitted
-to vote. In some of these states
-additional qualifications are added. For
-example, in Indiana he must have resided
-one year in the United States, not necessarily
-in Indiana. In Michigan he must have
-declared his intention two years and six
-months prior to November 8, 1904; otherwise
-he is barred from voting. In Missouri,
-if he has declared intention not less than
-one year, or more than five, before election.
-And so on. In Nebraska, if he has declared
-his intention thirty days before
-election, provided he has resided within the
-state six months. And so on, several of the
-other states having similar qualifications.
-In the states not mentioned the requirements
-are that voter must be a citizen by
-nativity or naturalization. In some of the
-states there is a provision that the citizen
-shall have paid a registration fee of $1, as in
-Delaware. That he shall have paid taxes
-within two years, if twenty-two years old,
-or more, as in Pennsylvania. If he can read
-and write, as in Massachusetts. If he can
-read or understand the Constitution, as in
-Mississippi. If he has paid all his taxes since
-1877, as in Georgia. If he is an Indian, with
-several tribe relations, as in South Dakota.</p>
-
-<p>As was said before, naturalization is a
-Federal right. The laws relating to it apply
-to the whole Union alike, and provide that
-no alien may be naturalized until after five
-years’ residence. Even this doesn’t give him
-the right to vote unless the state confers the
-privilege upon him. On the other hand, the
-right to vote comes from the state, but the
-state could not confer this right upon an
-alien who had not declared intention.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="HOME">
-<img src="images/heading7.jpg" width="700" height="175" alt="" />
-<h2><i>HOME</i><br />
-<span class="smaller"><i><span class="smaller">BY</span> Mrs. Louise H. Miller.</i></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>HOME DEPARTMENT</h3>
-
-<p>The Home Department welcomes suggestions, recipes, useful hints, brief
-articles, short accounts of what women have done in their homes and home
-towns, and brief, <i>true</i> stories of “Heroism at Home.” We are all
-working together and we want to put into our Department anything that
-will make the housewife’s life brighter and more useful. We, all of us,
-are the editors of “Home”; let us make it as good as we can.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Every month there will be a <i>prize of a year’s free subscription to
-<span class="smcap">Watson’s Magazine</span></i>, sent to any address desired, <i>for the
-best contribution</i>. There will also be, every month, a <i>prize of
-another such free subscription for the best true story of “Heroism at
-Home.”</i> These two prizes will not be given to the same person.</p>
-
-<p>The names of those contributing recipes and suggestions will be printed
-with what they send in, unless they request to have their names
-omitted. The names of those contributing stories of “Heroism at Home”
-will <i>not</i> be printed unless in exceptional cases. The reason for
-not printing the names in this case is that the stories are true and
-the characters in them are real people who might be sensitive about
-having their most private affairs set forth in type with their right
-names appearing in it. If we published the names and addresses of the
-person who sends in the story about them it would be almost the same as
-publishing their own names. In each number there will be a note saying
-that such and such a story receives the prize, but no names will be
-given. The names in the story will be left blank or fictitious names will
-be supplied. Under the head of “Heroism at Home” are further particulars.</p>
-
-<p>There is no need to worry about “not knowing how to write.” What our
-Department wants is the <i>facts</i>. If any corrections are really
-needed, they can easily be made. We aren’t trying to be “authors”—we’re
-just women trying to help one another.</p>
-
-<p>The Editors of the Magazine tell me that it will simplify matters very
-much if we make a few simple rules for sending in contributions. Let us
-see how the following will work out:</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>Make all contributions short and to the point.</i></p>
-
-<p>We have only a few pages altogether; there are a lot of us to contribute
-and there are many things to talk about.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>Address everything carefully and in full to Mrs. Louise H. Miller,
-<span class="smcap">Watson’s Magazine</span>, 121 West 42d Street, New York City.</i></p>
-
-<p>3. <i>Write on one side of the paper only.</i></p>
-
-<p>4. <i>No letters or manuscripts will be returned.</i></p>
-
-<p>Make a copy of everything you send if you want to keep it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><b>May Number.</b>—A continuation of this
-month’s subject for discussion.</p>
-
-<p><b>June Number.</b>—Our common ornamental
-flowers, wild and cultivated.</p>
-
-<p><b>July Number.</b>—What women can do toward
-improving and beautifying their home
-cities, towns, or country districts.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Department this month is something
-like! The Other Editors have taken hold!
-I knew that I should have to write most of
-it for the first two months, until time enough
-had passed for contributions to come in
-from the rest of you. Now the suggestions,
-recipes, articles, and stories of “Heroism at
-Home” have begun to come from all over
-the country and our Department begins to
-take on its permanent form. Every month
-from now on ought to be a big improvement
-over all that went before.</p>
-
-<p>The letters received have made me very
-happy, for they contain many words of praise
-and good wishes for the Department and
-prove that the writers are ready and willing
-to help edit it and that they <i>can</i>. Don’t
-misunderstand me. The words of praise are
-not for <i>my</i> work in the Department, but for
-the Department itself—for the plan of having
-us all work together for our common
-good. It is a good plan and, now that you
-are actually at work with me, I know we are
-going to work that good plan out and work
-it out <i>well</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, some of the letters did not
-reach me in time for publication in this number.
-They will not be lost to the Department
-on that account, however. Also, the
-final date set for letters on Why Women
-Should be Interested in Politics came so soon
-after the day when the March issue was mailed
-out that there was hardly time for many to
-reach us. The Magazine was very late last
-month. The Editors couldn’t help it, and
-they are trying hard to get this April number
-out promptly on time. After this we will not
-set any particular date for letters to be in, but
-if, for instance, you want to say something
-in the May number, send it to me as soon as
-you can after getting this issue.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span></p>
-
-<p>After talking with the Editors and thinking
-it over by myself I can see that it will not
-always be best to publish every letter as soon
-as it comes in. For example, an excellent
-letter has been sent to us from Nebraska
-telling how the women of a certain town have
-organized and done a great deal for the
-beauty, comfort and usefulness of their little
-city. It came in response to something I
-had said in the Department. Now this letter
-is just the kind of thing we want, but it
-seems to me better not to use it in this issue
-which is devoted chiefly to woman’s interest
-in politics.</p>
-
-<h3>MAKING YOUR COMMUNITY BETTER</h3>
-
-<p>Don’t you think it would be better to devote
-a whole number later on to the subject
-of what women can do for their native towns
-or districts? They have organized in a great
-many places and there are several national
-societies devoted to civic improvement. The
-members either do things themselves, or use
-their influence to secure good local laws to
-bring these things about. It is surprising
-how much they accomplish.</p>
-
-<p>The field is a large one and covers many
-things—beautifying public squares and
-streets, making front and back yards attractive,
-improving the schools and school-yards,
-securing parks for the people, making better
-the towns’ sanitary conditions, establishing
-dinner-clubs for factory girls, pushing the
-right kind of legislation for the community,
-planting trees, flowers and grass, establishing
-traveling or stationary libraries, starting
-church or public lecture courses, public
-baths, hospitals, suppression of smoke and
-other nuisances such as overhead telephone
-wires and ugly advertising boards—oh, there
-is no end to what can be done! Of course,
-no two communities need just the same improvements
-and town and country have
-different problems, but wherever you live
-you will find something that can be made
-better. And we women can do it! “A revolutionizing
-power as to all that changes
-the ‘order of one day’ lies in feminine hands,
-through the use of what is distinctly hers,”
-says that wise woman who, under the name
-of “C,” writes those splendid articles called
-“Home Thoughts” for the New York <i>Post</i>.</p>
-
-<p>All this isn’t a matter of theory. These
-things <i>have been done</i> in many places. And
-why shouldn’t woman be able to bring about
-public improvements? More than half the
-population of the United States are women.
-In many places we can vote. Everywhere
-we wield a great influence over those that do
-vote. And surely we have brains enough.</p>
-
-<p>To my mind, local women’s clubs organized
-for some such purpose as this are a good
-deal more worth while than women’s clubs
-organized merely for self-improvement.
-Work for the improvement of others—that
-is the best way to improve yourself. Be a
-citizen as well as an individual. Women’s
-literary and current events clubs are good
-institutions when they don’t try to do foolish
-things or make us neglect our home duties,
-but these same clubs might do the world,
-and the members, too, greater good if they
-would also turn their attention to helping
-the whole community to better things.</p>
-
-<p>But to return to that Nebraska letter. I
-suggest that we keep it till our July number
-and devote that whole issue to the question
-of women and civic improvement. I hope
-that every one of you who has done any
-work of that kind, or seen it done, will write
-to the Department and tell us about it. Remember
-that the July number comes out
-June 25 and that the letters should reach me
-about three weeks before that time. Write
-now.</p>
-
-<h3><i>FLOWERS FOR JUNE NUMBER</i></h3>
-
-<p>June is a month of flowers, how will it do
-to devote the June number to them? That
-is a very big subject, so we’d better narrow
-it down a little. Suppose we consider only
-the ornamental flowers common to our gardens,
-woods and fields. Let us all contribute
-something as to the care and raising and
-nature of them.</p>
-
-<p>We will not “study botany,” as they do in
-school and college, but, besides collecting
-information on planting, watering, repotting
-etc., we can get a very good bird’s eye view
-if what flowers <i>are</i>. Nearly all of us have
-probably raised flowers or seen them raised,
-but there are enough interesting facts about
-them to fill a hundred numbers of our Department.
-Let us try to collect as many
-interesting facts as possible so that we can
-have a broader knowledge when we see them
-or work with them in the future.</p>
-
-<p>We will not include the plants or trees that
-bear our common fruits and vegetables. This
-is a subject by itself and perhaps we can take
-it up in some later number.</p>
-
-<p>Though we are going to confine ourselves
-to our common flowers and plants let us get
-a general idea of where they belong in the
-vegetable kingdom—in regard to ferns,
-mosses, mushrooms, sea-weeds, lichens, etc.</p>
-
-<p>For instance, which of these is the nearest
-relative to the asparagus—the oak, the fern,
-the lily, the mushroom or the rose? The
-question isn’t important to us in itself, but a
-very little effort will enable us to understand
-the general arrangements of the plants so
-that it will be an added pleasure all our lives.</p>
-
-<p>What <i>is</i> a plant? What is it composed
-of? What does it eat? Drink? Breathe?
-What are the leaves for? The roots? The
-flowers? Why do plants differ so among
-themselves? Why does one grow from a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span>
-bulb, another from fine roots? Why is the
-seed of a maple put in that peculiar little
-case you crunch under foot on the pavement?</p>
-
-<p>Oh, there are lots of “whys”! The nice part
-of it is that it is all very simple, after all.
-We can find out a great deal with very little
-trouble. There are plenty of easy books on
-the subject, nowadays, and a good many
-people who know about plants. Many of
-you know all these things, and more, without
-asking.</p>
-
-<p>The things suggested in the last paragraph
-<i>are</i> important to us if we are raising
-flowers. If you raise flowers you are a
-flower-nurse and a flower-doctor. How
-can a nurse or doctor do much for a patient
-unless she knows what the patient eats,
-drinks and breathes, and what the various
-members and organs of the patient are for?</p>
-
-<p>Where did our flowers originally come
-from? Are they all native to America?
-If not, how did they get here? Were they
-always as they are now?</p>
-
-<p>How do plants reproduce their kind? Do
-all plants have seeds? Do seeds always
-grow into plants just like the one on which
-they grew? If so, have all the many varieties
-existed from the first? If not, how can
-you get another plant like the parent? Do
-you know what Luther Burbank, the “California
-Wizard,” is doing? Has a seed one
-parent or two? Where is it, or where are
-they? It’s easy to ask questions, isn’t it?</p>
-
-<p>Yes, and it’s surprisingly easy to answer
-them, if you try. An encyclopedia will help
-you, if you consult it. So will an unabridged
-dictionary, though it doesn’t say
-much and is often very technical. Of
-course a botany will and there are many
-“popular” books now that give you much
-interesting information. Don’t make a
-lesson out of it. You may be able to answer
-some or all of the above questions without
-help of any kind. If not, take a few minutes
-some time soon and browse around among
-some of those books and pick up anything
-that strikes your fancy. If there are no
-books handy, ask your friends. It is as
-good as a game of “Authors” any day!
-If your friends don’t know, you are very
-lucky. Then you can do a little observing
-and thinking on your own hook. That is a
-hundred times better than being told or
-taught.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing that can be made more
-deadly dry and tedious than “botany”:
-there are few things that can be made more
-delightful and interesting than a commonsense
-study of flowers!</p>
-
-<p>Have flowers played a part in history?
-What was the “War of the Roses?” What
-is the fleur-de-lis, the emblem of France and
-used so much in decoration and jewelry?
-Do you remember the story of Narcissus in
-Greek mythology? What other flowers
-have figured in history? Do you remember,
-in our February number, what royal family
-had the broom flower as their badge?
-What is the national flower of Scotland?
-Of Ireland? Of our country?</p>
-
-<p>Do we Americans use much taste in making
-bouquets? What is your idea of a really
-beautiful and artistic bouquet? Do you
-know the Japanese idea of a bouquet?</p>
-
-<p>Is it healthful to have many plants
-around you? How do plants keep the water
-fresh in an aquarium?</p>
-
-<p>Tell us your best remedies for insects that
-injure plants? What plants are best for the
-house in winter? In summer? Do you
-know how to make good window-boxes?
-Tell us anything you know about plants and
-their care.</p>
-
-<p>Would your town or district be pleasanter
-and better to live in if more flowers and trees
-were growing in it? What are parks worth
-to a large city? But there. I am running
-into our subject for July!</p>
-
-<p>Are you supposed to answer all those
-questions? Bless you, no! No one <i>has</i> to
-do anything in our Department. We get
-work enough in our daily lives—our Department
-is to afford us a change and relief from
-everyday work. It isn’t any the less play
-because we can profit by it and learn things
-from it. And perhaps it will teach us how
-to turn some of our daily work into an interesting
-kind of game (if we haven’t learned
-how to do that already) and yet do it better
-than we did before. The questions are
-merely to suggest things for our June number.
-Pick out a few that interest you and
-find out something about them or tell us
-what you know already. Mercy, no! You
-don’t <i>have</i> to! But you’re likely to find a
-little of it amusing and pleasant and to add
-a bit more interest to your life.</p>
-
-<p>If we only know how, and try, we can make
-our lives <i>so</i> much more pleasant for ourselves
-and those about us! It is very easy.
-And it doesn’t take much time or brains or
-money or anything else, except “gumption”
-enough to try.</p>
-
-<h4><i>For May, June and July</i></h4>
-
-<p>So for May we will continue our discussion
-of woman’s interest in politics; in June, our
-common, ornamental flowers, wild and
-cultivated; in July, what women can do
-toward improving and beautifying their
-native town or district.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Suggest Future Subjects</i></h4>
-
-<p>I have asked the printer to put the above
-announcement at the beginning of our
-Department for the sake of convenience.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span>
-I believe it will be a good plan to announce
-our monthly subjects three numbers ahead
-all the time, so that we can have plenty of
-time to think them over in advance, make
-suggestions and send in information.</p>
-
-<p>Now, what shall we have for the August
-number? If there is something you are
-interested in or want to talk about or hear
-others talk about, send it in to the Department.
-Do this not only for August but for
-all the following numbers. I chose the subject
-for the first few months in order to get
-our plan started. Now I have had more than
-my share of “chooses” and all the others are
-for you to select. It may be that I can arrange
-to have a special prize offered each month for
-the best monthly topic suggested. I’ll try.</p>
-
-<h3><i>WHY SHOULD WOMEN BE INTERESTED
-IN POLITICS?</i></h3>
-
-<p>There is one answer that is sufficient in
-itself—Because her daily bread depends
-upon politics!</p>
-
-<p>Is there any particular reason why she
-should go about her daily work like a mole
-and pay no attention to the things that make
-her life hard or make it easy? Doesn’t she
-suffer from unjust laws and bad conditions
-and profit by just laws and good conditions
-as much as her husband does, or her
-father, son, or brother?</p>
-
-<p>Someone objects that politics is for the
-man to take care of; housework is woman’s
-sphere. That isn’t quite a fair statement of
-the case. The man’s part in the care of the
-family is his business: the woman’s is her
-housework. Politics is a third question.
-Why should the man alone have this to see
-to? A good many objections will be offered
-to this, too, <i>but all these objections will boil
-down to just one thing</i>—because he <i>does</i>! And
-that isn’t any reason at all. If you were
-asked why little children should work in
-factories and kill their health and youth,
-would you consider “Because they do!” a
-sufficient or sensible reason?</p>
-
-<p>The men say that when women discuss
-anything they never get anywhere because
-they fail to <i>define</i> the terms they use, and
-may all be talking about different things
-under the same name. I think men make
-this mistake about as much as we do, but
-let’s be on the safe side this time and define
-just what we mean by “politics.”</p>
-
-<p>Politics in our country have become so
-disreputable that we are likely to feel that
-having anything to do with them is bad
-taste or even degrading. It is natural to
-feel that way, but is it silly, nevertheless.
-It is bad taste, or even degrading, to have
-anything to do with a notorious criminal,
-but <i>not if you are making him better</i> instead
-of letting him make you worse! This is
-particularly true when it is partly <i>your fault
-that he became a criminal</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Now as to the definition of politics. The
-Standard Dictionary gives this:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>1. The branch of civics that treats of the
-principles of civil government and the
-conduct of state affairs; the administration
-of public affairs in the interest of
-the peace, prosperity, and safety of the
-state; statecraft; political science: in a
-wide sense embracing the <i>science</i> of
-<i>government</i> and <i>civil polity</i>.</p>
-
-<p>2. Political affairs in a party sense; the
-administration of public affairs or the
-conduct of political matters so as to
-carry elections and secure public offices;
-party intrigues; political wire-pulling;
-trickery.</p>
-
-<p>3. A man’s political sentiments, party
-preference, or connection.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The word, then, has three shades of meaning.
-The third one we need not bother with,
-since it merely means any man’s opinion
-on the things given under Number 1 and
-Number 2.</p>
-
-<p>Now let’s contrast Number 1 and Number
-2. There are some large words there,
-but if we take it a piece at a time we shall at
-least see that there is a tremendous difference
-between the two shades of meaning.</p>
-
-<p>In Number 1 politics means the fair and
-unprejudiced study of how a nation should
-be governed, but in Number 2 politics means
-<i>How much can you get out of it regardless of
-the general welfare</i>!</p>
-
-<p>In Number 1 the object is the “peace,
-prosperity and safety of the state,” but in
-Number 2 the object is to “carry elections
-and secure public offices”—“party intrigues;
-political wire-pulling; trickery.”</p>
-
-<p>It is Number 1 we are considering primarily.
-True, if our daily bread depends on
-politics, we are also interested in “how much
-we can get out of it,” but we mean by this
-how much we can get justly and honestly—our
-equal share <i>along with everyone else</i>.
-“Equal rights to all, special privileges to
-none.”</p>
-
-<p>No, no! I’m not advocating the People’s
-Party principles just because I quote one of
-their watchwords. That motto is not theirs
-alone, but that of every honest citizen, no
-matter to what party he belongs. It is
-merely an expression of the principles set
-forth in the Declaration of Independence.
-Whatever I may believe personally, it is no
-part of my business to plead the cause of any
-political party in our Department. We have
-nothing to do with parties. Our object is
-to consider how our nation is governed and
-how it <i>should</i> be governed—national, state,
-county, township and city governments,
-under whatever names these divisions may
-be called in different places.</p>
-
-<p>We are primarily concerned with definition
-Number 1. We want to know how our
-nation should be governed. After that we<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
-will consider Number 2, and see how it <i>is</i>
-governed.</p>
-
-<p>Now, considering the awful amount of
-writing and talking there is about politics,
-the infinite number of questions there are to
-decide, and the unending difference of opinion
-on these questions, we can see at the outset
-that we can’t decide it all in two numbers
-of our Department. Nor in a hundred. We
-are not going to try to. All we want is an
-intelligent idea of the general situation and
-of our duty in the matter.</p>
-
-<p>What is government at bottom? In the
-beginning there was no government or
-organization of any kind, not even the
-family organization. Each man or woman
-lived his or her own life separate from all
-others. The first organization came about
-when a man and woman decided to live together
-and raise children. They soon found
-that when they had a child to take care of
-they could not go on independently of each
-other as they had before. They had two
-things to do—to care for the baby and keep it
-safe every minute from wild beasts and other
-people, and to secure food for themselves and
-their child. If they both went hunting for
-food there was no one to watch the baby; if
-they both watched the baby, there was no
-way of getting food. They saw that they
-had to have some <i>arrangement</i>. They had
-to <i>divide</i> the labor. So the woman tended
-the baby and the man went hunting for all
-three. Each of them gave up a little of the
-former independence and received a new
-thing in <i>return</i>—help from another person.
-Thus the “family” began. It was the first
-step towards <i>society</i> and government. They
-gave up part of their freedom <i>in return for
-help</i> from others.</p>
-
-<p>People lived by hunting animals and
-gathering fruits and berries at first. If a man
-laid by any food for his family, another man
-was likely to take it away while he was away
-hunting. He found it pretty hard to have
-to do anything himself and he at odds with
-other men. Pretty soon it dawned on him
-that it would pay to make some “arrangement”
-with those other men. He wouldn’t
-rob them, if they didn’t rob him. Later he
-arranged with a few of them to keep their
-families close together so that some of the
-men could protect them while the other men
-hunted for all. In some such way began the
-“town.” Each of them gave up a part of
-his freedom <i>in return</i> for help from others.</p>
-
-<p>When many towns had sprung up these
-towns began to see they could to advantage
-make “arrangements” among themselves
-(just as individual men had done) for protection
-and other purposes. Thus the “state”
-or country came into existence. Each town
-gave up part of its “independence” <i>in return</i>
-for help from other towns.</p>
-
-<p>Thus “society” was formed and grew
-more and more complex. Of course, I have
-only sketched the process in a very general
-way, but the idea is there. The one point
-we have to consider is that no one of these
-arrangements or institutions—the family,
-town and state—would be possible <i>unless</i>
-every member gave up part of his original
-freedom <i>in return</i> for help from others. A
-<i>bargain</i> has to be made. For instance, the
-different men and their families each made a
-bargain with the whole number to give up
-part of their freedom, time and energy to the
-band. <i>In return</i> each was to receive his
-share of the freedom, time and energy the
-others had given to the band or town. Each
-man made a <i>bargain</i> with the town. He
-owed the town something: the town owed
-him something.</p>
-
-<p>That was the beginning of government,
-and that is the arrangement at the bottom of
-any government to this day. Every government
-(town, county, state or national) is
-just a bargain between the various individuals
-and all of them taken together. Each
-owes something to all: all owe something to
-each.</p>
-
-<p>The point is, in each case, is this bargain a
-<i>fair</i> one? Does the individual give up more
-than he receives in <i>return</i>?</p>
-
-<p>In olden times the average individual did
-give up far more than he got in return. Often
-he didn’t get much besides protection against
-some other government. Yet for this he
-frequently had to give up <i>nearly all</i> his freedom,
-time and energy. A few individuals
-gained control of the government and,
-though they might not contribute as much
-as the others, took most of what the others
-gave for the use of the whole number, calling
-themselves kings, or dukes or emperors.
-The mass of the people forgot that originally
-the “government” meant <i>all</i> the people.
-They came to consider the few who had
-gained control of the government as <i>the
-government itself</i>. That is, they let themselves
-be cheated out of their share in it.</p>
-
-<p>Our Declaration of Independence was one
-of the things that resulted when, after centuries
-of misrule and suffering, the mass of
-the people began to wake up to the fact that
-they had been cheated all that time under a
-bargain which had originally been fair.
-They had been giving more than they got in
-return.</p>
-
-<p>In an absolutely fair government every
-individual would receive just as much as he
-gave and give just as much as he received.
-A modern government is so vast and so complex
-that it would be hard to measure each
-man’s share exactly, but the nearer any government
-comes to that, the better and fairer
-it is. England, for example, comes nearer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
-to that ideal than does Russia; Russia nearer
-than Afghanistan.</p>
-
-<p>The chief trouble in Russia is that the mass
-of the people have to give more than they
-receive. A comparative few have gained
-possession of the government and each takes
-a very, very large share of what <i>all</i> contribute,
-leaving almost no share at all for the
-majority.</p>
-
-<p>Of course it is almost impossible to trace
-out just what each Russian peasant gives up
-to the government, and what he receives in
-return. Without a government of some
-kind he could not produce or hold anything
-except by force against his fellows—land,
-goods, money, family, all would be <i>totally</i>
-insecure. As it is, he does get <i>some</i> security
-in these respects. In return he gives practically
-<i>all</i> his freedom, time and energy. On
-the other hand, a Grand Duke may give up
-to his country hardly any freedom, time and
-energy, and yet be rolling in wealth. Something
-is wrong. It is not a fair bargain. It
-is not a good government.</p>
-
-<p>How about <i>our</i> government? Is it a fair
-bargain?</p>
-
-<p>Modern civilization is very complex. No
-two men can really give just the same amount
-to the common country, since all men differ
-in ability. But the country asks only certain
-things from its individuals. To be fair
-the point is to <i>ask the same from all</i>. The
-country gives only certain things to its individuals:
-the point is to <i>give the same to all</i>.
-Our country doesn’t demand military service
-in time of peace, as do many other countries.
-And, in <i>return</i>, it doesn’t give us a tremendous
-standing army. If it <i>did</i> demand military
-service, to be fair it would have to make
-the demand equally of <i>all</i> able to bear arms.
-If it <i>did</i> give us a big standing army, to be
-fair it would have to use this army to protect
-us <i>all</i> equally.</p>
-
-<p>If our country taxes certain goods, it must
-tax them everywhere—not for one man and
-not for the next. If there is a tax of one
-cent on every bale of a certain commodity,
-each man should pay one cent for every bale
-he owns. If there is a tax of one cent on
-every dollar, each man should pay one cent
-for every dollar he owns.</p>
-
-<p>Is this the case in the United States?</p>
-
-<p>If the Government gives certain privileges
-to a few men, it should give the same to all.
-Is this always done in our country?</p>
-
-<p>Of course all may not always want a certain
-privilege. It is open to all, but only a
-few use it. Is this all that is required of the
-Government? Or, since the Government has
-nevertheless given some of the general fund
-to only a few, should these few make some
-adequate <i>return</i> for what they have used
-from the common property? Is this always
-done in our country?</p>
-
-<p>Ask yourself similar questions about every
-case that comes up. What I have said
-doesn’t pretend to “explain politics,” but it
-ought to give everyone a test or basis to refer
-everything back to. Ask yourself whether
-any law or custom is a <i>fair bargain</i>. You
-can tell well enough when you deal with the
-grocer or the milkman whether you are getting
-a fair bargain. Try to in these other
-matters.</p>
-
-<p>But to come back to why women should
-take an interest in politics. One reason has
-been suggested—that her daily bread is affected
-by them. Another has been hinted
-at—that it is partly your fault that politics
-as practiced in this country are corrupt
-(definition No. 2). Since we are to devote
-the next number of our Department to this
-same question, we will do little now in this
-issue except suggest reasons and ask questions.
-I’m not going to do all the expressing of opinion
-just because I happen to have the chance
-all to myself this month. By next month I
-hope there will be letters and opinions from
-a great many of you.</p>
-
-<p>In some parts of our country women can
-vote and it is likely that some day they will
-do so everywhere. When the country or
-state gives her the right to vote does that
-put her under any obligation to do or give
-anything in return for this privilege?</p>
-
-<p>Who gives women (or men) the right to
-vote—the city, state or country?</p>
-
-<p>Is it fair to give it to some women and not
-to all? Is it fair to give it to men and not
-to women?</p>
-
-<p>Would politics be purer if women took
-more interest in them? If women voted?</p>
-
-<p>In those places where women cannot
-vote what can they do towards securing
-good government? Can they do anything
-through their husbands, brothers and fathers?
-Through their neighbors? Through their
-own children? Can they do anything
-through the church? The schools? Last
-year, when Philadelphia threw off boss-rule,
-what was the method that succeeded in making
-the corrupt politicians surrender after
-all other methods had failed?</p>
-
-<p>Can you tell the Department of any instance
-where the women have brought about,
-or helped to bring about, reforms in town,
-country, state or national government even
-when they were not allowed to vote?</p>
-
-<p>Do you remember the saying that “the
-hand that rocks the cradle rules the world”?
-How much truth is there in it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span></p>
-
-<p>If you had a really intelligent idea of
-politics as they should be and as they are,
-would it bring you into closer touch with the
-men-folks of your family? Would it broaden
-your horizon? Would it interfere with
-household duties? Would it make you a
-better citizen? Could you accomplish real
-good by having this knowledge?</p>
-
-<p>What is the best way of acquiring an intelligent
-idea of the subject, it you haven’t
-one already? Take the opinion of those
-around you? Read weighty and technical
-books and articles? Read first a very simple
-book on civics—on the organization of our
-Government? Would it be a good plan to
-read your boy’s school text-book on this
-subject?</p>
-
-<p>Can some one point out a few articles in
-the numbers of this Magazine which make
-their point very clear and are easy enough
-for anyone to understand? Send the Department
-the names of a few that appealed to
-you, so that some more of us can venture
-on them. Similar articles in other magazines
-which the average woman can grasp
-without a previous extensive knowledge
-of politics or political economy? Books?</p>
-
-<p>Can you decide a question until you have
-heard both sides of it?</p>
-
-<p>Is it safe to believe all you read, or does
-it pay to consider when you read it, who
-wrote it, what personal or party reason he
-may have had for writing it?</p>
-
-<p>Consider your local newspaper. Do you
-know the difference between the “set” matter
-and the “plate” matter and the “ready-print”
-matter in its pages? Why is this
-difference <i>very</i> important in deciding as to
-the value of an article in that paper? Who
-writes set matter? Has he “any fish to fry”
-when he writes? Who writes plate and
-ready-print matter? Has he any fish to fry?
-With a little care you can tell these three
-kinds of printed matter apart in your local
-paper. (Ready-print matter is used only
-in some country weeklies and dailies and
-some other small local papers. It can be
-“spotted” by noticing what pages of the
-paper always have it. Unfold the paper and
-lay it flat on the floor. If it is ready-print
-and has few pages enough to make only one
-sheet, all of the pages on one side will be
-ready-print. There won’t be any local articles
-or items in the print. Both ready-print
-and plate are in different type from set matter.)
-If a corrupt man or corrupt men
-wrote the ready-print and plate could they
-wield a vast influence? More than by
-writing the set matter? It is well worth
-thinking about.</p>
-
-<p>Are there many magazines or papers that
-are not controlled by political or business
-interests? How much can you believe in a
-publication controlled in that way?</p>
-
-<p>The voters of the country are divided into
-several political parties. Would it be better
-or worse if there were no regular parties and
-every voter voted independently?</p>
-
-<p>What is a real democracy? Is the United
-States a real democracy now? Why?</p>
-
-<p>What is meant by direct legislation—the
-initiative, referendum, recall and imperative
-mandate? Big words, but they stand for
-things worth knowing about and having an
-opinion on. And they are easy enough to
-understand. Would these things tend toward
-real democracy? Have they been tried
-in actual practice? If so, have they proved
-a success? Why? What effect would they
-have on the whole party system?</p>
-
-<p>There, I think that is enough questions
-for one person to ask. Someone is likely to
-ask me a question in return—<i>How</i> do politics
-affect our daily bread? Well, there are
-several hundred answers to that. Let’s each
-of us suggest for the May number one or more
-ways that politics (according to both definition
-No. 1 and definition No. 2) affect our daily
-living.</p>
-
-<p>We are not going to try to become experts
-in politics, but we do want to have an
-intelligent general idea of them. It is our
-<i>duty</i>. In our May number I hope to have
-many opinions from women all over the
-country.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/heading8.jpg" width="500" height="40" alt="" />
-<h3><i>THE INTEREST OF EVERYDAY THINGS.</i></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>We had a glimpse last month at some of the interesting things concerned
-in bread and bread-making. The house is full of things we have known so
-long that we scarcely think of them except as parts of the daily routine,
-but which, if we turn our attention to them, prove veritable mines of
-information, history, travel and even romance.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Sponges</i></h4>
-
-<p>A sponge is the skeleton of a very, very,
-tiny animal, or rather of a colony of thousands
-of such animals that live under water.
-When the little animals die they leave behind
-them this network of elastic fibers that they
-have built up. For a long time it was
-thought that sponges were plants, and even
-now scientists know really very little about
-these little animals. You have noticed
-how many kinds of sponges there are.
-These different varieties are caused partly by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
-differences in temperature and chemical composition
-of the water and partly by the fact
-that there are more than one species or variety
-of the animal itself. There is no need
-to enumerate all the kinds of sponges from
-the fine, soft ones used in surgical operations
-to the big, coarse ones used for washing
-carriages. Nearly all the sponges inhabit
-salt water and the best ones come from the
-Mediterranean, particularly the Levant or
-that eastern part of the Mediterranean
-bounded by Syria, Asia Minor and the Holy
-Land and Egypt. Others are found in the
-waters around Florida and in those near
-Australia. The sponges are secured by
-means of native divers. In some places
-these men work all day long from sunrise
-to sunset through six months of the year,
-resting during the winter. The work is, of
-course, very hard and few of them reach old
-age. Often they are treated with inhuman
-cruelty by their employers and many are
-killed by sharks. Particularly in Florida
-there have been attempts made to raise
-sponges artificially, but though it is easy to
-secure the spawn of the tiny animals and
-succeed in getting them to attach their little
-colonies to stones, coral or other objects
-under water, the sponges never reach any
-considerable size and are commercially
-useless. They have also tried to propagate
-them by cuttings or slips, but here arises the
-difficulty of making the cuttings attach
-themselves to other objects, which is necessary
-to their development. And the little
-animals themselves, they go right on very
-quietly drinking in water and getting all
-they need from it—air, food and drink—whether
-they are off the coast of Europe,
-Asia, Africa, America or Australia or in a
-little glass aquarium being looked at through
-a microscope by a dried-up old man with
-spectacles and side-whiskers. And we use
-the sponges.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Maize</i></h4>
-
-<p>The right name of what we call corn or
-Indian corn is maize. The word is derived
-from the Spanish word <i>maiz</i>, which comes
-from the native Haitian word <i>mahiz</i>. Corn
-in Europe means what we call wheat.
-Maize, or corn, like all our grains, belongs
-to the big Grass Family and is a native of
-America. Most of our other grains come
-from Europe and Asia, just as we ourselves
-did. It probably came from the table-lands
-of Mexico and Peru and has always been the
-chief food of the Indians. It was introduced
-into Asia, southern Europe and northern
-Africa and spread quickly and widely for a
-while. However, the climate was not hot
-enough for it in Europe and it is not raised
-there very much now. The English generally
-consider it fit only for animals and rather
-turn up their noses at us for eating it
-ourselves. The only time I ever saw any
-offered to an Englishman he was very polite
-about it but managed to avoid eating even
-a single mouthful from the nice, tender ears.
-Other nations are horrified at seeing otherwise
-well-bred Americans pick up a roasting-ear
-and gnaw it off the cob, and it must be
-confessed that it does look pretty bad unless
-a person is careful to hold it with only one
-hand and bite it off daintily. Many Americans
-who travel in Europe miss it terribly
-and one woman confessed to me that her
-chief reason for coming home was just to get
-some real American corn once more. I
-understand, though, that the English look
-on our popcorn very differently. It is said
-that two New England spinsters introduced
-it over there a number of years ago and their
-little stand rapidly became so popular that
-they amassed a very considerable fortune
-and lived happily ever afterwards. We use
-sweet corn not only on the cob, for fritters,
-puddings and so on, as corn-meal and for
-stock, but extract from it whisky, starch and
-glucose sugar. Besides sweet corn and popcorn
-the common kinds are flint and dent.
-Sweet corn gets its name from the large
-quantities of sugar in it. Popcorn pops
-because it has a great deal of oil and this oil
-explodes when sufficiently hot. Corn varies
-in color from white to black, but most of it
-is yellow or white. Like wheat, Government
-experts and other scientists in this
-country, Canada and elsewhere have been
-experimenting with corn for years and by
-cross-breeding and selection (about which
-processes I hope the Department will receive
-some interesting contributions for our
-June number) they have vastly improved
-the old varieties and produced many new
-ones.</p>
-
-<p>When I was a child I remember being
-much impressed on being told that you
-never, <i>never</i> could find an ear of corn with
-an odd number of rows in it. Maybe you
-can, but I never have been able to, and, as
-that advertisement says, “there is a reason.”</p>
-
-<p>Can someone tell us for our June Department?
-You may have heard the story of
-the Southern planter before the War who
-offered to give freedom to any slave who
-could find an ear of corn with an uneven
-number of rows. None of them could,
-though it is easy to believe they hunted a
-good deal, until finally another white man
-showed one of the slaves how he could cut
-a row out of an ear when it was very young
-so as to leave no mark when he presented it
-and demanded his freedom. The master
-kept his word and the slave went free.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/footer6.jpg" width="500" height="100" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/heading9.jpg" width="500" height="40" alt="" />
-<h3><i>VARIOUS HINTS.</i></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was almost equally hard to award the
-prize for the best general suggestion or recipe
-sent in. After some careful deliberation, it
-seemed that, all things considered, the free
-subscription this month should go to Alicia
-E. Storm, of Plessis, N. Y., though we hesitated,
-especially between this and Mrs.
-Richardson. A little later I hope to be
-able to send a little souvenir to <i>everyone</i>
-who sends in a contribution and doesn’t
-get a regular prize. In case this plan carries
-out, as I think it will, of course all
-who have contributed before that time will
-be remembered. And always there is the
-gratitude of those who benefit from your
-suggestion, and my own sincere thanks and
-your consciousness of having helped other
-women in their daily trials and perplexities.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Home Talk.</i></h4>
-
-<p>We have no kitchen cabinet, and we keep
-a small table set for three in our kitchen,
-which is not large. The cooking stove, sink,
-and cupboards taking most of the room. I
-needed a small table to use for work and
-mixing table. There was a space behind the
-stove. I bethought me of the crate in which
-my sewing machine came. It is just the
-thing. The table is just about the right
-height, and the shelf below is as convenient
-as the top. I find that on baking day it
-helps very much to get everything one needs
-before commencing work. I use an earthen
-mixing bowl. After the bread and biscuits,
-I make pies, as the lard is then cold. Then
-I make my cakes and afterward doughnuts.
-It is a saving of time and fuel if one can bake
-a variety at once, as in cold weather victuals
-keep longer than in summer. A convenience
-for storing pies can be made by having
-several shelves sawed out large enough to
-hold your tins. One can use laths (four of
-them) for uprights, fastening them well at
-the four corners of the bottom shelf; then
-fasten the others about three inches apart.
-This gives more space, and keeps pies from
-being mussed.</p>
-
-<p>Did you ever experience the difference
-between two neighborly calls? Mrs. A.
-relates the latest bit of gossip, making up in
-insinuations what she lacks in fact. She
-talks about her dressmaker, criticizes the
-appearance and dress of her friends, and
-gives you an uncomfortable feeling—thinking
-perhaps you will be the subject of unpleasant
-remarks. Mrs. B. is fresh and
-cheery. She asks about your plants, and
-tells of the growth of her own—of every new
-bud. She tells of the cunning things her
-baby has said, of the nest her canary is
-building, of the new book she is reading.
-She tells, perhaps, of some ludicrous mistake
-she has made in her cooking, laughing at the
-same. This woman may not be intellectual
-in the highest sense, but she is charming.
-Her call will have made you happy all the
-day. We leave the effect of our presence—sometimes
-for long. So should we act that
-no sting of uneasiness be left in the hearts of
-those with whom we come in contact.—<i>Alicia
-E. Storm, Plessis, N. Y.</i></p>
-
-<h4><i>Valuable Pointers</i></h4>
-
-<p>Every work is easy and pleasant if you go
-at it as you go to a picnic. In house cleaning
-I fix one room at the time. It takes a
-week, but I have the most of each day and I
-do my work better, as I don’t have to hurry.
-No confusion in the regular routine of work;
-one thorough sweeping and dusting is enough
-for one day. If the tablecloth is clean
-enough for the home folks, it is all right for
-company. Don’t try to cook a variety of
-dishes each day. You won’t hold out so
-well, and one or two will do as well, and
-change them every day. Sheets, towels and
-some other things can be used all right without
-ironing. If you smoothed all the
-wrinkles out of all the rough clothes, you
-might have the wrinkles in your face. I read
-and rest some every day. Prepare two
-dinners on Saturday, and go to church and
-Sunday-school. I do have some trouble and
-everyone does, but I am always thankful,
-and my life-work is a delight to me. Let us
-try to do all things to the glory and honor of
-God. Although in the country, we have one
-of the best “teachers.” Our children attend,
-cold or hot, regularly. They are taught the
-Sunday-school lesson at school Friday afternoon.—<i>Mrs.
-E. A. Richardson, Thomaston, Ga.</i></p>
-
-<h4><i>To Make Sure of Milk Churning in Cold Weather</i></h4>
-
-<p>Many persons who churn in winter have
-trouble because butter will not come if
-chilled, and are obliged to throw the milk
-away, or feed it to the stock. If they will
-steam, not boil, the milk after milking, they
-can allow it to freeze solid and it will churn
-all right if thawed and warmed properly.
-This recipe has been worth many dollars to
-me, and hope it will help other women housekeepers.—<i>Mrs.
-D. L. Burrows, Gibson, Ga.</i></p>
-
-<h4><i>To Polish Nickel on Stoves</i></h4>
-
-<p>Use stove polish. It is the very best
-thing. Rub a light coating over it and
-polish with polishing cloth or brush. The
-cloth or brush is generally sufficient. Only
-give an occasional coat of polish.—<i>Mrs. D.
-L. Burrows, Gibson, Ga.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span></p>
-
-<h4><i>To Clean Iron Kettles</i></h4>
-
-<p>Boil skim-milk in it and then wash with
-good soap-suds. Use six quarts for an
-eight-quart kettle, and boil and simmer for
-twenty-four hours. This will also prevent
-future trouble.—<i>Mrs. E. R. Putney, Kansas
-City, Mo.</i></p>
-
-<h4><i>To Remove Large Stones From Fields</i></h4>
-
-<p>Make the stone very hot on one side only;
-pour water on it to make it crack, and help
-it along with a heavy hammer. Another way,
-in the winter, is to bore a hole pretty well into
-the stone, fill with water and plug it firmly
-shut. The force of the water as it freezes
-will crack the stone. Still another way is to
-make a hole in the direction of the veins or
-cleavage of the stone, put in a cleft cylinder
-of iron, then drive an iron wedge between
-the two halves of the cylinder. <i>L. L. Deweese,
-Piqua, O.</i></p>
-
-<h4><i>Shoe-Soles</i></h4>
-
-<p>Melt together tallow and common resin,
-two parts of first to one of second. Apply
-hot—as much as the sole will absorb. Neat’s-foot
-oil is good also. These remedies keep
-the leather soft, prevent its cracking, and
-make it waterproof.—<i>Mrs. N. O. Baker,
-Jersey City, N. J.</i></p>
-
-<h4><i>To Clean Wall Paper</i></h4>
-
-<p>Take off the dust with a soft cloth. With
-a little flour and water make a lump of stiff
-dough and rub the wall gently downward,
-taking the length of the arm each stroke,
-and in this way go round the whole room.
-As the dough becomes dirty, cut the soiled
-parts off. In the second round commence
-the stroke a little above where the last one
-ended, and be very careful not to cross the
-paper or to go up again. Ordinary papers
-cleaned in this way will look fresh and bright,
-and almost as good as new. Some papers,
-however, and these the most expensive ones,
-will not clean nicely. In order to ascertain
-whether a paper will clean nicely, it is best to
-try it in some obscure corner. Fill up any
-broken places in the wall with a mixture of
-plaster of Paris and silver sand, made into a
-paste with a little water, then cover the place
-with a piece of paper like the rest, if it can be
-had.—<i>Mrs. B. C. Benton, Denver, Col.</i></p>
-
-<h4><i>To Clean a Chimney</i></h4>
-
-<p>Place a piece of zinc on the live coals in
-the stove. The vapor thus produced will
-carry off the soot.</p>
-
-<h4><i>For a Cut</i></h4>
-
-<p>Sift powdered resin on the wound, wrap
-with a soft, clean cloth, and wet occasionally
-with water.—<i>Miss Anna Paisley, New
-Orleans.</i></p>
-
-<h4><i>To Cleanse Sponges</i></h4>
-
-<p>Wash in a solution of a teaspoonful of
-ammonia to two quarts of water, and afterwards
-in a solution of one part of muriatic
-acid to twenty-five of water. Sponges
-should be thoroughly rinsed, aired, and dried
-after every using. Unless they are kept very
-clean it is not well to use them. A piece of
-rough towel or tablecloth hemmed at the
-edges is much better. Another way to
-clean sponges is to steep them in buttermilk
-for some hours, then squeeze out and wash
-in cold water. Lemon juice is also good.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/heading10.jpg" width="500" height="40" alt="" />
-<h3><i>HEROISM AT HOME.</i></h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4><i>A PRIZE FOR THE BEST TRUE STORY</i></h4>
-
-<p>Every month the Department will publish a little story of heroism <i>in
-the home</i>—not any one act of heroism, but the tale of how someone
-<i>lived</i> heroically, <i>lived</i> self-sacrifice <i>in everyday
-life</i>. It must be <i>true</i> and must be about somebody you know
-or have known or know definitely about. <i>It must not have over 500
-words.</i> The shorter, the better. <i>Whoever sends in the best story
-each month will not only have it printed but will receive a year’s free
-subscription to <span class="smcap">Watson’s Magazine</span> sent to any name you choose.
-Tell your story simply and plainly.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Please state whether the names and places mentioned in your story are
-real or fictitious.</i> The Department does not print real names in these
-stories. Please do not send in stories about someone rescuing another
-from drowning or anything like that—we don’t want stories of single acts
-of heroism but of lives bravely and unselfishly lived out.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The stories of “Heroism at Home” have
-begun to come in. We can not print all of
-them in this number, but there will be a
-place for the others later on. Only one told
-of a single heroic incident. It was a brave,
-unselfish act, but that isn’t what we are
-going to use under this head—not things
-done suddenly, perhaps on impulse or by
-instinct, but the kind of heroism that lasts
-day after day. This one story, too, was
-told in verse and though it was good I fear
-we had better confine ourselves to simple
-prose. I hope the writer will send us another
-good true story in prose and of heroic
-<i>living</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The prize this month is awarded to “Her
-Career.” It was very hard to decide
-among several stories that told of some very
-beautiful and useful lives, so I got others to
-help me. I imagine it is never going to be
-easy to decide which is the very best of the
-stories each month. How the stories are
-told is not considered at all, but the heroic
-lives described are very hard to weigh
-against one another. But I will do the best
-I can.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span></p>
-
-<h4><i>HER CAREER</i></h4>
-
-<p>No, she never wrote a book, nor went as a
-missionary to Japan, nor won a degree in
-college. She never even taught school, nor
-belonged to a woman’s club.</p>
-
-<p>But she has been the inspiration of her
-family and has radiated blessings on all she
-knew.</p>
-
-<p>Thirty years ago she was a dark-haired,
-dark-eyed bride of eighteen. They were
-poor, but they had health and strength and
-bright dreams of the future. They built a
-small log house on the land they had bought
-on credit and began to improve it. Their
-days were filled with hopeful work and their
-nights brought rest and refreshing sleep.</p>
-
-<p>But soon a shadow fell across the sunlight
-that streamed on her pathway. Her
-husband began to drink. He was soon a
-helpless victim of the fiery appetite and
-could not go where liquor was without
-getting drunk.</p>
-
-<p>She was refined and regretted to the very
-depths of her soul her husband’s weakness.
-Sometimes she was righteously indignant,
-but she never upbraided him with moral
-lectures in which she posed as a mistreated
-angel, though she often talked it over with
-him after the “spree” was over.</p>
-
-<p>Children came. The “sprees” became
-more frequent and things looked more
-gloomy, but she worked tirelessly and
-trusted everlastingly.</p>
-
-<p>At last the county voted liquor out. This
-did some good; the temptation was farther
-away. But even then he would make
-several trips a year to the nearest liquor
-town and always with the same result. If
-a neighbor were going to town at the same
-time she would ask him to look after her
-husband. And when the erring man staggered
-home she would put him to bed and
-cook him something to eat—not always ham
-and eggs and delicacies, but the best she had.
-She never slipped anything in his coffee to
-cure him secretly.</p>
-
-<p>And she has almost won. He is not proof
-against them yet, but the “sprees” are few
-and far between.</p>
-
-<p>Six children call her mother—two womanly
-daughters well married, another a lovable
-and accomplished young woman, a handsome
-son, with his mother’s wonderfully
-calm eyes, who detests liquor, and two young
-girls at school.</p>
-
-<p>A neat white house with green blinds has
-taken the place of the log structure.
-She is a model housekeeper and has always
-done all her work—cooking, sewing, washing,
-ironing, scrubbing, milking, churning,
-sweeping, poultry-raising and one thousand
-and one other things. Besides this she has
-tied up sore toes and cut fingers, poulticed
-boils, applied hot salt to all manner of aches
-and pains; doctored mumps, whooping-cough
-and la grippe; and successfully nursed
-measles, pneumonia and fever.</p>
-
-<p>Her face has lost some of its freshness and
-her hair is turning gray, but she is still the
-blessed counselor of her family and she still
-finds time to visit and make herself a true,
-cheerful friend and neighbor.</p>
-
-<h4><i>HER SACRIFICE</i></h4>
-
-<p>Miss ⸺ lives in ⸺, Ohio. She was
-born on a farm where she lived with her
-father and mother and two brothers and
-one sister. The father became surety for a
-friend who failed, and it took the father’s
-farm to pay the debt. The family therefore
-left the farm, and moved to the county-seat,
-in the suburbs, and in a small house and two
-lots began life anew. He rode the country
-buying stock for other men, kept cows and
-peddled milk in the town, kept forty hens
-and sold eggs, cultivated the lots in garden
-produce, and kept the family together. One
-fortunate result of leaving the farm, the
-children were put into the city schools.
-Miss ⸺ graduated in the high school, and
-obtained a certificate to teach. The two
-brothers married and left the city. Then
-finally the sister married and left. Miss ⸺,
-at the age of 26, was left to care for her
-parents in their declining years.</p>
-
-<p>She obtained a position as teacher in the
-city schools and devoted her wages to the
-care of the home, and looked after her
-parents when out of school hours. There
-came offers of honorable marriage, for she
-was strong, healthy, comely and attractive.
-She could not consider them. Her parents
-could not do without her. They were declining
-in strength and looked to her for the
-care of the household. She taught on, and
-with her wages kept them in comfort. Two
-years ago the good old mother, weary of life,
-departed for the better land. Two years
-longer the old father lived, kept the house
-during the day while the daughter was in the
-schoolroom and awaited the sound of her
-footsteps in the evening returning from the
-school. In January he lay on the bed stricken
-with a fatal sickness, though unknown
-to him or her, and while they talked together
-as she bent over him he ceased to breathe,
-and she was left alone in the world, unmarried,
-without a home, and the prime of
-her good life spent in assiduous care of her
-parents—at the age of forty years! All
-hope of a home and family of her own sacrificed
-to her sense of duty to her father and
-mother! What is to be her reward? Many
-another has made a like sacrifice, but how
-is she to recoup the loss of the fourteen years
-spent in their service—the loss of her own
-home and family and children and all the
-sweet consolations of the state of motherhood?
-Was it not a heroic life? How few
-would have met it! Only those who know
-of her self-sacrifice will know how to honor
-her. Her fidelity, so unobtrusive, will be
-little noted by the world. But how grand
-and noble the sacrifice she has made!</p>
-
-<h4><i>QUIET COURAGE</i></h4>
-
-<p>Elizabeth Stanton was born about sixty-five
-years ago in a beautiful Southern town.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span>
-She was the youngest daughter of Judge
-James Stanton, one of the ablest jurists of
-the state.</p>
-
-<p>Few young ladies had superior advantages
-to Elizabeth, and fewer still possessed her
-amiable disposition and strong character.
-Being beautiful, accomplished and wealthy,
-it is no wonder she married the only son of a
-millionaire. A few years after their marriage
-her husband erected the finest residence
-in the state. Although built forty years ago
-it stands proudly today without an equal
-in the state.</p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth had everything that heart could
-wish save one—her husband was dissipated
-and grew more so as years came on. But
-no ear save the Master’s ever heard her complain
-and she was always cheerful.</p>
-
-<p>A few years after the Civil War her husband
-died, leaving his palatial home mortgaged
-and his vast estate squandered.
-Elizabeth was left with three children and
-a small amount of money. She gave up her
-magnificent home and wealth without a
-murmur and returned to her old home. In
-a few years she married again, a man of fine
-personality, a scholar and typical Southern
-gentleman, one born to wealth and knowing
-little how to acquire it. His fortune was like
-that of most Southern people after the Civil
-War. They remained in their native home
-till their small fortune was nearly gone.
-Then they removed to Florida and lived on
-a homestead, in a tent with a dirt floor for
-two years. Elizabeth had never before
-lived without servants, never cooked a meal
-or laundered a handkerchief. Now she did
-all her own work, even to the washing, and
-taught a country school several months of
-each year. She found time to visit and
-elevate the poor, rough people around her,
-and never by word did she let them know she
-was not of their class. She was greatly
-admired and beloved by all who knew her.
-During these years of hardship she was just
-as bright and cheerful and apparently as
-content as when she trod the marble floors
-of her former mansion. She smilingly remarked
-to me once that she was glad they
-had been chastened. It had made her a better
-woman and was the means of her husband’s
-conversion. As fortune always favors the
-brave, she did not always live in poverty.
-In a few years they had a fine orange grove
-bearing, and her husband was elected to a
-high office.</p>
-
-<p>I have never known a more heroic life of
-any woman. When clouds have hovered
-over me I have thought of this brave, beautiful
-character and it has been my inspiration.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/heading11.jpg" width="500" height="60" alt="" />
-<h3><i>RECIPES, OLD AND NEW.</i></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>From a collection of recipes that dates
-back almost to “War-Time” we shall give a
-few every month. Along with them will be
-given new recipes of the present day.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Bread Pudding</i></h4>
-
-<p>One pint bread crumbs, fine, one quart
-milk, three or four eggs. Season and sweeten
-to taste, then bake. Spread a layer of
-jelly or jam quite thick or white of eggs a
-little sweetened, and brown a little.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Ginger Snaps</i></h4>
-
-<p>Three cups of molasses, one cup of brown
-sugar, two small cups of lard, four tablespoons
-of ginger and one of cloves, and
-enough flour to roll them out.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Corn Batter Cakes</i></h4>
-
-<p>One and a half pints of corn-meal, the
-same of milk, one half teaspoon of salt, five
-eggs beaten together and put in with the
-corn-meal and milk, one and a half teaspoons
-of baking-powder.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Sponge Cake</i></h4>
-
-<p>Six eggs, one pint of flour, one pint of sugar,
-three-fourths of a cup of water, two
-tablespoons of baking-powder.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Pea Soup</i></h4>
-
-<p>One half peck peas. Take the shells and
-put on with two quarts of water. When
-well boiled take off and put through the colander.
-Take the water and pour into it
-the peas. Let boil until very soft and tender.
-Take off and put through the colander
-again. Take a quart of cream, or cream and
-milk, two even tablespoons of flour and less
-than one ounce of butter. Put in and let
-come to a boil. Pepper and salt to taste.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<img src="images/illus21.jpg" width="400" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>CHANGING THE DIRECTION</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Warren, in Boston Herald</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus22.jpg" width="500" height="425" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Before</i> <i>After</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>DeMar, in Philadelphia Record</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus23.jpg" width="700" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“<i>Sh— Sh— You Blamed Ass!</i>”</p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Rogers, in N. Y. Herald</i></p>
-<p class="caption">April, 1906</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="BOOKS">
-<img src="images/heading12.jpg" width="700" height="175" alt="" />
-<h2><i>BOOKS</i><br />
-<span class="smaller"><i><span class="smaller">BY</span> Thomas E. Watson.</i></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center smaller">Note: <i>Reviews are by Mr. Watson unless otherwise signed.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book"><b>On the Field of Glory.</b> By Henryk Sienkiewicz.
-Little, Brown &amp; Co., Boston.</p>
-
-<p>After the reader has finished reading this
-book he disapproves of the title. He has
-been taken into ancient Poland, where the
-winter snows lie deep, where the wolves of
-the forest come with the night to make danger
-for the traveler. He has been shown
-how the upper class lived in the time of the
-Soldier-King, John Sobieski. He follows the
-thread of a passionate and tender and
-happily ended love-story. He laughs with
-and at the four brothers, the huge, rude,
-boisterous, but brave and good-hearted
-foresters. He feels impressed by the genius
-of the author during the whole time, for he
-knows that this strange Polish world, with
-its unfamiliar men and women, is a creation
-born of the mental processes of a great
-literary artist.</p>
-
-<p>It is not an historical novel in the sense
-that “Quo Vadis” was. There is no field of
-glory at all. John Sobieski does not appear
-before us as Nero was made to do in the
-book just named.</p>
-
-<p>The John Sobieski of this novel might be
-any other King. So far as we are told about
-his appearance, manners, dress, personal
-peculiarities, he might have been Rudolph
-of Hapsburg or Henry of Valois.</p>
-
-<p>There are no battles, no sieges, no heroic
-advance or retreat. As the book closes, the
-Polish army has set out from Cracow to
-Vienna; and that’s as near as we approach
-the field of glory.</p>
-
-<p>With the heroine the reader never gets in
-full sympathy. She drives away the man
-who has always loved her and whom she
-loves <i>without knowing it</i>.</p>
-
-<p>She then consents to wed her hideous,
-lecherous, old guardian. More indignant
-than the bride, the spirits of the Unseen
-World resent this unnatural union, and they
-prevent it by claiming the groom while the
-marriage feast is being eaten.</p>
-
-<p>With the hero the reader is on good terms
-from first to last, for his is a fine character
-finely drawn.</p>
-
-<p>When the guardian and intended husband
-is dead, and the rejected lover is far away,
-the hero is subjected to trial and temptation,
-beset by dangers, marked for destruction
-by a lustful brute, neglected and hated
-by family connections. It is then that human
-interest of the deepest kind centres in
-the poor orphan girl <i>Panna Anulka</i>, whom
-we had condemned on account of her
-readiness to marry old <i>Pan Gideon</i>. We
-follow her fortunes then with painful attention
-and we rejoice when she is saved.</p>
-
-<p>While “On the Field of Glory” is not,
-perhaps, so great a book as “Quo Vadis,”
-its atmosphere is purer, its store of love
-more tender and its portrayal of ancient
-manners and character apparently quite
-as faithful.</p>
-
-<p class="book"><b>The Strange Story of the Quillmores.</b> By
-A. L. Chatterton. Stitt Publishing
-Company, New York.</p>
-
-<p>To write a novel which shall hold the
-reader with a strong and constant grip, and
-yet give him no love-story, is a feat not done
-by everyone that tries it. Mr. Chatterton
-tells no story of love, but I have not read
-many books that interested me more than
-“The Strange Story of the Quillmores.”
-Mr. Chatterton’s pictures of life are true to
-life: his men are the men who wear breeches—not
-impossible abstractions who say or do
-things which no human beings ever said or
-did. And his women are as real as his men.</p>
-
-<p><i>Uncle I’</i> and his store, where the neighbors
-buy all sorts of things, from ham to
-coffins, and where a group of loafers and
-tattlers is generally on hand, are as well
-known to the reader as if he had been there.
-<i>Uncle I’</i> must be a character taken from
-life. He is full of quiet humor, homely wisdom,
-sound common sense, manly courage
-and loyalty.</p>
-
-<p>Old-fashioned <i>Uncle I’</i>, keeping his old-fashioned
-carry-all store, swapping stories
-and repartee with his old-fashioned neighbors,
-struggling heroically with his old-fashioned
-telephone, and with it all, living
-up to the best standards of honesty and
-usefulness—yes, <i>Uncle I’</i> is a complete artistic
-success.</p>
-
-<p>So is <i>Doctor Gus</i>. True, he reminds the
-reader, in a general way, of Ian Maclaren’s
-Scotch country doctor, but <i>Doctor Gus</i> is
-American, and he is stamped with sufficient
-individuality to make him a very live man
-to the reader.</p>
-
-<p>What could be better than the old German<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span>
-woman, <i>Mother Treegood</i>? The chapter in
-which <i>Mother Treegood</i> comes to visit Uncle
-I’s wife, who is broken with grief on account
-of her dying daughter, is one that is
-worthy of Dickens. It has the heart-throb
-of human sorrow, human sympathy, human
-love.</p>
-
-<p>I don’t know of anything more touching,
-in its simple unpretentious way, than the
-story of how <i>Mother Treegood’s</i> boys, the
-twins, ran away from home, and how one of
-them was drowned in the Ohio River, and
-was sent home for burial.</p>
-
-<p>“My pretty boy was to our house brought,
-aber no one could him know—he was in the
-wasser—de water—so long—<i>oh das Kalte,
-Kalte Wasser!</i> so many, many days. I took
-more of the fever—und go out of my head—und
-so I never my Liebling seen again.”</p>
-
-<p>The cry that was heard in Ramah, “<i>Oh,
-that cold, cold water!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Then, later on, there came a little box of
-tin-iron, “mit a hole cut in the on-top side.”
-But let <i>Mother Treegood</i> tell it in her own
-way:</p>
-
-<p>“One day there came by the express company
-a little bundle. When it was opened—it
-was an oyster can—a box of tin-iron,
-mit a hole cut in the on-top side. The letter
-was from de other boy—und it say—that
-his brudder, who vas ver-drownded, did
-begin his business life in a hotel in Cincinnetty,
-as a bellboy, und he safe his money
-und put it in the oyster can. Und in dat
-oyster box was the shin-plasters, the five
-centses, und de ten centses—yoost as he
-take them in for noospapers and shoe-blacking—und
-it was yoost enough, ach mein
-lieber Gott!—yoost enough to pay for his
-grave at Brookfill.”</p>
-
-<p>Surely this is very effective. It probably
-happened just that way. To know
-that it could, and perhaps <i>did</i>, is just the
-right impression for the author of a novel to
-make on the reader.</p>
-
-<p>Another splendid episode is that wherein
-a “run on the bank” begins, as the funeral
-of Colonel Quillmore is in progress. The
-chapters which relate the tragedy, the fire in
-the Colonel’s laboratory, the wild ride of
-<i>Father Lessing</i> and <i>Uncle I’</i>; the dramatic
-climax where <i>Mrs. Quillmore</i> lashes herself
-into raving madness; the funeral procession
-whose mourners get caught up in the growing
-excitement of the “run on the bank,” and
-leave the hearse to fly to the bank for their
-money; the nerve and resource of <i>Doc. Gus</i>
-in saving the bank, and in saving the cashier
-from the would-be lynchers—are chapters
-which bear convincing testimony to the
-power and creativeness of the author.</p>
-
-<p>The book is so finely conceived and written
-that one is tempted to scold the author for
-a few glaring faults which are well-nigh inexcusable.</p>
-
-<p>Why paint <i>L’Oiseau</i> so black when he
-was to be white-washed at the end? There
-was no need to have him behave so brutally
-to the boy, <i>Lanny Quillmore</i>. It was a blunder
-to make him insult the boy, incur the
-hatred of the boy, assault the boy, and drive
-the boy from his own home. The lad is
-allowed to think and believe that <i>L’Oiseau</i>
-is on terms of criminal intimacy with <i>Mrs.
-Quillmore, Lanny’s</i> mother. There was no
-necessity for this. If <i>L’Oiseau</i> was brother-in-law
-to <i>Mrs. Quillmore</i>, and was prompted
-by paternal interest in paying her such suspicious
-attention, and in being out in the
-woods with her at unseasonable hours in the
-night, why permit the lady’s son to torture
-himself under a misapprehension?</p>
-
-<p>What earthly reason was there for keeping
-from her only son a knowledge of the fact
-that <i>L’Oiseau</i> was her brother-in-law, and
-that her abnormal physical and mental condition
-required these unusual and suspicious
-attentions from him?</p>
-
-<p>Again, <i>L’Oiseau</i> was rambling about at
-night with <i>Mrs. Quillmore</i> when she lost consciousness,
-fell by the wayside, was found
-by the priest, and succored by <i>Doc. Gus</i>.</p>
-
-<p>What had become of her escort, <i>L’Oiseau</i>?</p>
-
-<p>He had mysteriously disappeared, and
-<i>Doc. Gus</i> had a right to put the worst construction
-upon his conduct. <i>Father Lessing</i>
-knew the truth; why did <i>Father Lessing</i>
-allow <i>Doc. Gus</i> to remain in ignorance?</p>
-
-<p>But the most serious blunder in the plot
-relates to the climax—the fire in <i>Colonel
-Quillmore’s</i> laboratory.</p>
-
-<p><i>Doc. Gus</i> sees the shadow of two men
-thrown upon the window shade. Only one
-of these men is accounted for, and the reader
-is left not only in doubt as to what happened,
-but in hopeless confusion. He cannot adopt
-any theory which will explain <i>all the facts</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Now, <i>that</i> is against the rules. Let the
-plot be ever so complicated, the mystery
-ever so deep, the author <i>must</i> either clear it
-up himself, or furnish the reader with the
-clue. Wilkie Collins, in spite of his bewildering
-tangles, unravels everything before
-he quits. In “Edwin Drood,” the book
-which Dickens was writing when death
-interrupted the story, the author had constructed
-one of his most involved and
-difficult plots. Before he had furnished the
-key to the riddle, he died. Yet Edgar Allan
-Poe was able to tell, with unerring certainty,
-just how the story was meant to end. By a
-keen analysis of the facts which Dickens had
-already related, and by a course of reasoning
-that left no room for doubt, Poe demonstrated
-that <i>Jasper</i>, the guardian and devoted
-friend of <i>Edwin Drood</i>, had murdered him;
-that jealousy was the motive; that the body
-of the victim was hidden in the new tomb
-which the inflated ass, <i>Sapsea</i>, had recently
-built for the deceased <i>Mrs. Sapsea</i>; and
-that the corpse was located by old <i>Durdles</i>,
-the drunken workman whose skill with
-his hammer was so great that he could,
-by tapping, tapping, tapping on the outside
-or a wall, tell whether a foreign substance,
-such as a human body, was inclosed
-within.</p>
-
-<p>Poe’s own matchless story, “The Gold<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span>
-Bug,” illustrates the rule which Mr. Chatterton
-broke. There are all sorts of mystifications
-to start with, but they are cleared
-up at the end.</p>
-
-<p>Even in Frank Stockton’s famous “The
-Lady or the Tiger,” the rule is kept. The
-reader is left in a dilemma, but he can clear
-up everything by choosing one horn or the
-other. If he says that it is the lady who is
-behind the door which is about to be opened,
-no mystery remains. If he says that it is
-the tiger which is behind the door, nothing
-is left of the puzzle.</p>
-
-<p>But in the Quillmore story there is no possible
-explanation <i>which will dispose of the
-facts</i>. If <i>Colonel Quillmore</i> died in the laboratory,
-and <i>L’Oiseau</i> did <i>not</i> kill him, who
-did? What about the <i>two</i> men quarreling
-in there at the time of the tragedy? What
-becomes of that other man? And how could
-<i>Quillmore’s</i> son meet him again in Paris?
-With the exception of <i>L’Oiseau</i>, no one had
-<i>the motive</i> to kill <i>Colonel Quillmore</i>; and the
-author made a point of showing that other
-people were afraid to go near the laboratory.</p>
-
-<p>But if the <i>Colonel</i> did <i>not</i> die in the laboratory,
-how did his false teeth get into the
-mouth of the dead man when <i>Doc. Gus</i>
-dragged him out of the flames? How did the
-<i>Colonel’s Masonic ring</i> get on the dead man’s
-finger? How did the <i>Colonel</i> make his escape
-without being seen, and, <i>who was it that
-he quarreled with and killed before he fled</i>?
-Nobody appears to have been missing from
-the neighborhood. Usually when somebody
-is killed, somebody is missed.</p>
-
-<p>Had Mr. Chatterton refrained from putting
-another man in the laboratory, had he
-left the <i>Colonel</i> dead in the flames, identified
-by his Masonic ring, had he left the
-reader to suppose that the sudden death of
-the <i>Colonel</i> and the sudden blaze which
-broke out in the building resulted from some
-dangerous chemical experiment, such as the
-<i>Colonel</i> delighted in—the story would have
-lost not a grain of interest and would have
-escaped a flagrant violation of the rules of
-literary construction.</p>
-
-<p class="book"><b>The Game and the Candle.</b> By Frances
-Davidge. D. Appleton &amp; Co., New York.</p>
-
-<p>Frances Davidge set herself too difficult a
-task when she attempted to make the characters
-in her novel. “The Game and the
-Candle,” speak in epigrams on every other
-page. The consequence is that the story,
-with its really brilliant beginning, develops
-into a commonplace love-story, and is only
-saved from absolute banality by its unforeseen
-and dramatic ending. In the field of
-literature which attempts to picture New
-York society the story will not find an enduring
-place, but it serves its purpose very
-well. The novelists are numberless who
-have sought to satirize our men and women
-of wealth and leisure; but few have given
-us any books that have lived longer than
-their allotted span of one brief season. The
-big society novel has not yet been written.
-Miss Davidge evidently knows a great deal
-of the foibles, the follies and the manners of
-the people of whom she writes, and her career
-is worth watching. At present she seems a
-bit immature and prolix, but there is no
-doubt as to her ability to write amazingly
-clever dialogue and to tell a story logically
-and well. Some of her characters are greatly
-overdrawn. One wishes that there were
-less of <i>Gussie Regan</i>, the hair-dresser; and
-<i>Emily Blair</i>, lovable as she is, could never
-have existed. Altogether, however, the
-story is pleasing and will find, doubtless, a
-large and appreciative audience.</p>
-
-<p class="right">H. C. T.</p>
-
-<p class="book"><b>The Carlyles.</b> By Mrs. Burton Harrison.
-D. Appleton &amp; Co., New York.</p>
-
-<p>In “The Carlyles” Mrs. Burton Harrison
-relinquishes the modern field which she has
-occupied for so long and with such marked
-success, and goes back to Civil War times for
-the scenes of her story. The Reconstruction
-period has been covered by innumerable
-writers. Indeed, it has been so frequently
-used by novelists and proven so fruitful a
-field, that one is apt to be overcome at the
-courage of an author who selects it now as
-the background for a tale; but Mrs. Harrison
-brings a certain freshness and charm to
-a subject that, it would seem, could inspire
-none. The opening chapter, which describes
-the impoverished condition of the <i>Carlyles</i>,
-brought on by the ravages of war, reveals
-the author at her best, and shows her intimate
-knowledge of life in Richmond in the
-’60’s. The splendid fortitude of old <i>Mr.
-Carlyle</i> in the face of his calamity and financial
-ruin, and the pride of the aristocratic
-Southerner are depicted with faultless art.</p>
-
-<p>The story itself is the old one of a girl who
-is unable to choose between two lovers, one
-of whom, of course, is a Yankee soldier and
-the other a Southerner fighting as a lieutenant-colonel
-under Lee. The usual complications
-occur. <i>Lancelot Carlyle</i>, a cousin and
-lover of <i>Mona</i>, the heroine, is imprisoned at
-Fort Delaware, and of the long period of his
-confinement Mrs. Harrison writes graphically,
-describing minutely the terrible ordeal
-of prison life. Fine as this portion of the
-novel is, however, it is in the chapters dealing
-with quiet domestic scenes that Mrs.
-Harrison writes with most force and distinction.
-The incident of the Christmas
-dinner-party, with the unheralded return of
-<i>Lancelot</i> and the sudden death of old <i>Alexius
-Carlyle</i>, is handled with consummate skill.
-The author has written no finer passage in
-any of her previous novels, nor one more
-certain to move her readers to tears.</p>
-
-<p class="right">H. C. T.</p>
-
-<p class="book"><b>The House of Mirth.</b> By Edith Wharton.
-Charles Scribner’s Sons.</p>
-
-<p>Undoubtedly no novel during the past season
-has elicited more favorable criticism and
-more numerous letters from constant readers
-than “The House of Mirth.” The book
-had a certain artificial success from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>
-start, because the impression went abroad
-that here at last was a book about
-Society, meaning the smallest number of
-the narrowest brains in any community
-from Kankakee to New York. On this
-very account there are a few millions
-of people in the United States who would
-not care to read it; but in view of the
-fact that some of the most serious
-critics have hailed “The House of Mirth”
-as a great American novel—only the bookseller
-now speaks of <i>the</i> American novel—a
-good many of the few millions, being persons
-of means and intelligence, would be
-tempted to indulge themselves in the rare
-luxury of such a boon. We cannot profess
-to treat the book as a true picture of American
-Society; because while we know how to
-wear the clothes and order the things to eat
-and drink, when we have the money, we
-have never, in our best-dressed and best-fed
-moments, been able to convince ourselves
-that we are anything but hopelessly middle
-class. Yet we are happy—sometimes;
-and we are bound to marvel at some of the
-things the society people in “The House of
-Mirth” do. For the most part they act like
-those people in New York who are loosely
-described as Fifth-avenue bohemians, which
-means they are people of much money,
-thoroughly informed about the decorative
-issues of life, with nothing to do but bore
-themselves and with a taste and intelligence
-that, in literature or the theatre, never
-craves anything more exciting than a
-musical show or a third-class novel, written
-by a man in Chicago, about lords and ladies
-of some corner lost and forgotten in Continental
-Europe. Our marvel that these
-society people should seem so underbred is
-only an exhibition of our unfamiliarity with
-a certain social stratum. We would have
-no right to make record of it, if it were not
-for the fact that so many people, of the
-better class themselves, have written letters
-of protest to divers publications, protesting
-against the impression that “The House of
-Mirth” is a story accurately representing
-New York society. We quote one letter
-from the <i>New York Times Saturday Review</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I am not a literary man, much less a
-literary critic, but I look forward each week
-to the appearance of <i>The New York Times
-Book Review</i> with renewed interest and read
-the various criticisms of your readers as to
-the merits of “The House of Mirth,” which
-in almost every instance meets their approval
-as a literary production of unusual merit.
-The writer, however, an octogenarian, born
-and bred in New York City, member of one
-of its oldest families and presumably familiar
-with its society, can but look upon “The
-House of Mirth” as a gross libel upon that
-society, and as an insult to a class as pure,
-as refined, and as intellectual as may be
-found the world over....</p>
-
-<p>“That such a condition as is therein described
-does exist in the lower strata of
-New York society, which may be termed
-swelldom, composed largely of “newrich”
-who swarm from other parts of the country
-to exploit their newly acquired wealth in
-showy equipages, wondrous wardrobes, and
-loud manners to the disgust of refined people,
-cannot be denied; but why a lady who
-has the entrée into the best society should
-elect to open the sewers of its lowest strata
-and allow its fœtid airs to escape through
-the medium of her pen is beyond the ken of
-your contributor.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">T. R. W.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>For our part, we prefer to depend upon the
-octogenarian who has just spoken, and who
-asserts his membership in one of the oldest
-families in New York, for an opinion upon
-the accuracy of “The House of Mirth” as a
-Society novel. As a novel pure and simple
-it seems to us to be radically defective in
-imaginative power, slow and cumbrous in
-construction, and wholly ineffective to
-impose an illusion. We say this with regret
-because we have read a good many of the
-author’s short stories from the time the
-first volume of them was issued; and the
-impression conveyed by her work in the
-short story field, as contrasted by the impression
-of this novel, makes clearer to us
-than ever the conviction that to write a
-short story a short-story writer is required,
-and to write a novel a novelist, and they
-have always been two persons from Mr.
-Kipling down and across. The author’s
-style is clear, sharp, refined, as before; but the
-gross defect of “The House of Mirth” is that
-the characters are pushed here and there
-by the author like so many wooden soldiers
-on a cardboard field of battle. They have
-no more volition than marionettes. In fact
-they are merely described names except in the
-instances of the three chief characters. One
-could have borne with the waxlike fibre of
-the attendant persons if the figure of <i>Lily Bart</i>,
-the heroine, would stand the gaze of the
-naked eye during even half the book. <i>Lily</i>
-is described by the author as possessing a
-fine sense of diplomacy in intercourse with
-the people of her set, yet her whole register
-of action from the first page reveals her as
-moving through the comedy without prudence,
-yet without conscience, with maneuver,
-yet without skill; with an under-appeal
-to the reader’s sympathy, yet exasperating
-the reader until in the moment of
-tragedy he feels that the heroine deserved
-all she got and ought to have got it sooner.
-But, when one gets away from the book, one
-feels that the fault is not the fault of the
-character, but of the author who has paltered
-by trying to make literary academics
-and psychology square with life itself and a
-good story.</p>
-
-<p>The minor irritations of the book are
-the absolutely fictional flavor of the names
-of most of the characters, the use of English
-or Continental idiom, and the mummery
-of the illustrations. Among the English
-phrases which the author so much affects is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span>
-the word <i>charwoman</i> for <i>scrubwoman</i>. It
-may be that Society calls a scrubwoman a
-charwoman, but we would like to see any
-society man or woman do it to the lady’s
-face.</p>
-
-<p>It is announced that Clyde Fitch is to
-dramatize “The House of Mirth” for production
-next fall and that he will adhere to
-the construction of the story as much as
-possible. The book is worthy of Mr. Fitch’s
-lofty talent.</p>
-
-<p class="right">R. D.</p>
-
-<p class="book"><b>Letters and Addresses.</b> By Abraham Lincoln.
-Unit Book Publishing Company.</p>
-
-<p>Even if there were a man, at this day of
-awakening in the United States, who could
-honestly say he had no interest in politics,
-providing he had any intelligence at all and
-ambition to think, he could not pass over
-such a book as “Lincoln’s Letters and
-Addresses” for the simple reason that on
-account of the style alone, the reading of
-them is a solace and a refreshment that
-endures. Of course, most of us are familiar
-with the addresses and the letters that
-have been so widely quoted, repeated, and
-learned by heart in school, that they are
-become as household words; but in such a
-book as this, containing infinite riches in
-little room, one secures not only the loftiest
-kind of pleasure but also a strangely intimate
-and attractive vision and understanding of
-the gaunt, unshapely figure whose genius
-towers higher as the years are added to the
-history of our country.</p>
-
-<p class="right">R. D.</p>
-
-<p class="book"><b>Contrite Hearts.</b> By Herman Bernstein.
-A. Wessels Company, New York.</p>
-
-<p>Some books are interesting because of their
-content alone; some only on account of the
-personality of their author: some for the
-reason that both the author and the content
-of his book are humanly valuable. Of the
-third distinction is “Contrite Hearts,” a
-story of Jewish life in Russia and the United
-States, by a writer who on occasion before
-has shown that he can use an alien
-language with simplicity and force. He
-has shown before also that he can present
-a picture of the people of his race
-without bias and with a due understanding
-of their defects and qualities. The Jew in
-America as presented in melodrama is a
-creation almost wholly of the romance
-spirit of the theatre. It is not to be denied
-that the prevalence of the very poor Jews in
-the lowest ranks of traffickers among men
-has provided an obvious type. In sharp
-contrast to this is the growing dominance of
-the Jew in the very highest ranks of commerce.
-Between the two must of necessity
-exist the Jew of the middle class; and all
-these varieties of the race have expanded to
-their utmost in the United States rather than
-in any other country. From a purely
-artistic standpoint, therefore, there is nothing
-more evident than that the field of Jewish
-manners and customs is wide and rich
-ground for the novelist. The transmutation
-in one generation of a peasant in Russia, with
-no rights beyond those of a street mongrel,
-to a man in the most advanced as well as
-the most vigorous civilization of the day,
-is material too obvious to be overlooked
-by the most casual scribe.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Bernstein, while not a writer of dramatic
-quality has that quieter and more sincere
-gift native to Russians, whether Jew
-or Gentile, of presenting life as an actuality
-against the artificial background of
-the printed page. Many who are called
-novelists among ourselves, and who have
-never talked or written any language but
-English, could learn a good deal of simplicity
-from this foreign-born author. Of course, one
-runs across the traces of his birth in certain
-peculiarities that even constant practice cannot
-wear out. These blemishes, however,
-are never vulgar as are the strainful phases
-of an indigenous author who uses his language
-as a race-track tout spreads himself
-with the flashy colors and fabrics that the
-clothier and the haberdasher of his station
-provide. It is rather interesting to hear
-what one of the characters in “Contrite
-Hearts” has to say of this country.</p>
-
-<p>“Here in America it is different. All are
-equal. Everyone is free. And all roads
-to success are open to the able, the enterprising,
-the persevering. There is no difference
-here between Jew and Gentile.
-People flock hither from all lands, and
-within a few years the Jew, the Frenchman,
-the German, the Irishman, the Italian—all
-are proud that they have become American.
-You ask me about the Jews, about
-Jewish affairs, about Jewish institutions—well,
-we have various kinds of Jews here.
-Orthodox Jews—these are the plain Jews
-like ourselves. Reform Jews—Jews who imitate
-the ways of the Christian. There are
-also Jews here who try to be both Orthodox
-and reform at the same time—that is,
-neither this nor that.”</p>
-
-<p>Is this all true?</p>
-
-<p class="right">R. D.</p>
-
-<p class="book"><b>Politics in New Zealand.</b> By Prof. Frank
-Parsons. Edited by Dr. C. F. Taylor.
-Dr. C. F. Taylor, Publisher, Philadelphia,
-Pa.</p>
-
-<p>This is one of the Equity Series published
-quarterly by Dr. Taylor, and contains the
-chief portions of the political parts of a book
-entitled, “The Story of New Zealand,” by
-Prof. Frank Parsons and Dr. Taylor. The
-latter is a large, heavy book selling at $3.00,
-and is doubtless the most complete history
-of New Zealand and exposition of present
-conditions there ever published. It is a
-beautifully illustrated volume containing
-860 pages, and includes history, description,
-the native people (the Maoris) and their
-treatment by the whites, the splendid
-resources of the country, and, more than all,
-a full and interesting account of the rise and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
-development of the remarkable institutions
-and government of New Zealand which are
-attracting the attention of all the rest of the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>As Dr. Taylor well says in his explanatory
-note in “Politics in New Zealand,” the
-size and cost of the “Story of New Zealand”
-prevent it from reaching the masses of our
-people, and the political facts, particularly
-of that progressive country should reach the
-mind and thought of our voters. “It is,”
-he says, “with a view of placing these political
-facts within the easy reach of the masses
-of our people, that I have selected the most
-important of these facts from the large book
-and arranged them as you see them in this
-unpretentious pamphlet.” “Politics in New
-Zealand” is now being used in combination
-with subscriptions to <span class="smcap">Watson’s Magazine</span>.
-(See advertising pages.)</p>
-
-<p>The great value of “Politics in New Zealand”
-lies in the fact that it gives the workings
-of many Populistic ideas put into actual
-practice. In this country the People’s
-Party has been obliged to theorize and resort
-to an appeal to the reasoning faculties of
-the people. It has been unable to point out
-many illustrations of the actual working of
-its theories, except by reference to foreign
-countries. For example, to sustain its contention
-for public ownership of railroads, it
-has been obliged to use the lines in Germany
-and other monarchies as illustrations. The
-United States is such a vast domain as compared
-with countries in Continental Europe,
-that considerable discrimination is necessary
-in order to draw a fair conclusion. Besides,
-the European countries are so old that the
-habits of the people are a great factor not to
-be lightly dismissed. In using New Zealand,
-however, as our object lesson, the conditions
-are more, nearly parallel. It is true that
-country is much smaller than the United
-States, but in point of age and habits of the
-people, there is much similarity. Accordingly,
-New Zealand is without doubt the
-best object lesson in the world for proving
-the soundness of Populistic theories.</p>
-
-<p>Those who have either bought or sold real
-estate in the older portions of the United
-States, understand the difficulties and uncertainties
-surrounding land titles under
-the system which is in vogue generally. As
-Prof. Parsons points out, it is often necessary
-to search through many big volumes of
-deeds and mortgages, and carefully construe
-the provisions of various wills and conveyances
-in order to follow the title to its source,
-and form an opinion as to its validity. And
-even then the opinion of the most accomplished
-expert may prove fallacious, and the
-purchaser may lose his land through some
-defect of title. As early as 1860 the New
-Zealanders passed an act to remedy this
-condition of things by establishing what is
-known as the Torrens system of title registration.
-The owner of land may give the
-registrar his deeds and the claims of all persons
-interested, and the registrar investigates
-the title once for all. He accepts it if he
-finds it valid, and registers the applicant as
-proprietor, giving him a certificate to that
-effect. The certificate gives an indefeasible
-title in fee, subject only to such incumbrances
-and charges as may be entered on
-the register. An independent purchaser has
-only to consult the register to learn at once
-who is the owner of the land, and what burdens,
-if any, rest upon it. He is not obliged
-to trace the title back to the Government
-Patent. This system is now in force in some
-places in the United States, but its adoption
-is generally opposed by those who profit by
-examining titles—that is to say, the lawyers.</p>
-
-<p>There were some telegraph lines constructed
-under the provincial governments
-of New Zealand prior to 1865, but nothing
-was done in a national way until that year.
-Then the General Assembly authorized the
-Governor to establish electric telegraphs and
-appoint a commissioner to manage them.
-Existing lines and offices were to be purchased,
-new lines built, and a national system
-developed. The commissioner made
-the regulations, fixed the rates, and employed
-operators to transmit all messages
-presented. Afterward the telegraphs became
-a part of the postal system. This
-naturally led to government ownership and
-operation of the telephone when the latter
-means of transmitting intelligence was introduced.
-It is also a part of the postal system,
-and as Prof. Parsons points out, “The
-Government is ‘hello-girl’ as well as postmaster,
-telegraph operator and banker.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Gladstone secured the establishment
-of postal savings banks in England in 1861.
-New Zealand adopted the idea in 1865, and
-since that time nearly every country in the
-civilized world, except the United States,
-has followed England’s example. The object
-of the New Zealand Post Office Savings
-Bank Act (1865) was stated to be: “To give
-additional facilities for the deposits of small
-savings at interest, and with the security of
-the Government behind it.” Practically
-all the money order offices in New Zealand
-(470 a few years ago) were open under the
-Postal Banking Law for the transaction of
-savings bank business, while there were but
-five private savings banks in the Islands.
-In New Zealand there is a place of bank
-deposit for each 1,800 people. In the United
-States there is one for each 7,650 people.
-The total deposits in all sorts of banks is $110
-per head of population in the United States,
-$125 in Great Britain, and $140 in New
-Zealand. Comment seems to be unnecessary.
-The postal banks will not receive
-less than a shilling at a time, but printed
-forms are furnished on which stamps may be
-pasted, one or more at a time, until the total
-amounts to a shilling or more, when the slip
-can be deposited as cash to the amount of
-the stamps pasted on it. The great advantage
-of postal banking, and in fact all government
-banking, is its safety. No postal
-bank in any country has ever closed its door<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span>
-for liquidation, or experienced a run on its
-funds.</p>
-
-<p>In view of our insurance scandals and the
-recent investigation, the chapter on Government
-Insurance is especially interesting at
-this time. In 1870 New Zealand adopted
-the Australian ballot and a public works
-policy, together with a Government Life Insurance
-Department. As the author points
-out, “The philosophy of this new departure
-was very simple. The purpose of insurance
-is the diffusion of loss. Instead of allowing a
-loss to fall with crushing weight on one individual,
-or family, it is spread out over a large
-number of stockholders or premium payers.
-If it is a good thing to distribute loss over a
-few thousand people who hold stock in a
-given company or pay premiums to it, it is
-still better to distribute the loss over the
-whole community. It is also wise to eliminate
-the expenses and profits of insurance so
-far as may be, and put the guarantee of the
-Government behind it, so that it may reach
-as many people and afford as much security
-as possible.”</p>
-
-<p>The insurance department was popular
-from the very start. The latest report when
-this book was written (1901) showed in force
-42,570 policies covering $51,000,000 of insurance,
-or practically half the total business
-of the Colony. The Government office had
-beaten the private companies in fair competition,
-for there was no attempt to exclude
-private insurance companies. It had, in
-1901, a much larger business than any of the
-companies, and almost as much as all the
-companies put together. This refers, of
-course, to the ordinary life insurance business,
-for there were 21,000 policies in industrial
-societies, which were not included in the regular
-life insurance statement. Two of our
-companies mixed up in the recent scandal,
-the Equitable Life and the New York Life,
-had, in 1901, been in the Colony 15 and 13
-years respectively. The Equitable had 717
-policies in force and the New York Life 139,
-as against 42,570 Government policies.</p>
-
-<p>The people of New Zealand prefer the
-Government insurance because of its safety—it
-has the guarantee of the Government behind
-it. It is in no danger of vanishing
-through insolvency, as ordinary insurance
-does now and then. Because of its cheapness,
-the rates being lower than any ordinary
-private companies; and because of its freedom
-from all oppressive conditions. The
-only conditions are that the premiums must
-be paid, and the assured must not commit
-suicide within six months after the insurance
-is taken out. As Professor Parsons says,
-“The policy is world-wide. The assured may
-go where he will, do what he likes—get himself
-shot in battle, smoke cigarettes, drink
-ice-water and eat plum pudding, or commit
-suicide under the ordinary forms after six
-months, and the money will still be paid to
-his relatives.” Instead of wasting valuable
-time and gray matter on devising schemes to
-prevent scoundrels from looting private insurance
-companies, why not devote a little
-thought to inaugurating a system of government
-insurance?</p>
-
-<p>An unique institution in New Zealand is
-the Public Trust office, established in 1872.
-Its purpose is to serve as executor, administrator,
-trustee, agent, or attorney, in the settlement
-and management of the property of
-decedents, or others, who for any reason are
-unable or unwilling to care for it themselves;
-to insure honest administration and safe investment;
-to provide for a wise discretion
-that may avoid the difficulties and losses incident
-to a strict fulfilment of wills and trusts
-imperfectly drawn; and to give advice and
-draw up papers, wills, deeds, and other instruments
-for the people in all parts of the
-Colony.</p>
-
-<p>“In the earlier years,” says the author,
-“nominations for representatives were made
-and seconded vocally at an assembly of the
-voters of the district. But since the Act of
-September (1890) representatives are nominated
-by petition in writing, signed by two or
-more voters of the district, transmitted with
-the candidates’ assent and a $50 deposit to
-the returning officer, who immediately publishes
-the names of the candidates. Each
-candidate must be nominated on a separate
-paper which must be transmitted to the returning
-officer at least seven days before the
-polling day. If the nominee doesn’t get one
-tenth as many votes as the lowest successful
-candidate, the $50 deposit is forfeited to the
-public treasury. This shuts out frivolous
-nominations. The nominations are usually
-made some time before the voting day, and
-the candidates go about the district and meet
-and address the electors in all parts of it. No
-candidate would stand any chance of election
-who failed to give the people he wished to
-represent an opportunity to get acquainted
-with him and ask him questions about his
-attitude on issues likely to come before the
-next Parliament. Seamen, sheep-shearers
-and commercial travelers are permitted to
-vote by mail. Such person gets a ballot
-paper filled up by the Postmaster with the
-names of the candidates in the applicant’s
-district, and the postal voter then marks the
-ballot and mails it.”</p>
-
-<p>Another Populistic economic theory put in
-practice in New Zealand is the Land and Income
-Assessment Act which abolishes the
-personal property tax and establishes graduated
-taxation on land values and incomes.
-The avowed objects of the law are to tax “according
-to ability to pay,” “to free the small
-man,” and, “to burst up monopolies”; and
-its cardinal features are the exemption of improvements
-and of small people and the special
-pressure put on the big monopolies and
-corporations and on absentees.</p>
-
-<p>All improvements are exempt. All buildings,
-fencings, draining, crops, etc.—all value
-that has been added by labor, all live stock
-also and personal property; only the unimproved
-value of the land is taxed. Mortgages
-are deducted also in estimating the land taxes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
-as they are taxed to the lender. There is a
-small-estate exemption of $2,500, where the
-net value of the estate doesn’t exceed $7,500.
-So that if a farmer has no more than $2,500
-of land value left after deducting improvements
-and mortgage liabilities from the value
-of his real property, he pays no land tax.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the three exemptions mentioned,
-there is another conditional exemption. If
-an old or infirm person owns land or mortgages
-returning less than $1,000 a year, and
-can show that he is not able to supplement
-his income, and that the payment of the tax
-would be a hardship, the commissioner may
-remit the tax. Here the custom is quite the
-other way. The millionaire swears off his
-tax. Out of 110,000 land owners, in New
-Zealand, only 16,000 pay tax.</p>
-
-<p>The graded tax begins when the unimproved
-value reaches $25,000. It rises from
-¼ of a cent on the pound of $25,000 to 16⁄4ths,
-or 4 cents, a pound on a million dollars, or
-more, of unimproved value. This graduated
-tax is in addition to the ordinary level-rate
-land tax levied each year, which is 2 cents
-on the pound. Absentee owners of large
-estates have still another tax to pay. If the
-owner of an estate large enough to come
-under the graded tax has been out of the
-country a year, this graded tax is increased
-20%.</p>
-
-<p>The income tax applies to net income from
-employment, and net profits from business.
-There is an absolute exemption of $1,500,
-except in the case of absentees, and companies
-whether absentees or not, and a further
-additional exemption up to $250 a year for
-life insurance premiums, if the citizen wishes
-to spend his money that way. All income
-derived from land or from mortgages, so far
-as they represent realty, is outside this tax,
-which affects only income from employment
-or business. The farmer, who derives all his
-income from land, pays no income tax. The
-same may be said of a lawyer, doctor, teacher,
-artisan, or any other person who makes no
-more than $1,500 a year. The total number
-of income-tax payers is only about 5,600.</p>
-
-<p>United States Consul Connolly, reporting
-to our Government in 1894 and 1897, has
-considerable to say regarding taxation in
-New Zealand. He says that country excels
-in the matter of taxation. That in a very
-short time the system of taxation had been
-revolutionized and the incidence almost entirely
-changed, not only without disturbing
-to any appreciable extent existing interests,
-but with the most beneficial results. He
-says the income tax was most fiercely denounced
-as inquisitorial, destructive of the
-first principles of frugality and thrift—in
-fact all the forms of evil lurked in the shadows
-of the words “income tax,” and a united
-effort was made to resist this “iniquitous
-tax,” but all to no purpose. And that in
-1897, after six years of experience, the more
-liberal and fair-minded of those who opposed
-the income tax frankly admitted that it is
-a fair and unembarrassing tax. “In New
-Zealand the land and income tax is now
-popular; it is accepted in lieu of the property
-tax; it is a success.”</p>
-
-<p>In the United States the Government is
-paternalistic toward banks, railroads and
-manufacturing interests. It loans its credit
-to the national bankers at most advantageous
-terms, but has persistently refused to
-favor other classes in a similar way. In
-New Zealand, however, in 1894, there was
-established a Government loan office which
-lends public funds to farmers, laborers, business
-men, etc. at low interest, and on easy
-terms. The security taken is on freehold,
-or leasehold, interest clear of incumbrances
-and free of any breach of conditions. The
-loans are on first mortgage of land and improvements.
-No loan is to be less than $125,
-or more than $15,000, and the sum of the
-advances to any one person must not exceed
-$15,000. There are two kinds of advances,
-fixed loans and installment loans. The first
-may be for any period not exceeding ten
-years, and the principal is due at the end of
-that term. The second is for 36½ years, and
-part of the principal is to be paid each half
-year. Interest in both cases is at 4½%, if
-paid within fourteen days of the time it is
-due (5% if payment is not prompt); and in
-the case of an instalment loan, 1% more is
-to be paid for the reduction of the principal.</p>
-
-<p>Passing over the chapters devoted to the
-labor department, the state farm, the factory
-laws, the shop acts, the 8-hour day,
-industrial arbitration and co-operation, all of
-which are of intense interest, but of such
-a nature as to preclude brief statement, we
-come to the Government ownership and
-operation of the railways. The year 1894
-Prof. Parsons calls “the glory year of land
-resumption. Government loans to farmers,
-nationalization of credit, labor legislation
-and judicialization of strikes and lock-outs.”
-It was in this year that another important
-move was made through a vital change in
-the national railway policy. In 1887 a
-commission system was inaugurated, under
-which the roads were put in the hands of
-commissioners appointed by the Governor,
-with the assent of Parliament. This did
-not prove satisfactory to New Zealand.
-The commissioners managed the roads with
-a view to making a good financial report.
-They were looking for profit. In the Parliamentary
-debates it was charged that rates
-were so high that firewood went to waste in
-the forest, and potatoes rotted in the fields,
-while the people in the cities were cold and
-hungry in the years of depression; that goods
-were frequently hauled more cheaply by
-wagon than by rail; that while rates were
-reduced somewhat now and then, it was
-done by reducing wages; that the pay of the
-men was cut while the salaries of high-priced
-officials were increased, and so on. This is a
-striking parallel to conditions in the United
-States today.</p>
-
-<p>Prof. Parsons admits that the commissioners
-were honest, but they were simply railroad<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span>
-men, running the roads to make money
-for the treasury. Finally public indignation
-became intense. The air was full of complaints,
-and in 1893 the abolition of the commission
-was made an issue in the campaign,
-and the people, by an overwhelming majority,
-elected representatives pledged to put the
-roads under direct control of the Minister
-of Railways and the Parliament, and to
-bring the railroads within speaking distance
-of the people.</p>
-
-<p>The result of this change is that the roads
-are no longer run primarily for profit, but for
-service; and the men are treated with the
-consideration due to partners in the business.
-It is announced that the definite policy of
-the Government shall be that all profits
-above the 3% needed for interest on the railway
-debt shall be returned to the people
-in lower rates and better accommodations.
-This is in striking contrast to the facts brought
-out in the letter of Engineer William D.
-Marks to Hon. Wharton Barker, recently
-printed as a public document at the instance
-of Senator Tillman of South Carolina, in
-which it is shown that the people of the
-United States are today paying interest on
-a fictitious railway capitalization of something
-like $7,000,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>In 1899 the Minister of Railways announced
-a reduction of 20% on ordinary
-farm products and 40% on butter and cheese,
-etc. These concessions, Prof. Parsons declares,
-amount to one seventh of the receipts—equivalent
-to a reduction of $150,000,000
-on the yearly freight rates in the United
-States. That alone would be a yearly saving
-of almost $2 a head for the people of the
-United States. In 1900 Mr. Ward, the new
-Minister of Railways, announced a general
-lowering of passenger fares as the first fruits
-of his administration. “The announcement
-was received with cheers by the audience—stockholders
-in the road.” Care is taken
-in New Zealand that small men shall not be
-put at a disadvantage. The State roads
-carry 400 pounds at the same rate as the ton
-rate, or the train-load rate, and one bale of
-wool goes the same rate as a thousand. No
-such thing is known in New Zealand as the
-lowering of rates to a shipper because of the
-great size of his shipments. All the rates are
-made by the management openly. There
-are no secret modifications of the tariff.
-There may be a variation on scheduled rates
-to equalize a long haul, or enable a distant
-mine or factory to reach the market in
-condition to compete with nearer rivals,
-but the total charge is never lower than
-the rate that is given to others for the same
-service.</p>
-
-<p>The State roads are used to advance the
-cause of education. Children in the primary
-grades are carried free to school.
-Other children pay $2.50 to $5, according
-to age, for a three-months season ticket up
-to sixty miles. This gives them a possible
-120 miles a day for 3 to 6 cents in round numbers,
-or 20 to 40 miles for a cent. A child
-who goes in and out six miles each day rides
-12 miles for 3 cents.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible in the limits of this article
-to more than touch upon many of the other
-advances made in New Zealand. The Referendum
-is now used to a considerable extent
-in local affairs, and its use is being extended.
-Old age pensions are in force, being a much
-better method than maintaining poor houses.
-Immigration is carefully guarded. The
-State is now opening coal mines and engaging
-in the business of furnishing fuel to the people.
-Many other innovations of this character
-are being considered and put in operation
-from time to time.</p>
-
-<p>Prof. Parsons summarizes his study of
-New Zealand in some sharp contrasts and
-conclusions, from which we quote in part:</p>
-
-<p>“The United States is in form a Republic,
-but ... an aristocracy of industrial
-power. New Zealand is in form an Imperial
-Province, but in fact it is substantially a
-Republic. The will of the great body of the
-common people is in actual control of the
-Government.</p>
-
-<p>“In America, farmers organize for agricultural
-needs, and the working-men organize
-for labor purposes, but they do not join forces
-to take control of the Government in their
-common interest, as is the case in New Zealand.
-Not only have our farmers and workers
-failed to get together, but neither group
-has learned to use the ballot for its interest
-in any systematic way. The farmers divide
-at the polls and organized labor divides at
-the polls. In New Zealand the small farmers
-are practically solid at the ballot box,
-and organized labor is solid at the ballot, and
-the two solids are welded together into one
-irresistible solid.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">C. Q. D.</p>
-
-<p class="book"><b>BACK HOME. By Eugene Wood. S. S.
-McClure Co., New York.</b></p>
-
-<p>It isn’t often that an author writes a real
-review of his own book. Well, maybe he
-does, too, but it seldom happens that he
-writes it as a preface to the book itself, very
-seldom that it is an interesting one, very,
-very seldom that it tells you what to expect
-to find in the book, and very, very, <i>very</i> seldom
-that he isn’t too much wrapped up in
-his own private idea of his story to write a
-fair one from our point of view. However,
-Eugene Wood, being unconventional and
-other pleasing things, has done all this in the
-preface to his “Back Home.” When you
-have read the preface, you are glad you did,
-instead of feeling sorry you wasted time on it
-and fearful lest a book by the same author of
-that preface will be something of a bore.
-After Mr. Wood’s preface you know Mr.
-Wood and about what to expect in Mr.
-Wood’s book. You like one, and you know
-you are going to like the other.</p>
-
-<p>It would be the easiest thing in the world
-for the reviewer to sit down and write reams
-of “copy” on “Back Home” and the good
-things therein, but it is much more to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span>
-point for him who reads to listen to Mr. Wood
-himself. If you are human instead of petrified,
-you will enjoy both the preface and the
-book. Both reach for the heart-strings,
-and the terms—the term is good.</p>
-
-<p>Here is the larger part of the preface:</p>
-
-<p>“Gentle Reader:—Let me make you acquainted
-with my book, ‘Back Home.’
-(Your right hand, Book, your right hand,
-Pity’s sake: How many times have I got to
-tell you that? Chest up and forward, shoulders
-back and down, and turn your toes out
-more.)</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s a book. It is long? No. Is it exciting?
-No. Any lost diamonds in it? Nup.
-Mysterious murders? No. Whopping big
-fortune, now teetering this way, and now
-teetering that, tipping over on the Hero at
-the last and smothering him in an avalanche
-of fifty-dollar bills? No. Does She get Him?
-Isn’t even that. No ‘heart interest’ at all.
-What’s the use of putting out good money to
-make such a book; to have a cover-design
-for it; to get a man like A. B. Frost to draw
-illustrations for it, when he costs so like the
-mischief, when there’s nothing in the book to
-make a man sit up till ‘way past bedtime’?
-Why print it at all?</p>
-
-<p>“You may search me. I suppose it’s all
-right, but if it was my money, I’ll bet I could
-make a better investment of it. If worst
-came to worst, I could do like the fellow in
-the story who went to the gambling-house
-and found it closed up, so he shoved the
-money under the door and went away. He’d
-done his part.</p>
-
-<p>“And yet, on the other hand, I can see
-how some sort of a case can be made out for
-this book of mine. I suppose I am wrong—I
-generally am in regard to everything—but
-it seems to me that quite a large part of the
-population of this country must be grown-up
-people. If I am right in this connection,
-this large part of the population is being unjustly
-discriminated against. I believe in
-doing a reasonable amount for the aid and
-comfort of the young things that are just beginning
-to turn their hair up under, or who
-rub a stealthy forefinger over their upper lips
-to feel the pleasant rasp, but I don’t believe
-in their monopolizing everything. I don’t
-think it’s fair. All the books printed—except,
-of course, those containing valuable information;
-we don’t buy those books, but go
-to the public library for them—all the books
-printed are concerned with the problem of
-How She got Him, and He can get Her.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, now. It was either yesterday
-morning or the day before that you looked
-in the glass and beheld there The First Gray
-Hair. You smiled a smile that was not all
-pure pleasure, a smile that petered out into a
-sigh, but nevertheless a smile, I will contend.
-What do you think about it? You’re still on
-earth, aren’t you? You’ll last the month out,
-anyhow, won’t you? Not at all ready to be
-laid on the shelf? What do you think of the
-relative importance of Love, Courtship, and
-Marriage? One or two other things in life
-just about as interesting, aren’t there? Take
-getting a living, for instance. That’s worthy
-of one’s attention, to a certain extent. When
-our young ones ask us: “Pop, what did you
-say to Mom when you courted her?” they
-feel provoked at us for taking it so lightly
-and so frivolously. It vexes them for us to
-reply: “Law, child! I don’t remember.
-Why, I says to her: ‘Will you have me?’ and
-she says: ‘Why, yes, and jump at the
-chance.’” What difference does it make
-what we said or whether we said anything at
-all? Why should we charge our memories
-with the recollections of those few foolish
-months of mere instinctive sex-attraction
-when all that really counts came after, the
-years wherein low passion bloomed into
-lofty Love, the dear companionship in joy
-and sorrow, and in that which is more, far
-more than either joy or sorrow, “the daily
-round, the common task?” All that is wonderful
-to think of in our courtship is the marvel,
-for which we should never cease to
-thank the Almighty God, that with so little
-judgment at our disposal we should have
-chosen so wisely.</p>
-
-<p>“If you, Gentle Reader, found your first
-gray hair day before yesterday morning, if
-you can remember, ’way back ten or fifteen
-years ago—er—er—or more, come with me.
-Let us go ‘Back Home.’ Here’s your
-transportation, all made out to you, and in
-your hand. It is no use my reminding you
-that no railroad goes to the old place. It
-isn’t there any more, even in outward seeming.
-Cummins’s woods, where you had your
-robbers’ cave, is all cleared off and cut up into
-building lots. The cool and echoing covered
-bridge, plastered with notices of dead and forgotten
-Strawberry Festivals and Public Vendues,
-has long ago been torn down, to be replaced
-by a smart, red iron bridge. The
-Volunteer Firemen’s Engine-house, whose
-brick wall used to flutter with the gay rags of
-circus-bills, is gone as if it never were at all.
-Where the Union School-house was is all torn
-up now. They are putting up a new magnificent
-structure, with all the modern improvements,
-exposed plumbing, and spankless
-discipline. The quiet, leafy streets echo
-to the hissing snarl of trolley cars, and the
-power-house is right by the Old Swimming-hole
-above the dam. The meeting-house,
-where we attended Sabbath-school, and marveled
-at the Greek temple frescoed on the
-wall behind the pulpit, is now a church with
-a big organ, and stained-glass windows, and
-folding opera-chairs on a slanting floor.
-There isn’t any “Amen Corner,” any more,
-and in these calm and well-ordered times nobody
-ever gets “shouting happy”.</p>
-
-<p>“But even when “the loved spots that our
-infancy knew” are physically the same, a
-change has come upon them more saddening
-than words can tell. They have shrunken
-and grown shabbier. They are not nearly so
-spacious and so splendid as once they were.</p>
-
-<p>“Some one comes up to you and calls you
-by your name. His voice echoes in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
-chambers of your memory. You hold his
-hand in yours and try to peer through the
-false-face he has on, the mask of a beard or
-spectacles, or a changed expression of the
-countenance. He says he is So-and-so.
-Why, he used to sit with you in Miss Crutcher’s
-room, don’t you remember? There was
-a time when you and he walked together,
-your arms upon each other’s shoulders. But
-this is some other than he. The boy you
-knew had freckles, and could spit between
-his teeth, ever and ever so far.</p>
-
-<p>“They don’t have the same things to eat
-they used to have, or, if they do, it all tastes
-different. Do you remember the old well,
-with the windlass and chain fastened to the
-rope just above the bucket, the chain that
-used to cluck-cluck when the dripping bucket
-came within reach to be swung upon the well-curb?
-How cold the water used to be, right
-out of the north-west corner of the well! It
-made the roof of your mouth ache when you
-drank. Everybody said it was such splendid
-water. It isn’t so very cold these days, and
-I think it has a sort of funny taste to it.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Gentle Reader, this is not really
-‘Back Home’ we gaze upon when we go
-there by train. It is a last year’s birds’ nest
-The nest is there; the birds are flown, the
-birds of youth, and noisy health, and ravenous
-appetite, and inexperience. You cannot
-go ‘Back Home’ by train, but here is
-the magic wishing-carpet, and here is your
-transportation in your hand all made out to
-you. You and I will make the journey together.
-Let us in heart and mind thither
-ascend.</p>
-
-<p>“I went to the Old Red School-house with
-you. Don’t you remember me? I was
-learning to swim when you could go clear
-across the river without once ‘letting down.’
-I saw you at the County Fair, and bought a
-slab of ice-cream candy just before you did,
-I was in the infant-class in Sabbath School
-when you spoke in the dialogue at the monthly
-concert. Look again. Don’t you remember
-me? I used to stub my toe so; you
-ought to recollect me by that. I know
-plenty of people that you know. I may not
-always get their names just right, but then
-it’s been a good while ago. You’ll recognize
-them, though; you’ll know them in a
-minute.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">A. S. H.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Easter_Hope"><i>The Easter Hope</i><br />
-<span class="smaller">BY CORA A. MATSON DOLSON</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">We look across the days of March,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Of knife-keen winds, and barren hills,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To where the skies of April arch</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Above the beds of daffodils.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Oh, hearts of Hope! The hours are long,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">While melting drifts o’erflood the rills;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Yet do these winds blow, keen and strong,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Toward those beds of daffodils.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The Easter promise cannot fail!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The stone will move when God’s hand wills,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And we again our loved ones hail,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Who sleep, as sleep the daffodils!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h2><i>Explained</i></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Givem</span>—Why are you out of work?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Weary Willy</span>—I was a life-insurance president and made so much
-money I had to resign.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="The_Say_of_Other_Editors">
-<img src="images/heading13.jpg" width="700" height="175" alt="" />
-<h2><i>The Say of Other Editors</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Clark Howell’s politicians and newspaper
-supporters over the state are sending
-up a unanimous wail because <span class="smcap">Tom Watson</span>,
-a Populist, manifests some interest in Georgia
-politics. They swear he is trying to
-break up the Democratic party and gain control
-of the state. Well, what about Major
-J. F. Hanson, the Republican president of
-the Central Railway? He has been active
-in state politics for a long time, and wields
-more influence than a thousand ringsters who
-are “cussing” <span class="smcap">Tom Watson</span>. If it is a high
-crime for Populist Watson to take a hand in
-Georgia politics, what kind of crime is
-Republican Hanson guilty of when he joins
-Hamp McWhorter and Sam Spencer in a
-prolonged struggle to dominate the public
-policies and politics of Georgia? Will some
-of the political time-servers please answer?—<i>Newnan
-(Ga.) News.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The fact that Mr. Howell has never replied
-to the question why he was so anxious
-for Watson to call and see him, leads us to
-believe that he was after the same thing he
-accuses Smith of—attempting to get what
-honey he could out of the Populist beegum.—<i>Washington
-(Ga.) Reporter.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The latest proposition is to put the Quay
-statue at Harrisburg in a niche. That would
-be a good plan provided they wall up the
-niche afterward.—<i>Broken Bow (Neb.) Beacon.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The railroad rate bill was passed by the
-House by a vote of 346 to 7, last week
-Thursday.</p>
-
-<p>The bill is now up to the Senate. It may
-stay there for some time before it passes, if
-it is passed at all.</p>
-
-<p>The corporation-ridden Senate is a disgrace
-to a people who are said to elect their
-public servants. The men who made the
-Senate so far from the touch of the common
-people either were short-sighted, or defrauded
-the real American citizen out of one
-of the most necessary needs in this age of
-graft and political corruption.</p>
-
-<p>The Grange favors the direct nomination
-and election of our United States Senators,
-and in due course of time we, the people,
-shall be electors in deed and action. By
-direct vote of the people, making the senators
-responsible and answerable to the
-masses, alone can we inject purity into our
-elections and accomplish reform in public
-affairs.—<i>Sandusky (Mich.) Salinac Farmer.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Up to January 16 the <i>Congressional
-Record</i> contained 2,300 columns of speeches
-made so far by congressmen, but it has to
-record only one important bill passed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>William Jennings Bryan’s costume in the
-honorable position of a “Datto” of Mindanao
-consists of a high hat and a black silk
-apron. In cold weather he is permitted to
-varnish his legs.—<i>McEwen (Tenn.) New Era.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The members of the lower house of Congress
-are debating the railroad rate bill this
-week. At the end of that time the public
-will know which ones are entitled to railroad
-passes under the new regulation of the companies
-that only employees are to receive
-them.—<i>Matthews (I. T.) News.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We admire patriotism but we don’t like
-toadyism. It makes us tired to see how
-quick some editors sneeze when a high official
-takes snuff. And when the snuff is
-taken purely and solely for political effect
-it makes it all the more disgusting.—<i>Marshville
-(N. C.) Our Home.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“This is the time,” says Senator Platt,
-“when little bosses will find their level.”
-And it is also the time when some great
-bosses are finding rock bottoms.—<i>Stanberry
-(Mo.) Owl.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>What’s the difference between a street
-curb boodler and one that sells out for a
-promise of an appointment? Ans.—One
-gets his money before voting while the other
-gets it afterwards, if he does not get left—principle
-same.—<i>Batavia (O.) Democrat.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Why are all the candidates opposing Hoke
-Smith? There must be some reason for it.
-Everyone had faith in him, believed him far
-superior to a majority of other people, until
-he got into the race. Why this change?
-Why so many attacks upon him? Is it because
-he is advocating reforms which have
-already been adopted by several of the other
-Southern states? It must be because he
-stands for something, and is not ashamed
-or afraid to tell what it is.—<i>Marietta (Ga.)
-Courier.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>With Clark Howell devoting most of his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
-time to “cussing” out <span class="smcap">Tom Watson</span>, Hoke
-Smith is sailing smoothly on to the gubernatorial
-chair.—<i>Dalton (Ga.) Citizen.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The New York Sun puts it this way: “If
-John Mitchell’s statement at the miners’ convention
-is not a bluff, there will be either an
-enormous increase in the coal bills of the
-American people or the most costly and
-disastrous strike the country has ever seen.”
-But what do the mine owners and the striking
-mine workers care about that, so long as
-the people who buy the coal are willing to
-bear their suffering in silence—paying without
-a murmur any price the coal barons put
-on their product; and feeling well assured
-that nothing will be done by the suffering
-people to change the laws by which these
-barons are enabled to inflict this suffering.—<i>Waterbury
-(Conn.) Examiner.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>During the last ten years stocks and
-bonds amounting to $12,500,000,000 have
-been floated in this country. This additional
-capitalization of the industries and railroads
-of the country is about equal to the total
-value of all grain crops raised by the farmers
-during the same period. It is one-third
-more than the total value of the products of
-all mines in the country for the same period.
-It is equal to one-eighth of the total wealth
-of the United States in 1900. That is the
-way the “great” financiers absorb the
-wealth produced by the toilers of the nation.
-After studying the above statistics you may
-realize the force of Gov. Johnson’s statement
-that fictitious valuation and the consequent
-tax on the producers is the great curse of
-this country. Ignatius Donnelly used to
-tell a story about a hen that laid an egg in a
-nest fitted with a false bottom. The egg
-disappeared, and the hen laid another, continuing
-in her vain effort to have an egg show
-up in the nest until there was nothing left of
-her but the feathers. The fictitious capitalization
-is the false bottom that takes the
-products of the laborer, leaving him nothing
-to show for his efforts.—<i>Willmar (Minn.)
-Tribune.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Hepburn rate bill now pending in
-Congress is nothing more nor less than the
-Hearst bill with a few loopholes in it for the
-convenience of those railroad companies
-that may desire to side-step its provisions.—<i>Globe
-(Ariz.) Register.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The fact that the congressmen of both
-old parties are almost a unit for the railroad
-rate bill now pending in Congress, should be
-enough to satisfy any reasonable man that
-the people can get their rights only through
-a new party. The bill is a miserable pretense
-engineered by railroad tools in Congress,
-and its object is to make the people believe
-they are going to get relief through the old
-parties.—<i>Chillicothe (Mo.) World.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Gov. Magoon testifies that men may be
-put to death in the Panama Canal zone without
-trial. It seems to be easier to put them
-to death than to put them to work.—<i>Athens
-(Ill.) Free Press.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The time has come when we need men
-that stand for something. The day is past
-when our forefathers stood for truth, honor,
-principle; and all that was right must be
-called into play again or this republic will
-be but an iridescent dream.—<i>Marion (Ala.)
-Democrat.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A writer in a recent issue of a so-called
-farm paper says the reason boys go to towns
-and cities to live is because they long for a
-life in which they will be independent of
-every one else on earth. Then why in
-thunder do they go to the cities to find it?
-A man might as well dig out gopher holes
-expecting to find wolves as to go to the cities
-to find an independent life. The place to
-find that is on the farm. Here we are our
-own boss, and if any one else does not like
-the way we do, we are in a position to tell
-him to go to—with no danger of losing our
-job.—<i>Irrigon (Ore.) Irrigator.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It now looks like Marion Butler is arranging
-to take charge of the Republican Party
-in North Carolina. We make no prediction
-about what will be or what will not be done.
-Those who know his past record will hesitate
-before surrendering entirely to a man who is
-so thoroughly repudiated by all classes in
-this state.—<i>Asheboro (N. C.) Courier.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Chicago Tribune asks: “Granting
-that it will take seven years to construct the
-Panama canal, have the seven years begun
-yet?” That is rather a hard question, not
-knowing the personality of the timekeeper.
-However, there is one thing in connection
-with the scheme that we are all well aware
-of—the big salaries of the political constructors
-have begun, all right.—<i>Farmington
-Valley Herald, Hartford, Conn.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>According to the <i>Pantagraph</i>, Senator
-Cullom should be re-elected because he
-stayed in Washington after the session of
-Congress of last winter and did work that he
-was drawing a salary of $5,000 a year to do.
-The statement that his present illness was
-brought on by overwork seems preposterous.
-Who ever heard of a United States Senator
-overworking, unless it was to keep himself in
-office? From present indications, it seems
-that the people of the state are willing to give
-Mr. Cullom a rest from his overwork.—<i>Colfax
-(Ill.) Press.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>John A. McCall, late head of a giant life
-insurance company, is dead, and, as far as
-mortal knows, is at rest for the first time for
-months. This erstwhile gentleman and
-master of high finance was “weighed in the
-balance and found wanting.” The weighing
-was done by fellow citizens, which made<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span>
-remorse all the more keen. Rapid decline
-followed and McCall, broken-hearted, deserted
-and despised, is gone. His fate should
-be an example to others who are tempted
-to do wrong. A half dozen other luminaries
-of New York, who were caught dead to
-rights in the insurance frauds, are fast following
-in McCall’s wake, and are even now
-all but ostracized by social and business
-associates. The weight of the common
-verdict against them is bearing heavily upon
-their shoulders, streaking their hair and furrowing
-their faces. Their sins are finding
-them out.—<i>Washington (Ill.) Register.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Old political systems are being broken up
-by the heat of public common sense and non-partisan
-movements. The independent
-American citizen and voter is going to
-make himself felt, by gosh!—<i>Mt. Vernon
-(Ind.) Unafraid.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>John A. McCall has departed to the
-great bar of all time. There is no doubt but
-that shame and humiliation killed this
-proud, self-made man.</p>
-
-<p>Wrong-doing is bound to bring its death
-sentence to all lives, rich or poor.—<i>Milford
-Centre (O.) Ohioan.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“Some day, we pray to God, there will come
-a House which will hold tight the purse-strings,
-and, on some measure of right, say to
-our lords: ‘Pass the bill or get no money.
-We will go to the country on this issue.’
-And then we will have achieved what the
-English House of Commons won in 1832, and
-our Senate will become the perfunctory body
-the House of Lords ever since has been.”—<i>St.
-Louis Dispatch.</i></p>
-
-<p>That sounds like it came from way up in
-the amen corner, and is likely to have many
-hearty responses.—<i>Salem (Va.) Times-Register.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Mr. Rogers, of the Standard Oil Trust, is
-the last man in the world who should show
-contempt for the law. The law which is
-brought about through class legislation has
-enabled him to become a millionaire by robbing
-the public, and it is through respect for
-the law that an enraged public permits him
-to hold his ill-gotten gains.—<i>Rolla (Mo.)
-Sharp Shooter.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Well, the railroad rate bill has passed the
-House, with only seven negative votes—all
-Republicans. But in the Senate is where
-the tug-of-war comes.—<i>Malad (Ida.) People’s
-Advocate.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Pure food is once more an issue in both
-houses of Congress, and the bill bids fair to
-be defeated in the Senate, which numbers
-among its members not a few who have interests
-in groceries, fisheries, packing and
-canning houses that will be unfavorably
-affected by pure food legislation. The clause
-most necessary to the effectiveness of the
-bill, the one providing that all packages shall
-be labeled to show exactly the contents of
-the package whether medicine, food or beverage,
-and which enables the purchaser at
-least to know with what and when he is
-poisoning himself, is the very clause that
-seems in greatest danger of defeat.—<i>Adams
-(N. Dak.) Budget.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>And now the assertion comes forth that a
-large white goat in a New York town by the
-name of Rockefeller, while the family heads
-were bowed in sorrow, climbed upon the
-porch and devoured the wreath of flowers
-which hung on the door. But, pshaw!
-that is only characteristic of the name—swiping
-all in sight.—<i>Wrens (Ga.) Reporter.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is probable that when the Hepburn
-railway rate bill gets back to the lower house
-of Congress that it and its author will
-scarcely have a bowing acquaintance.—<i>Glenwood
-(Mo.) Phonograph.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The fight in Congress over the railway
-rate bill seems to center on court review of
-the orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission.
-Now the courts have the right
-under the Constitution to review all orders of
-the commission or they have not. Therefore
-why should the fight be over this feature
-of the bill unless the railroads believe that
-the courts have had this authority if denied
-in the measure, we are unable to comprehend.
-On the first blush we should say that the
-courts, if asked, would have this right, for
-they have claimed the right to review almost
-any and every thing till the Democratic
-Party was forced to denounce “government
-by injunction.” Still, the railroads occupy a
-peculiar position toward the people of the
-country.</p>
-
-<p>The stockholders in a railroad corporation
-have not the same rights the stockholders
-have in nearly every other corporate body.</p>
-
-<p>The railroads have been permitted to condemn
-our land for their use, but in so doing
-they incurred certain responsibilities to the
-public that are imposed on no other corporation.</p>
-
-<p>It would therefore seem but just that if
-railroads can force us to part with our real
-estate, surely we, the people, have a right to
-say that these roads shall be managed just as
-the people through their representatives in
-Congress desire, and unless such regulations
-are confiscatory the courts shall have no say.—<i>Tarboro
-(N. C.) Southern.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Having resigned from seventy corporations,
-Senator Depew must be awful lonesome
-when the directors meet and make a
-noise like declaring a dividend.—<i>Schaghticoke
-(N. Y.) Sun.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here is what we found in Sunday’s <i>Constitution</i>
-about the Governor’s race.</p>
-
-<p>One article about Hoke Smith and Tom
-Watson brands them as assassins of Democracy.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span>
-In another place is the following complimentary
-clipping about Estill: “The weekly
-papers are giving Colonel John H. Estill the
-squarest kind of a deal. The Savannahian
-is the man to watch and his following seems
-to be growing rapidly in all quarters of the
-state.”</p>
-
-<p>And on the same page is another clipping
-from the <i>Tifton Gazette</i>, in which Estill,
-Judge Russell and Mr. Howell are spoken of
-as men of the most sterling integrity, distinguished
-ability and unflinching honor, and
-either of them would do Georgia credit in the
-gubernatorial chair.</p>
-
-<p>Is it a wonder that the common people
-believe that Clark Howell, Estill and Judge
-Russell are in a combination to beat Hoke
-Smith?—<i>Lawrenceville (Ga.) Gwinnett Journal.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The old adage “competition is the life of
-trade” has been transformed to “combination
-is the life of trade” to suit the condition
-of the times.—<i>Oakland (Md.) Journal.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Wall Street Is Playing with Fire” is
-the startling head line in a local paper.
-There is no need for alarm, though. Wall
-Street has plenty of water to put out any fire.—<i>Almond
-(N. Y.) Gleaner.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The great copper war which for years
-has been waged between Heinze and the
-Amalgamated has been ended by what is
-practically a merger of the opposing interests.
-This fight between stock gamblers for the
-control of immense properties has for years
-divided the people of Montana into bitter
-factions, has disorganized politics, corrupted
-judges and legislatures and had a baneful
-effect upon all the people of the state. Now
-that the contending forces have made peace
-the public will probably be the more thoroughly
-fleeced.—<i>Warren (Minn.) Sheaf.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Precedent has been found which shows
-that Henry H. Rogers could have been legally
-made to testify. We have been of that
-opinion all the time, but it is only another
-instance where the sword of Justice and the
-law has proved insufficient when met by the
-shield and armor of gold.—<i>Santa Anna (Tex.)
-News.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Congress has decided to investigate the
-coal and oil trusts. A nice summer’s job is
-here cut out for somebody. It is hoped
-there will be no Garfield business about the
-investigation. The miserable failure Commissioner
-Garfield made of that Beef Trust
-investigation should be enough to disgust
-even a Roosevelt.—<i>Seaford (Del.) News.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>According to a statement issued by the
-Bureau of Statistics last Saturday with reference
-to the number and value of farm animals
-in the United States, there are more cows
-than any other one domestic animal. But the
-horse, while next to the lowest in number,
-is more valuable. The mules rank lowest in
-number and the sheep lowest in value. The
-report shows that the total value of all the
-farm animals to be nearly $4,000,000,000.—<i>Hamilton
-(Tex.) Herald.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The United States Senate, by a vote of 38
-to 27, has passed the shipping subsidy bill.
-The bill appropriates $200,000,000 of the
-taxpayers’ money for the American merchant
-marine. What a lovely gift! Voting
-the people’s money to boost a class of wealthy
-business men. What a lovely principle!—<i>Veblen
-(S. Dak.) Advance.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>While a lot of fellows have been sent to
-jail for stealing loaves of bread, hams, shoes
-and such, none of the big insurance thieves
-have even been indicted. Justice is not only
-blind, but she is deaf as a post, dumb as an
-oyster, and she couldn’t smell a fertilizer
-factory at ten feet.—<i>Pennsboro (W. Va.)
-News.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To judge from the Standard Oil witnesses
-in the New York investigation, we shall no
-doubt hear a demand for the Government
-to be ruled for contempt in wanting to know
-too much.—<i>Parco City (Okla.) Democrat.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>John A. McCall, ex-president of the
-New York Life Insurance Company, who
-confessed that he stole hundreds of thousands
-of dollars belonging to widows and orphans
-and used the money as a corruption fund to
-help elect McKinley and Roosevelt presidents
-of the United States, is dead and gone,—we
-don’t know where, but if we were dead
-too, we wouldn’t hunt him up.—<i>Granville
-(Ia.) Gazette.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Members of the lower house are chuckling
-over the predicament one of their colleagues
-finds himself in. It seems the unsophisticated
-private secretary of this especial representative
-forwarded to Washington by
-mail three parts of a sectional bookcase,
-using his employer’s postal frank. The
-bookcases contained private books, and one
-of them is said to have concealed a miscellaneous
-collection of kitchen utensils intended
-for the owner’s home there. The entire
-collection was “unfrankable” and the local
-postmaster has called on the representative
-to pay postage on his property to the amount
-of $72. The name of the representative is
-being kept secret, but that doesn’t soothe
-his feelings to any great extent.—<i>Bowlder
-(S. Dak.) Pioneer.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>President Roosevelt and Secretary
-Taft are said to favor a lock canal. If
-reports are true, that’s the matter with the
-project now. It’s locked with red tape and
-departmental interferences.—<i>Clifton (Tenn.)
-Mirror.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Governor Pattison of Ohio signed the
-Freiner two-cent fare bill which was accepted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span>
-by the Senate and it is now a law. It will not
-go into effect, however, until thirty days have
-elapsed. The law provides that two cents
-shall be the maximum rate charged in Ohio
-for transporting passengers on the railroads
-of Ohio for all distances in excess of five
-miles.—<i>Winfield (La.) Comrade.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Senate has passed the corrupt subsidy
-bill granting $20,000,000 a year to the
-steel trust infant industry so that our merchant
-marine can compete with that of other
-nations. Isn’t that satisfactory evidence
-that U. S. senators should be elected by
-direct vote of the people? Remove the
-tariff and our ship builders can “compete”
-without a subsidy.—<i>Alva (Okla.) Renfrew’s
-Record.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There’s one consolation to the poor man
-when he thinks of John D. Rockefeller being
-the richest man in the world; he knows that
-the devil won’t let him bring a cent of it to
-hell with him.—<i>St Louis (Mo.) National
-Rip Saw.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is just as true today as it ever was that
-the safest and most honorable way for a man
-to secure a competence is to do it little by
-little, taking a lifetime for the work. The
-haste to be rich and make money fast is the
-economic curse of America today. Every
-man wants to draw a prize in the business
-lottery and it is seldom indeed that he is content
-with small savings and safe investments.—<i>Headland
-(Ala.) Post.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Managers of the Hepburn Rate Bill
-contemplate providing it with a set of puncture-proof
-tires when it starts its round of
-the Senate.—<i>Alma (Neb.) Record.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The United States Senate passed a “Ship
-Subsidy Bill” the other day in just three
-minutes. Anything that has “Subsidy” (the
-proper word is graft) to it gets through just
-as soon as some member makes plain the
-amount of graft in the measure.—<i>Smith
-Crater (Kan.) Messenger.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is being told that a Kansas man, accompanied
-by his little son, visited the Senate
-while in Washington last week and the boy
-was particularly interested in Edward
-Everett Hale, a magnificent looking old man.
-His father told him that he was the chaplain.
-“Oh, he prays for the Senate, doesn’t he?”
-asked the boy. “No,” replied the father,
-“he gets up and takes a look at the Senate
-and prays for the country.”—<i>Enid (Okla.)
-Echo.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Ohio legislature has passed a law
-making a uniform rate of two cents a mile
-on all railroads in that state. The railroads
-on the other hand have decided to cut off
-all forms of transportation except the two
-cent fare. This includes reduced transportation
-for conventions, 1,000-mile books, all
-charity business, round trip rates, and clergymen’s
-rates.—<i>Stewartville (Minn.) Times.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Leslie Shaw, Secretary of the Treasury,
-says that we have the best banking system
-on earth. Still in the past few months
-failures in five national banks have footed
-up to almost $7,000,000. Now if these banks
-had had out a flood of asset currency, backed
-only by the assets of the banks, and no
-doubt they would have had, the Government
-would probably have lost as large a sum,
-and all of this would have had to come out of
-the people for the benefit of the speculators.—<i>Lansing
-(Mich.) Capital City Democrat.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The end of old Steve Elkins, the blocks-of-five-election
-buyer, he, who, with the aid
-of his father-in-law, Gassaway Davis, got
-control of most of the coal mines and railroads
-of West Virginia, is in sight. The extortions
-of the coal trust and railroad combine
-that Elkins organized have become so
-unbearable that the Republican governor
-of that state has appealed to Senator
-Tillman to secure an investigation. The
-Republicans of the Senate dare not deny it.
-When the truth comes out that will be the
-end of Elkins, for which all the people will
-give thanks unto God.—<i>Omaha (Neb.) Investigator.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>They don’t seem to be doing much digging
-on that great canal, but they manage to bury
-a considerable amount of money there.—<i>Cresson
-(Tex.) Courier.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h2><i>The Best</i></h2>
-
-<p>She (<i>indignantly</i>)—Stop, sir! You shall not kiss me again! How rude you
-are! Don’t you know any better?</p>
-
-<p>He (<i>cheerily</i>)—I haven’t kissed every girl in town, it is true, but as far
-as I have gone I certainly don’t know any better.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="News_Record">
-<img src="images/heading14.jpg" width="700" height="175" alt="" />
-<h2><i>News Record</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">FROM FEBRUARY 8 TO MARCH 8, 1906</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="news">
-
-<h3><i>Home News</i></h3>
-
-<p class="day">February 8.—John A. McCall, former President
-of the New York Life Insurance
-Co., is seriously ill at Lakewood, N. J.</p>
-
-<p>Richard A. McCurdy, former President of
-the Mutual Life Insurance Co., plans to
-leave the United States and make his
-home in Paris.</p>
-
-<p>The New York Life Insurance Company’s
-“house cleaning” committee reveal that
-Judge Andrew Hamilton has received
-$1,347,382 from that company since
-1892. This is $283,383 in excess of the
-total payments disclosed by the Armstrong
-Committee. The committee recommends
-legal action against John A.
-McCall for the recovery of the amount.</p>
-
-<p>Senator La Follette, of Wisconsin, introduces
-a bill in the Senate making it an
-offense for any Government officer, official
-or employee to accept a railroad
-pass or franking privilege over telegraph
-lines.</p>
-
-<p>By a vote of 346 to 7 the House of Representatives
-passes the Hepburn railroad
-rate regulation bill just as it came
-from the Committee on Interstate and
-Foreign Commerce, and declared by
-Chairman Hepburn to be exactly in
-accordance with recommendations of
-President Roosevelt on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>The House of Representatives passes the
-General Pension bill for the year ending
-June 30, 1907. The bill appropriates
-$140,245,000. Congressman Gardner,
-of Michigan, declares that when the last
-pensioner on account of the Civil War
-has disappeared from the rolls, $12,000,000,000
-will have been expended.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 9.—The Illinois coal operators
-decide to refuse the demands of the
-United Mine Workers for an increase
-in wages.</p>
-
-<p>The Pennsylvania House of Representatives
-passes a resolution directing the
-attorney general of that state to ascertain
-whether any railroad companies
-in Pennsylvania are engaged in the
-mining of coal, and if so, to proceed
-against them.</p>
-
-<p>By reducing the rate of railroad fares to
-two cents a mile, it is estimated that
-the people of Ohio will be saved $4,000,000
-a year, or a sum equal to almost
-all the taxes paid for the support of the
-state government.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate Committee takes under consideration
-the Hepburn railroad rate bill.</p>
-
-<p>The taking of testimony against Senator
-Reed Smoot, the Mormon, ends. Senator
-Smoot’s counsel will introduce
-testimony in his defense.</p>
-
-<p>The House of Representatives passes 429
-pension bills. The Judiciary Committee
-of the House begins an investigation
-to ascertain whether or not
-Congress has the power for Federal
-control of insurance.</p>
-
-<p>Secretary Taft appears before the Senate
-Committee on the Philippines and says
-the United States will probably suffer
-no reduction in tariff income under the
-Philippine tariff bill passed by the
-House of Representatives.</p>
-
-<p>Secretary Root proposes to reorganize the
-State Department and put it on a business
-basis.</p>
-
-<p>Charles E. Magoon, governor of the
-Panama Canal Zone, appears before the
-Senate Committee on Interoceanic
-Canals. He declares the sanitary conditions
-good, the Supreme Court of
-Panama capable and impartial, and
-advises the coinage of silver money for
-use on the Isthmus.</p>
-
-<p>The differences between President Dolan,
-of the United Mine Workers of the
-Pittsburg district, and the delegates
-to the convention are taken to the
-courts.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 11.—Samuel Glasgow, manager
-of a milling company of Spokane, Washington,
-claims to have received Chinese
-papers from his representative in China,
-claiming that a recent speech of William
-J. Bryan to Chinese merchants had
-been used to stir up renewed antipathy
-to American goods.</p>
-
-<p>John Mitchell, President of the United
-Mine Workers, reaches New York City
-to confer with the mine operators on the
-new scale of wages demanded by the
-miners.</p>
-
-<p>President Baer, of the Reading Railroad,
-states that the Pennsylvania Legislature<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span>
-has not the power to interfere with
-the vested rights of coal-carrying railroads.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 12.—The Senate passes the resolution
-introduced by Senator Tillman
-which directs the Interstate Commission
-to investigate the alleged discrimination
-by railroad companies in the
-matter of the transportation of coal and
-other commodities; as to whether the
-railroad companies own stock in coal
-companies or in other commodities carried
-by them; whether any of the railroad
-officers are interested in such commodities;
-whether there is any monopolizing
-combination or trust in which
-the railroads are interested, and whether
-any of the railroad companies control
-the output of coal or fix its price. The
-Commission also is directed to investigate
-the system of car distribution, and
-whether there is discrimination against
-shippers either in the matter of the distribution
-of cars or otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>Senator Lodge, of Massachusetts, makes a
-speech in the Senate favoring a revision
-by the courts of all rates made by the
-Commission. This would practically
-kill the effectiveness of the Hepburn bill.</p>
-
-<p>The Pennsylvania House of Representatives
-adopt a resolution that the Attorney
-General be instructed to inquire
-into the allegations that the Pennsylvania
-Railroad, the New York Central
-and the Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburg
-Railroad companies, and their leased
-lines, are directly or indirectly engaged
-in the mining of bituminous coal, and
-if it be found that they are engaged in
-this business that he proceed against
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Leaders of the United Mine Workers reach
-New York to hold a conference with
-their President, John Mitchell.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 13.—F. Augustus Heinze, defeated
-in the courts, sells his Montana copper
-mines to the trust, ending the great
-Montana copper war.</p>
-
-<p>John Mitchell and the wage-scale committee
-of the Mine Workers are working
-on the schedule of demands which will
-be presented to the mine operators.</p>
-
-<p>The committee to which Thomas W. Lawson
-has turned over all his proxies of
-the Mutual and New York Life Insurance
-Companies agree to employ counsel
-to aid them in their efforts to oust the
-new managements of the two companies.
-Five members of Lawson’s committee
-are governors of various states.</p>
-
-<p>Attorney General Hadley, of Missouri,
-who is conducting the State’s case
-against the Standard Oil Co., goes to
-Iowa and gets testimony from former
-officers of the Standard’s subsidiary
-companies. He states that he has
-made out his case against the Standard.</p>
-
-<p>George W. Beavers, of New York, former
-Chief of the Division of Salaries and Allowances
-of the Post Office Department,
-pleads guilty to a charge of conspiracy,
-and is sentenced to two years imprisonment.
-Machen and others have already
-been convicted and are serving sentences.</p>
-
-<p>The Bituminous Coal Trade League, of
-Pennsylvania, sends Congressman Gillespie,
-of Texas, a petition stating that
-Senators Elkins, of West Virginia, and
-Gorman, of Maryland have caused violations
-of the anti-trust laws. Former
-Senator H. G. Davis, of West Virginia,
-father-in-law to Senator Elkins, cousin
-to Gorman, and Vice Presidential nominee
-of the Democratic party in 1904, is
-also accused of being a party to these
-violations.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 14.—The “housecleaning” committee
-of the New York Life Insurance
-Co. submits a report to the trustees of
-the company, showing that $148,702.50
-has been illegally contributed to campaign
-funds in the last three elections.
-The committee recommends that suits
-for the recovery of the same be brought
-against John A. McCall and all other
-officers who had anything to do with
-making the contributions.</p>
-
-<p>John G. Brady, Governor of Alaska, resigns.</p>
-
-<p>The House of Representatives passes the
-appropriation bill for fortifications. The
-total amount appropriated is $4,383,993,
-$600,000 of this to be spent in fortifying
-the Philippines and Hawaii.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate passes the ship subsidy bill.
-If the bill becomes a law it is estimated
-that $26,000,000, will be taken from the
-United States Treasury and paid out in
-bounties to vessel owners during the
-next ten years.</p>
-
-<p>The resolution of Representative Sulzer,
-of New York, calling for an inquiry regarding
-the sale of the old New York
-Custom House to the National City
-Bank, of New York, passes the House
-by a unanimous vote.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 15.—John Mitchell presents the
-demands of the miners to the mine owners.
-Committees are appointed to represent
-both sides.</p>
-
-<p>Congressman Longworth procures a license
-to marry Miss Alice Roosevelt. The
-President attends Mr. Longworth’s
-bachelor dinner.</p>
-
-<p>James W. Alexander is again stricken with
-paralysis and is in a sanitarium at Deerfield,
-Mass.</p>
-
-<p>Officers of the beef packers again testify
-that Commissioner Garfield promised
-that no evidence they gave would be
-used against them. The testimony
-brought out these facts: First, Commissioner
-Garfield apparently took the
-word of Armour &amp; Co.’s general superintendent
-that the Armour Car Company,
-which has been declared the tap root of
-the Beef Trust, was not owned by Armour<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span>
-&amp; Co., and had nothing to do with
-the fresh meat industry, and made no
-further attempt to get information concerning
-the private car line monopoly.
-Second, Swift &amp; Co. gave information
-reluctantly to the Commissioner of Corporations,
-and only after consulting
-counsel. At this conference attorneys
-for the other packers in the trust were
-present. The secretary of Swift &amp; Co.
-contributed the information that he
-sought this advice of counsel because he
-“wanted it.”</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 16.—James W. Alexander, former
-President of the Equitable Life Insurance
-Co., is operated on. The physicians
-refuse to tell the nature of the operation,
-but give hopes of Alexander’s recovery.</p>
-
-<p>Reports from Memphis, Tenn., state that
-more than fifty per cent of the Southern
-peach crop has been killed and the other
-fifty per cent is commercially worthless.</p>
-
-<p>State Senator James Minton, of New
-Jersey, invites Thomas W. Lawson, Ida
-Tarbell and Attorney-General Hadley,
-of Missouri, to attend a public hearing
-on his resolution calling on Attorney-General
-McCarter, of New Jersey, to
-bring proceedings to annul the charter
-of the Standard Oil Company.</p>
-
-<p>Stuyvesant Fish, a member of the “housecleaning”
-committee of the Mutual Life
-Insurance Co., resigns because Standard
-Oil interests obstruct a thorough investigation
-of the company’s affairs.</p>
-
-<p>On account of the illness of Senator Tillman,
-the Senate postpones the vote on
-the railroad rate bill until February 23.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 17.—Miss Alice Roosevelt, the
-daughter of the President, is married,
-in the White House, to Congressman
-Nicholas Longworth, of Cincinnati.</p>
-
-<p>Justice Rufus W. Peckham, of the United
-States Supreme Court, advises the
-“housecleaning” committee of the
-Mutual Life Insurance Co. to bring
-action against Richard A. McCurdy,
-ex-president of the company, before he
-leaves this country.</p>
-
-<p>Fire destroys $1,000,000 worth of wheat
-at Duluth, Minnesota.</p>
-
-<p>President Peabody, of the Mutual Life
-Insurance Co., refuses to give his consent
-for an investigation of the company’s
-board of trustees by the “housecleaning”
-committee.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 18.—John A. McCall, late president
-of the New York Life Insurance
-Co., dies at Lakewood, N. J. His death
-was hastened by the recent insurance
-scandals. The New York <i>World</i> sums
-up the result of the insurance investigation
-as follows:</p>
-
-<p>John A. McCall, dead, fortune shattered;
-J. W. Alexander, mental and physical
-wreck; James H. Hyde, self-expatriated
-in Paris; Robert A. McCurdy, preparing
-to follow Hyde; Robert H. McCurdy,
-preparing to follow his father; Judge
-Andy Hamilton, on the Riviera; Thomas
-D. Jordan, in seclusion; Andrew Fields,
-in seclusion; Louis Thebaud, going to
-Paris; W. H. McIntyre, in seclusion;
-George W. Perkins, reputation smirched;
-Chauncey M. Depew, damaged in reputation.</p>
-
-<p>John B. Stetson, the millionaire hat manufacturer
-of Philadelphia, dies at Gillen,
-Florida.</p>
-
-<p>John Mitchell and his associates, representing
-the anthracite miners, complete
-their demands to the coal operators.
-They will be presented in a day
-or two.</p>
-
-<p>President Roosevelt prepares to have the
-frauds in connection with the Indian
-affairs in Indian Territory investigated.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 19.—Eight suits are begun by the
-Mutual Life Insurance Co. against the
-McCurdys, Louis A. Thebaud, son-in-law
-of Richard A. McCurdy, and C. H. Raymond
-&amp; Co., for restitution of moneys
-of the company illegally spent. This
-includes campaign contributions, illegal
-salaries, rebates and illegal commissions.</p>
-
-<p>President Roosevelt recommends to Congress
-a lock canal of eighty-five foot
-level across the Isthmus of Panama.
-The lock canal was also favored by the
-Canal Commission and Secretary Taft.
-A majority of the Board of Consulting
-Engineers favored a sea level canal.</p>
-
-<p>The United States Supreme Court decides
-that it is illegal for railroads to sell
-commodities which they transport as
-common carriers. The decision of the
-Court bears directly on railroads that
-own or operate coal mines.</p>
-
-<p>Congressman E. Spencer Blackburn, of
-North Carolina, is accused of accepting
-a fee for using his influence to obtain
-action by an executive department.
-The offense is similar to the one committed
-by Senator Burton.</p>
-
-<p>The trial of the beef packers continues at
-Chicago. E. Dana Durand, chief assistant
-to Commissioner Garfield, testifies
-that the Department of Commerce
-turned over certain data obtained from
-the packers to the Department of
-Justice.</p>
-
-<p>Sixteen miners are killed by an explosion
-at Maitland, Colorado.</p>
-
-<p>A sub-committee of the House Committee
-on Interstate and Foreign Commerce
-takes action on the Tillman, Gillespie
-and Campbell resolution to authorize
-the Interstate Commerce Committee to
-investigate the connection between
-railroads and coal and oil companies.
-All three of the resolutions will be embodied
-in one and sent back to the
-House for passage.</p>
-
-<p>The Interstate Commerce Commission
-orders an investigation of the rates and
-practices of the railroad carriers engaged
-in transporting oil from Kansas and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[309]</span>
-Indian Territory to interstate destinations.</p>
-
-<p>Representative Campbell introduces a
-joint resolution to authorize the Interstate
-Commerce Commission to immediately
-investigate and report to
-Congress from time to time whether any
-interstate commerce carriers own or
-control any oil or other products which
-they ship as common carriers; whether
-the officers of such carriers charged with
-the distribution of cars and furnishing
-facilities for transportation are directly
-or indirectly owners of companies interested
-in oil products; whether a combination
-in restraint of trade exists
-between the carriers and the shippers
-of oil products, and whether the officers
-of oil companies are officers, agents
-or members of the directory of any common
-carrier.</p>
-
-<p>Congressman Mann, of Illinois, introduces
-a bill to make insurance business interstate
-commerce.</p>
-
-<p>Senator Tillman introduces a bill in the
-Senate to prohibit corporations from
-making money contributions in connection
-with political elections.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 20.—The McCurdys prepare to
-fight the suits brought against them by
-the Mutual Life Insurance Co. for the
-restitution of money illegally taken
-from the company. The McCurdys
-and Raymond &amp; Co. also charge that
-other officials and trustees of the Mutual
-received rebates on their own
-policies.</p>
-
-<p>Opinions of prominent lawyers show that
-the Supreme Court’s decision against
-railroads owning commodities which
-they haul as common carriers will
-prevent railroads from operating if
-not from owning coal mines. Most
-of the big coal mines in the country
-are either owned, controlled or operated
-by the railroads.</p>
-
-<p>Commissioner of Corporations James R.
-Garfield testifies in the case of the
-Government against the beef packers
-now being tried at Chicago. He denies
-that he promised the packers
-immunity from prosecution or that all
-information given him would be regarded
-as confidential.</p>
-
-<p>Pittsburg, Pa., follows the example of
-other cities and throws off the yoke of
-boss rule. George W. Guthrie, a Democrat
-supported by the independent
-factions, defeats Alexander M. Jenkinson,
-the Republican candidate of the
-Frick-Mellon-Cassatt combination.</p>
-
-<p>The House Committee on Interstate and
-Foreign Commerce recommends a favorable
-report to the House on the bill for
-an investigation by the Interstate
-Commerce Commission of the relations
-between railroads and coal and oil
-companies. This is the resolution introduced
-in the Senate by Senator Tillman,
-with a few modifications of the Gillespie
-and Campbell resolutions substituted.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 21.—President Roosevelt announces
-that he will not try to influence
-the Senate Committee’s action on the
-Hepburn railroad rate bill, but intimates
-that he will veto any bill that
-does not meet his approval.</p>
-
-<p>John Mitchell declares there will be a coal
-strike in the bituminous coal fields.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate passes a pure food bill by a
-vote of 63 to 4. The bill makes it a
-crime to ship from one state to another
-any article of food, drugs,
-medicines or liquors which is adulterated
-or misbranded, or which contains
-any poisonous or deleterious substances.</p>
-
-<p>General Grosvenor, of Ohio, is defeated
-for re-nomination to Congress. Gen.
-Grosvenor has been in Congress twenty
-years.</p>
-
-<p>The House of Representatives takes up
-the army appropriation bill. Chairman
-Hull, of Iowa, urges the need of
-preparing for an emergency, as there is
-fear of trouble with China.</p>
-
-<p>John A. McCall is buried in New York
-City. McCall left no money and the
-suits for recovery of money illegally
-paid Hamilton will be dropped.</p>
-
-<p>Because of his stand for an honest investigation
-of the Mutual Life Insurance Co.,
-the trustees who fear exposure plan to
-oust Stuyvesant Fish from the presidency
-of the Illinois Central Railroad.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 22.—John Mitchell, president of
-the United Mine Workers, has another
-conference with several mine
-operators on a new scale of wages to be
-paid after April 1.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Minor Morris, who was forcibly
-ejected from the White House some
-time ago, issues a statement in which
-she denounces the President for her
-treatment.</p>
-
-<p>Senator Knox, of Pennsylvania, introduces
-a railroad rate regulation bill
-giving the courts the right to review
-any order or action of the Interstate
-Commerce Commission. It is the intention
-of the railroad senators to add
-the court review clause of the Knox
-bill to the Hepburn bill.</p>
-
-<p>In the report to the New York Legislature
-the Armstrong, or Insurance Investigating,
-Committee, makes the following
-recommendations.</p>
-
-<p>Not only should stock corporations be
-permitted to give policy-holders the
-right to vote, but an opportunity should
-be afforded for conversion into purely
-mutual companies.</p>
-
-<p>The law as to investments in securities
-should be amended so as to provide:
-That no investment in the stock of any
-corporation shall be permitted, except
-in public stocks of municipal corporations.</p>
-
-<p>The statute should forbid all syndical<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[310]</span>
-participations, transactions for purchase
-and sale on joint account, and the
-making of any agreement providing that
-the company shall withhold from sale
-for any time or subject to the discretion
-of others any securities which it may
-own or acquire.</p>
-
-<p>No officer or director should be pecuniarily
-interested in any purchase, sale or loan
-made by the corporation.</p>
-
-<p>Contributions by insurance corporations
-for political purposes should be strictly
-forbidden.... Any officer, director
-or agent, making, authorizing or
-consenting to any such contribution
-should be guilty of a misdemeanor.</p>
-
-<p>The company should be compelled to set
-forth in its annual statement to the
-Superintendent of Insurance all sums
-so disbursed (for lobbying), giving the
-names of the payees, the amounts paid
-and the specific purpose of the payment.</p>
-
-<p>Limit the amount of new business; prohibit
-bonuses, prizes and awards; limit
-renewal commissions to four years and
-to, say, 10 per cent. of the first year’s
-premiums; prohibit loans and advances
-to agents; limit total expenses to the
-total “loadings” upon the premiums.</p>
-
-<p>The companies should be required annually
-to file with the Superintendent
-of Insurance a gain and loss exhibit for
-the year in a prescribed form, showing
-the amount available for distribution,
-the amount of dividends
-declared and the method of calculation
-by which they have been determined.</p>
-
-<p>Section 56 should be repealed and the
-matter should be left subject to the
-general provisions of the Code of Civil
-Procedure relating to actions against
-corporations.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to requiring approval of the
-Superintendent of other than certain
-standard forms, provision should be
-made for the standardization of the
-new types of policies.... The
-issue of other policies than those thus
-provided for should be prohibited.</p>
-
-<p>The committee recommends publicity of
-names and addresses of policy-holders
-and the giving them the right to verify
-statements and prosecute for falsity.
-The committee recommends requiring
-statements in elaborate detail covering
-all transactions, and favors giving
-the Superintendent of Insurance power
-to examine under oath.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 23.—Stuyvesant Fish resigns as a
-trustee from the Mutual Life Insurance
-Co. and will head a committee of policy-holders
-to fight the present management.</p>
-
-<p>Insurance men plan to fight the new laws
-recommended by the Armstrong Committee
-before the New York Legislature,
-and, if unsuccessful there, to carry the
-matter before the courts.</p>
-
-<p>The Hepburn railroad rate regulation bill
-is reported by the Senate committee
-without any amendments. Through
-trickery of Senator Aldrich, the bill will
-be presented to the Senate by Senator
-Tillman as a Democratic measure.</p>
-
-<p>The House of Representatives passes a
-resolution ordering an investigation of
-the relations between coal and oil carrying
-railroads and coal and oil companies.</p>
-
-<p>Commissioner Garfield again testifies in
-the trial of the beef packers at Chicago.
-He admits that the Department of Commerce
-and Labor furnished the Department
-of Justice with evidence.</p>
-
-<p>Johann Hoch, the noted bigamist, is
-hanged at Chicago.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 24.—The House Committee on
-Immigration unanimously agrees on a
-bill to amend the immigration laws.
-The new bill will make naturalization
-uniform throughout the United States,
-and confines the issuance of citizenship
-papers to United States Circuit and District
-Courts, and to the highest court of
-original jurisdiction of each state. The
-bill further provides that an alien must
-be able to read, write and speak English
-before he can become a citizen.</p>
-
-<p>Since Senator Aldrich’s trick of having
-Senator Tillman, of South Carolina, report
-the Hepburn railroad rate bill,
-which makes it a Democratic measure,
-Washington despatches state that the
-long standing feud between the President
-and Senator Tillman will end.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 25.—C. Augustus Seton, who is
-under arrest in New York City, confesses
-to forging $4,300,000 worth of
-Norfolk and Western Railroad stock
-certificates.</p>
-
-<p>Coal mine operators give out statements
-saying there will be a strike, as they will
-refuse to grant the miners’ requests.
-T. L. Lewis, vice-president of the
-United Mine Workers, declares there
-will be no strike and that the operators
-will grant the requests of the miners.</p>
-
-<p>Harry Orchard, who assassinated the late
-Governor Steunenberg, of Idaho, confesses
-to taking part in 26 murders.</p>
-
-<p>Ex-Speaker David B. Henderson dies at
-Dubuque, Iowa. Mr. Henderson served
-two terms as speaker, succeeding the
-late Thomas B. Reed. He was elected
-in 1883 and served continuously until
-the end of the Fifty-seventh Congress.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 26.—The Missouri Supreme Court
-hands down a decision which it is
-believed will influence the Supreme
-Court of New York to order H. H.
-Rogers to answer the questions asked
-him in the Standard Oil investigation.
-At the time Attorney-General Hadley,
-of Missouri, was taking depositions in
-the case in New York City, Rogers
-was put on the witness stand. He
-refused to answer certain questions and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[311]</span>
-expressed his contempt for Missouri
-Courts. Mr. Hadley went before Justice
-Gildersleeve, of the New York
-Supreme Court, and asked for an order
-forcing Rogers to answer or be held in
-contempt of court. The order was
-refused on the grounds that the questions
-involved had never been passed
-upon by the Missouri courts. Now
-comes the Missouri court with a strong
-decision which covers every point at
-issue.</p>
-
-<p>President Roosevelt intervenes to prevent
-the threatened coal strike.</p>
-
-<p>In accordance with a decision handed
-down by the Supreme Court of Texas,
-the Pacific, the United States, the
-American and Wells-Fargo Express
-Companies, and fifty of the principal
-railroads of the state, will have to pay
-$5,225,000 in penalties for violating
-the anti-trust law. The court holds
-that when a railroad company enters
-into an agreement with an express
-company which excludes other companies
-from doing a business on its
-lines, it restrains trade and stifles competition,
-which is prohibited by the
-anti-trust law.</p>
-
-<p>The supposed shrewd trick of Senator
-Aldrich in having Senator Tillman report
-the Hepburn railroad rate bill
-now has the Republican Senators
-embarrassed. The Senate seems to be
-in favor of the bill and the Republicans
-dare not let it pass as a Democratic
-measure. Realizing that something
-must be done, they appeal to Senator
-Spooner to draft a rate bill that will
-suit all factions of the Republicans
-and be put through the Senate as a
-party measure.</p>
-
-<p>William Nelson Cromwell, the New York
-lawyer who unloaded the Panama
-Canal property on the United States,
-and who has since acted as counsel
-to the President and Secretary Taft on
-Panama matters, appears before the
-Senate committee. He denies that he
-was the cause of ex-Chief Engineer
-Wallace’s resigning. When questioned
-as to his dealings with Secretary Taft he
-refused to answer.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 27.—Steel Trust officials and
-George Gould order the bituminous
-coal mine operators to make peace with
-the miners and prevent a strike.</p>
-
-<p>The Insurance Commissioners of Kentucky,
-Minnesota, Wisconsin, Tennessee
-and Nebraska ask the New York
-Insurance Department to co-operate
-with them in making an investigation
-of the Mutual Life Insurance Co.</p>
-
-<p>William Nelson Cromwell again appears
-before the Senate Committee on Interoceanic
-Canals. He continues to refuse
-to answer questions as to his dealings
-with Secretary Taft and the amount of
-his fees. Senator Morgan, of Alabama,
-produced a copy of Cromwell’s contract
-with the French company, or Panama
-Canal Co., which gave Cromwell the
-power to organize companies, issue
-stock, bonds, etc., and finance any and
-all sorts of organizations to further the
-idea of selling the canal to the United
-States.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 28.—It is reported from Pittsburg
-that the United States Steel Corporation,
-through President W. Ellis Corey,
-has demanded of the Pittsburg Coal
-Company, with which it has a twenty-five-year
-contract for coal, the minimum
-for each year being set at 8,000,000 tons,
-that there be no strike in the Pittsburg
-district. At the same time the Gould
-interests, so heavy in the West and
-Southwest, have ordered peace. As a
-result there will be no strike of the bituminous
-miners, who will receive a satisfactory
-advance.</p>
-
-<p>It is reported from Springfield, Ohio, that
-local militia, called out to check a race
-riot caused by the shooting of M. M.
-Davis, a brakeman, by a negro, has
-been unable to stop the riot. An appeal
-has been made to the Governor to
-send more troops. Early this morning
-houses were burning in the negro quarter,
-and the authorities are powerless.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday the President signed the Urgent
-Deficiency Bill, which contains an
-appropriation of $118,000 for New York
-State to pay its claim for money to
-equip Government troops during the
-War of 1812.</p>
-
-<p>Five hundred delegates of the Independence
-League, guests of William R.
-Hearst, appeared yesterday at Albany
-to plead before the Governor and the
-Legislature for the passage of measures
-in which the league is interested.</p>
-
-<p>The Commissioners of Insurance in the
-states of Kentucky, Minnesota, Wisconsin,
-Tennessee and Nebraska have
-requested the Insurance Department of
-New York State to co-operate with
-them in an investigation of the Mutual
-Life Insurance Company.</p>
-
-<p>It is reported from Little Rock, Ark., that
-Thomas E. Jordan, former Controller
-of the Equitable Life Insurance Company,
-and who could not be located
-during the Armstrong Investigation, is
-stopping with his wife at Hot Springs,
-Ark.</p>
-
-<p>The debate in the Senate on the railroad
-rate question opens today with a speech
-by Senator Foraker, of Ohio.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday, before the Senate Committee
-on Interoceanic Canals, Senator Morgan,
-of Alabama, in his examination of William
-Nelson Cromwell, produced an
-agreement between the Panama Canal
-Commission and William Nelson Cromwell,
-showing that for a large compensation
-the Panama Canal Company<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312"></a>[312]</span>
-contracted to pay William Nelson Cromwell
-a large compensation to Americanize
-the Panama project. Mr. Cromwell
-said the enterprise proposed in the
-document was abortive and died long
-ago. Senator Morgan tried to learn
-from Mr. Cromwell how much he had
-received in fees from the old or new
-Panama Company and by persistent
-questioning deduced the fact that the
-total payments to Mr. Cromwell did not
-exceed $200,000, extending over a term
-of years, and giving to him from $10,000
-to $15,000 a year. Mr. Cromwell declined
-to say what service he had performed
-for these sums, admitting only
-that his clients were satisfied. The
-inquiry will be continued.</p>
-
-<p>At a dinner yesterday at Washington the
-Republican members of Congress from
-New York proposed as the next nominee
-of the Republican Party for Governor
-of New York State, Charles E.
-Hughes, the inquisitor of the Armstrong
-Investigation Committee. The platform
-indicated was based on general
-reform and municipal ownership.</p>
-
-<p>The Inter-State Commerce Commission
-at Washington yesterday announced its
-decision in the cases of the Fred G.
-Clark Company against the Lake Shore
-and Michigan Southern Railway Company
-and the Waverley Oil Works
-against the Pennsylvania Company and
-others. In these cases the New York,
-New Haven and Hartford Railroad
-Company was the principal defendant.
-The commission holds that the combination
-rates on petroleum and its
-product from Cleveland and Pittsburg
-to points reached by the New York,
-New Haven and Hartford Railroad
-result in unreasonable and unjust rates,
-and that the refusal of the railroad
-company to consent to participate in
-through rates is unjust and the situation
-is such as to favor greatly the Standard
-Oil. In its final conclusion the commission
-holds that the act to regulate
-commerce does not authorize it to compel
-the establishment of joint rates or
-the conditions of interchange in case the
-connecting carriers fail to agree in respect
-thereto; and it therefore concludes
-that notwithstanding that the combination
-rates are unjust and the
-general shipping situation is such as to
-work a practical monopoly in favor of
-the Standard Oil Company, the Commission
-is without authority to grant
-relief in these cases and the petitions
-are therefore dismissed.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday at Washington the House Committee
-of Agriculture decided by a vote
-of 8 to 7 not to recommend any appropriation
-to buy seeds for free distribution
-by the Department of Agriculture.</p>
-
-<p>Special counsel for the State of Missouri
-will make application before the New
-York courts to compel Henry H. Rogers
-to answer questions in the inquiry the
-State of Missouri has been making into
-Standard Oil methods.</p>
-
-<p>In the United States Circuit Court at
-Chicago yesterday, Judge Landis gave
-a decision that the Interstate Commerce
-Committee has the power to compel
-witnesses to answer questions in the
-hearing of Street’s Western Stable Car
-Line before the commission.</p>
-
-<p>At Oklahoma City, Okla., yesterday, the
-assistant attorney-general began to
-take testimony in the ouster case
-against the Standard and other oil companies.
-A wholesale oil dealer testified
-that he had been instructed to get
-samples of oil shipped if he had to steal
-them; and also that there had never
-been any competition between the
-Standard Oil and the Waters-Pierce
-Company in Oklahoma.</p>
-
-<p>At Albany yesterday, Senator Saxe’s bill
-to impose a tax on personal property
-wherever found, a measure designed to
-wipe out tax dodging by rich New
-Yorkers who establish their legal residence
-elsewhere, was passed in the
-Senate and goes to the Governor.</p>
-
-<p>At Aiken, S. C., yesterday, Professor S. P.
-Langley, Secretary of the Smithsonian
-Institution, died of paralysis.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 1.—Senator Foraker in the Senate
-yesterday made a speech, lasting three
-hours, in which he attacked the Hepburn
-railroad rate bill.</p>
-
-<p>For several hours last evening the city of
-Springfield, Ohio, was in the hands of a
-mob which burned two houses and
-partly destroyed a dozen others. All
-of these houses were inhabited by negroes.
-Hundreds of negroes have fled
-from the city.</p>
-
-<p>The annual report of the Pennsylvania
-Railroad shows a net income for the
-year 1905 of more than $38,000,000, an
-increase of about $10,000,000 as compared
-with 1904. The operating expenses
-were reduced and traffic increased.</p>
-
-<p>At the annual meeting of the Equitable
-Life Assurance Society yesterday the
-directors were informed that counsel of
-the society were definitely engaged in
-working out a plan of mutualization.</p>
-
-<p>Richard A. McCurdy, former president of
-the Mutual Life Insurance Company
-sails for Europe today for an indefinite
-stay abroad.</p>
-
-<p>William Nelson Cromwell reappeared
-yesterday before the Senate Committee
-of Interoceanic Canals and admitted
-that he drew the monetary agreement
-entered into between the Republic of
-Panama and Secretary of War Taft.
-This agreement caused criticism in the
-Senate recently because in fact it was a
-treaty made without consulting that
-body.</p>
-
-<p>At Washington the Foreign Relations<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313"></a>[313]</span>
-Committee finished its work on the Santo
-Domingo treaty and reported it to the
-Senate. The Republicans voted solidly
-for the report and the Democrats
-against it.</p>
-
-<p>The Independence League of New York
-State has decided to perfect an organization
-in every assembly district in the
-State of New York. In William R.
-Hearst’s address at Albany he said:
-“The fundamental idea of the Independence
-League is independence of
-boss control, of corporate control and
-of any party subject to boss rule and
-corporation control.”</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday the Senate in executive session
-ratified the treaty between the United
-States and Japan relating to copyrights
-of works of literature and art.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 2.—It is reported from Washington
-that the President has been conferring
-with Senators, Representatives, members
-of the Interstate Commerce Commission
-and members of his Cabinet
-on the question of the Hepburn railroad
-rate bill, and he is willing to accept
-three or four amendments of the bill if
-they will strengthen it for trial before
-the courts.</p>
-
-<p>At Springfield, Ohio, the state militia
-charged the mob and dispersed it.
-The members of the Commercial Club of
-that city met to take action for the enforcement
-of the law, and said in
-speeches that the present conditions
-were due to politicians catering to
-negroes and low whites, and lax police
-and court methods.</p>
-
-<p>John F. Wallace, formerly chief engineer
-of the Panama Canal Commission, becomes
-an employee of the George Westinghouse
-Company at a salary of $50,000
-per year. Mr. Wallace is to assist in
-building electric railways paralleling
-steam railways in many parts of the
-country.</p>
-
-<p>It is reported from Washington that our
-Government takes a very serious and
-gloomy view of the situation at Algeciras,
-and would not be surprised to see
-the Moroccan conference end in a
-rupture.</p>
-
-<p>The existence of a Mutual Life policy-holders’
-movement of world-wide scope,
-at the head of which will undoubtedly
-be Stuyvesant Fish, became known
-yesterday through the exchange of
-telegrams between Lord Northcliffe,
-formerly Sir Alfred Harmsworth, and
-Mr. Fish. Lord Northcliffe is chairman
-of the British protection committee of
-the Mutual Life policy holders.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 3.—John R. Walsh, president of the
-Chicago National Bank, which failed
-December 18, 1905, was arrested yesterday
-on a Federal warrant charging him
-with violation of the national banking
-laws in making false reports to the
-Controller of Currency and with conversion
-to his own use of bank funds
-amounting to $3,000,000. He was
-released after giving a bond of $50,000.</p>
-
-<p>At Meridian, Miss., a tornado swept
-through the business centre of the town,
-destroying $5,000,000 of property and
-about thirteen lives.</p>
-
-<p>Springfield, Ohio, is quiet after two nights
-of rioting and incendiary fires. The
-state militia is still on duty.</p>
-
-<p>At Chicago, executives of all the Eastern
-railways in session failed to settle the
-differential rate controversy. On account
-of the attitude of the Erie Railroad
-it seems impossible to avert a rate
-war. Every line except the Erie voted
-for the arbitration of the question.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate Committee of the Philippines
-voted to smother the Philippine tariff
-bill yesterday. It is said that efforts
-will be made to have the measure reconsidered
-or called before the Senate.</p>
-
-<p>Commissioner of Public Works, J. M.
-Patterson, of Chicago, yesterday gave
-his resignation to Mayor Dunne. Mr.
-Patterson says he has become a convert
-to Socialism.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 4.—A delegation representing practically
-all life insurance companies
-doing business in the United States will
-go to Albany on March 9, the day set
-for the hearing of the bills that the
-insurance investigation has presented,
-to state the case of the companies before
-the Legislature.</p>
-
-<p>Ex-Governor James Stephen Hogg died
-yesterday at Houston, Tex. at the age
-of 55.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 5.—It is reported that on the evening
-before his death the late Ex-Governor
-Hogg said: “I want no monument of
-stone, but let my children plant at the
-head of my grave a pecan tree, and at
-the foot a walnut tree, and when these
-trees shall bear, let the pecans and walnuts
-be given out among the plain
-people of Texas that they may plant
-them and make Texas a land of trees.”</p>
-
-<p>At St. Augustine, Fla., yesterday, Lieutenant-General
-John M. Schofield, retired,
-died of cerebral hemorrhage at
-the age of 75.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 6.—In the House of Representatives
-at Washington, John Sharp Williams
-attacked the President and the Attorney-General
-and introduced a resolution,
-which was passed by the House, inquiring
-whether the Department of
-Justice had instituted criminal prosecutions
-against any of the individuals
-or corporations adjudged by the Supreme
-Court of the United States in the
-Northern Securities case to have violated
-the anti-trust laws.</p>
-
-<p>The Enterprise Transportation Company,
-carrying freight between New York
-and Fall River, Mass., appeared before
-the Interstate Commerce Commission
-in New York City, complaining that the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314"></a>[314]</span>
-trunk lines out of New York refused to
-make through freight rate arrangements
-with the Enterprise Transportation
-Company. Lawyers representing nearly
-all the big railroads were present.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 7.—Andrew Hamilton, who was legislative
-agent for the New York Life
-Insurance Company at Albany, returned
-yesterday to New York. On
-the steamship he was registered as “H.
-A. Milton.”</p>
-
-<p>The suit of the State of Kansas against
-the Standard Oil Company was dismissed
-by the Supreme Court of Kansas
-on March 5th. This ends, so far as
-present litigation is concerned, the
-movement begun a year ago by Kansas
-against the Standard Oil Company and
-re-establishes that corporation in the
-position it held previous to the effort
-made to exclude it from the state.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday District-Attorney Jerome of
-New York City appeared before the
-grand jury and asked that indictments
-be found against the despoilers of the
-life insurance companies.</p>
-
-<p>In the 20th annual report of the Boston
-Chamber of Commerce, published yesterday,
-it is pointed out that Boston has
-become re-established as the second port
-of the country.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 8.—W. H. Moore, Municipal Ownership
-candidate for Mayor of Seattle, was
-elected on a platform pledged to municipal
-ownership of public utilities.</p>
-
-<p>All over the Dominion of Canada the
-banks are collecting American silver
-money and shipping it to Montreal,
-whence it is shipped to Washington and
-changed for gold. The removal of
-American silver from Canada will be a
-good thing for the banks and profitable
-for the government. The banks will
-be paid of ⅜ of one per cent for collecting
-it and the government will bear all
-transportation charges. It is estimated
-that the government will clear at least
-one-half of a million dollars.</p>
-
-<p>It is reported that Andrew Hamilton, the
-legislative agent for the New York
-Life Insurance Company, who has just
-returned from Paris, consulted with
-District-Attorney Jerome before his
-return to find out just what his chances
-were with the law.</p>
-
-<p>It has been learned that the National City
-Bank and the Hanover Bank were the
-only two New York Banks who received
-yesterday their allotment of a special
-deposit of $10,000,000 of government
-funds which Secretary Shaw last week
-announced. The news has caused
-much talk and criticism in banking
-circles.</p>
-
-<p>In a special message to the Senate and the
-House the President said that the action
-of both houses in passing the resolution
-directing the Interstate Commerce
-Commission to investigate the subject
-of railroad rate discriminations and
-monopolies in coal and oil was hasty,
-ill-considered and ineffective.</p>
-
-<h3><i>Foreign News</i></h3>
-
-<p class="day">February 9.—Mutiny is said to continue in
-the Russian Black Sea fleet. Admiral
-Chouknin is wounded by a woman at
-Sevastopol. Siberian plague has broken
-out among the Russian troops in
-Manchuria.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Cattier, a prominent Belgian,
-publishes a book stating that King Leopold
-has received $15,000,000 graft
-from the rubber trade of the Congo Free
-State.</p>
-
-<p>Passengers from Venezuela say President
-Castro is actively preparing for war with
-France. The people do not agree with
-the President’s views and a revolution
-may follow.</p>
-
-<p>The negro inhabitants of the Transvaal
-and Orange River Colonies, South
-Africa, are demanding of England all
-the political rights enjoyed by the
-whites.</p>
-
-<p>The Colonial Minister of France presents
-to the Council of Ministers, a plan for
-the political, administrative and economic
-reorganization of the French Congo.</p>
-
-<p>Because of recent disorders, King Charles
-dissolves the Portuguese Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>Fifty-five miners are drowned in a gold
-mine at Johannesburg, Transvaal.</p>
-
-<p>The foreign representatives unite in demanding
-that the Shah investigate conditions
-in the Province of Shiraz, Southern
-Persia. Reports from other parts of
-Persia also show strong feeling against
-the Shah.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 10.—A bomb kills four gendarmes
-at Warsaw. Assaults on police continue
-throughout Russian Poland.</p>
-
-<p>The English garrison at Tibet is reported
-surrounded by hostile tribes.</p>
-
-<p>The Irish members of Parliament again
-elect John Redmond chairman of the
-Irish Parliamentary party.</p>
-
-<p>An armed expedition is sent against the
-religious fanatics of Natal.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 12.—The general opinion at Algeciras
-is that France and Germany will
-reach an agreement on the Moroccan
-question.</p>
-
-<p>General fear of another uprising and massacre
-in China is expressed by despatches
-from different parts of that country.</p>
-
-<p>A proclamation is issued by the Governor-General
-at Odessa declaring the Russian
-Government will put to death any one
-found with deadly implements.</p>
-
-<p>Ex-Premier Balfour, of England, declares
-his policy to be one to build up British
-industries by maintaining a larger foreign
-market for manufacturers.</p>
-
-<p>The Imperial Protestant Federation sends
-a petition to King Edward, of England,
-asking him to refuse consent to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315"></a>[315]</span>
-marriage of Princess Ena to King Alfonso
-of Spain.</p>
-
-<p>The new railroad over the Andes Mountains
-between Santiago, Chili, and Buenos
-Ayres, Argentine Republic, begins operations.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 13.—Another revolution is started
-in Santo Domingo.</p>
-
-<p>St. Petersburg police save one of the
-Government banks from a mob of
-revolutionists. Another armed revolt
-is frustrated at Kharkoff, Russia.
-Many political prisoners are being sent
-to Siberia.</p>
-
-<p>Reforms are being agitated in Persia which
-may result in that country’s being
-given a constitution.</p>
-
-<p>Despatches from Algeciras state that the
-United States will finally settle the
-dispute between France and Germany
-over the Moroccan question.</p>
-
-<p>Venezuela offers to arbitrate her differences
-with France.</p>
-
-<p>The British Parliament meets preliminary
-to the formal opening on Feb. 19.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 14.—Balfour and Chamberlain
-agree on a protective policy for England.
-This will have no effect at this
-time, as a new Parliament overwhelmingly
-in favor of free trade has just been
-elected.</p>
-
-<p>Despatches from Algeciras indicate that
-the American delegates to the Moroccan
-conference are gradually bringing France
-and Germany to a settlement of their
-dispute.</p>
-
-<p>The secret has leaked out that America,
-England and Japan have had a secret
-agreement concerning China since the
-close of the Russo-Japanese war.</p>
-
-<p>A monument at El Caney in honor of the
-Americans who lost their lives during
-the siege of Santiago is unveiled.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 15.—Fearing an outbreak in
-China, two of Admiral Sigsbee’s cruisers
-are sent to reinforce the American Far
-Eastern fleet.</p>
-
-<p>St. Petersburg reports show that the
-Russian Terrorists hire boys to throw
-bombs.</p>
-
-<p>The situation at Algeciras is unchanged.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 17.—The Czar of Russia prevents
-a disruption of his Cabinet by bringing
-about peace between Premier Witte and
-Interior Minister Durnovo. General
-Linevitch turns over his command of
-the Russian troops in the far East to
-Gen. Grodekoff. St. Petersburg police
-arrest a band of Terrorists and discover
-enough poisons to kill half the population
-of St. Petersburg.</p>
-
-<p>It is discovered that China has placed
-orders with German manufacturers for
-1,000,000 small arms and 100 cannon.</p>
-
-<p>Venezuela completes all preparations for
-war. The Venezuelan Government
-appoints Guzman Garbiras to succeed
-M. Veloz-Goiticoa as Minister to the
-United States.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 18.—Clement Armand Fallières,
-recently elected President of the French
-Republic, assumes his duties.</p>
-
-<p>The Russian Government orders the
-Governor General of East Siberia to
-prevent Capt. Einar Mikkelson from
-hoisting the American flag on any
-island which he may discover in the
-Arctic Ocean north of East Siberia and
-between Wrangel Land and the Parry
-Islands.</p>
-
-<p>The body of the late King Christian IX
-of Denmark is entombed in Roskelde’s
-cathedral, Copenhagen.</p>
-
-<p>A despatch from Shanghai, China, states
-that nothing is known there of conditions
-requiring the sending of United
-States troops to that Country. The
-Methodist Foreign Missionary Society
-receives reports from its head missionaries
-at different Chinese cities stating
-that there is no danger of disturbances.
-The Southern Baptist Missionary
-Board, through its secretary, cables
-its missionaries to take refuge in the
-nearest seaports, where they can be
-under the protection of foreign consulates.</p>
-
-<p>The King of Hungary prepares to dissolve
-the Diet when it assembles today.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 19.—The Hungarian Diet is dissolved
-by armed troops and police.</p>
-
-<p>Another anti-Jewish riot occurs at Vietka,
-Russia. Most of the city is burned, but
-no deaths are reported.</p>
-
-<p>The “General Memorandum” issued by
-Admiral Nelson to his captains at
-Trafalgar is found at Merton.</p>
-
-<p>The mutineers of the Russian battleships
-<i>Kniaz Potemkin</i>, who were sentenced
-to death, have had their sentences commuted
-to imprisonment.</p>
-
-<p>King Edward opens the newly elected
-English Parliament. In his speech
-the King expresses a desire that the
-government of the country shall be
-carried on in a spirit regardful of the
-wishes of the Irish people.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 20.—Germany rejects the final
-proposal of France for a settlement of
-the Moroccan controversy. The points
-in dispute will now come before the
-delegates of all the Powers.</p>
-
-<p>A company of British mounted infantry
-and three officers are massacred by
-fanatics in Sokoto, Northern Nigeria.</p>
-
-<p>A despatch from Ekaterinodar, Ciscaucasia,
-states that a fight is in progress
-between a detachment of Russian soldiers
-and 600 mutinous Kuban Cossacks.</p>
-
-<p>Members of the Hungarian Diet decide to
-accept the dissolution of that body
-without protest.</p>
-
-<p>The British House of Commons records
-its determination to resist any proposals
-which will create any system of
-protection.</p>
-
-<p>The Russian Government is trying many<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316"></a>[316]</span>
-prisoners for participating in a movement
-to overthrow the Government.
-The political dissatisfaction throughout
-the Empire seems to be as great as at the
-beginning of the late revolution.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 21.—Ambassador White, head of
-the American delegation to the Algeciras
-conference, expresses the opinion
-that France and Germany will reach
-an agreement on the Moroccan question.</p>
-
-<p>Attacks upon Catholic missions are made
-by Chinese in several of the southeastern
-provinces of China.</p>
-
-<p>The British House of Commons pledges
-a system of intelligent self-government
-for Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 22.—German Reichstag passes
-a bill to extend reciprocal tariff rates
-to the United States until June 30, 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Fear that the Algeciras conference will end
-without France and Germany reaching
-an agreement on the Moroccan question
-is expressed by the French press.</p>
-
-<p>People returning from China declare that
-the situation is very critical and a revolution
-is feared. The feeling against
-the present government is strong and
-the boycott of American goods is rigidly
-enforced.</p>
-
-<p>Religious fanatics destroy a French post
-in Sokoto, Central Africa.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 23.—The American Minister to
-China states that he sees very little
-reason for apprehension over China’s affairs.
-Wu Ting Fang, former Minister
-to the United States, says China is passing
-through a crisis. He justifies the
-boycott of American goods. All missionaries
-are advised by Assistant Secretary
-of State Bacon to move to places
-where they can be protected.</p>
-
-<p>Despatches from Algeciras state that the
-fear of war over Germany’s rejection
-of France’s proposals on the Moroccan
-question is growing less.</p>
-
-<p>Bills providing for general suffrage are
-introduced in the Lower House of the
-Austrian Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>Reports from St. Petersburg state that
-Count Witte has not resigned.</p>
-
-<p>A revolt against the Turkish Government
-is reported to be spreading in Yemen,
-Turkish Arabia.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 24.—W. K. Vanderbilt, Jr., is
-attacked by a mob near Pisa, Italy,
-after his automobile runs down and injures
-a boy.</p>
-
-<p>Active preparations are being made at
-Manila for any trouble with China.</p>
-
-<p>Director General Ivanoff, of the Vistula
-Railroad, is assassinated at Warsaw,
-Russia.</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish Government distributes
-money in the famine stricken provinces
-to relieve the sufferings of the people
-and prevent disorders.</p>
-
-<p>The German Foreign Office states that
-there is little danger of war between
-Germany and France over the Moroccan
-question. French despatches say about
-the same.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 25.—More riots occur at Warsaw
-and Odessa, Russia. Six persons are
-killed and 15 wounded.</p>
-
-<p>The customs war between Austria and
-Servia ends. Servia agrees to Austria’s
-demands.</p>
-
-<p>Secretary Root says the United States
-has no right to interfere with conditions
-in the Congo Free State, Africa.</p>
-
-<p>President Castro, of Venezuela, declares
-he will clear his country of all foreigners,
-break up the Monroe Doctrine and humble
-France.</p>
-
-<p>Canada will appoint a commission to
-investigate life insurance business in
-Canada.</p>
-
-<p>Two packages of dynamite are found at a
-gate of the Forbidden City, Peking,
-China.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 26.—Despatches from Shanghai,
-China, tell of the murder of missionaries
-at Nan-Chang. Six Jesuits and
-two members of an English family are
-reported murdered. The remaining
-foreigners escaped to Kiu-Kiang in
-boats. Several missions at Nan-Chang
-and Kiang-se were destroyed, among
-them the American.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 27.—The Americans who escaped
-the Nan-Chang, China, massacre are
-reported safe at Kiu-Kiang.</p>
-
-<p>Cossacks knout several prisoners to death
-at Odessa, Russia.</p>
-
-<p>Ex-Premier Balfour is elected to the British
-Parliament from London.</p>
-
-<p>Duchess Sophie Charlotte, of Oldenburg,
-and Prince Eitel Frederick, second
-son of the Emperor of Germany, are
-married at Berlin. The Emperor also
-celebrates his silver wedding.</p>
-
-<p>France asks the Czar of Russia to use his
-influence to get Germany to agree to
-France’s terms on the Moroccan question.</p>
-
-<p>Premier Witte reopens negotiations to
-determine the extent of a proposed
-agreement with England.</p>
-
-<p>Japanese officers assume control of the
-Imperial War College and the Trade
-and Commercial Schools at Canton,
-China. The United States English
-and French war vessels sail for different
-Chinese ports to protect foreigners.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 28.—Duchess Sophia Charlotte
-Oldenburg, the daughter of the Grand
-Duke of Oldenburg and Prince Eitel
-Frederick, the second son of the Emperor
-of Germany, were married yesterday
-in the chapel of the palace at Berlin.</p>
-
-<p>President Caceres, of Santo Domingo, in a
-message to his Congress, recommends the
-revision of the Constitution, of the import
-and export duties, the improvement
-of the ports and public roads, the
-enactment of laws benefiting agriculture,
-the free administration of justice
-and other improvements becoming a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317"></a>[317]</span>
-civilized nation. He recommends to
-Congress also the study of the treaty
-now before the United States Senate
-and declares that it is necessary to the
-welfare of his republic.</p>
-
-<p>The leading papers of St. Petersburg
-evince no satisfaction over the announcement
-of the date of the meeting of the
-Duma. It is said that the Duma will
-be prorogued almost immediately until
-autumn.</p>
-
-<p>Premier Witte has become an advocate of
-an Anglo-Russian understanding and it
-is reported that negotiations are about
-to be opened in London to determine
-the extent of a proposed agreement.
-If they are successful the new grouping
-of the Powers will check Germany’s
-ambition.</p>
-
-<p>It is reported from St. Petersburg that
-Russia is using all her influence at Berlin
-to prevent a rupture between
-France and Germany.</p>
-
-<p>The French officials at the Moroccan Conference
-at Algeciras do not look favorably
-upon the Berlin report that Germany
-will make concessions if France
-will also yield something. The French
-say that they have made concessions
-to which Germany has not responded.</p>
-
-<p>It is reported from Manila that Japanese
-officers have assumed control of the
-imperial war college and the trade and
-commercial schools at Canton, China.</p>
-
-<p>The battleship <i>Ohio</i>, flagship of the American
-fleet at the Asiatic station, has
-sailed for Hong Kong, where it will dock
-and make repairs, so as to be ready for
-possible emergencies.</p>
-
-<p>A telegram from Odessa states that in the
-village of Ivanislaw, in the Province of
-Kherson, 50 Cossacks and 70 gunners
-appeared a few days ago under orders
-from a police official and knouted 13
-peasants. One of these peasants went
-mad and others are dying. A schoolmaster
-became insane after witnessing
-the scene. The sole offense chargeable
-against the villagers was their re-election
-of communal representatives which
-was in conformity with the ukase of
-Dec. 24 last.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 1.—The reactionary policy of Interior
-Minister Durnovo received a setback
-yesterday when the action of the St.
-Petersburg police in closing the central
-bureau of the Constitutional Democracy
-was disowned by the Government.
-Permission was given for the
-reopening of the bureau.</p>
-
-<p>A dispatch from St. Petersburg says that
-the financial embarrassments of Russia
-are increased by the necessity of paying
-Japan for the maintenance of Russian
-prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>The new general tariff and conventional
-tariffs between Russia and Germany,
-France, and Austria-Hungary go into
-effect today.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 2.—It is reported from Shanghai
-that the Chinese Government has decided
-to instruct its ministers abroad to
-assure the Powers that there is no cause
-for uneasiness in the present situation
-in China and that there are no signs of
-an anti-foreign movement.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 3.—As the result of a series of special
-councils composed of forty high dignitaries
-presided over by the Czar, the
-main guarantees of liberty have been
-granted to the Russian people and a
-manifesto is to be coded and incorporated
-in the laws of the empire.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 4.—A terrific cyclone swept over the
-Society and Cook’s Islands in the Pacific
-Ocean on February 7 and 8. It is said
-10,000 persons perished. The damage
-to property is estimated at a million
-dollars.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 5.—At Tokio a bill was introduced in
-the Diet providing for the nationalization
-of the railways, and authorizing
-the government to compel companies
-to sell out to it at a price based on the
-cost of building plus twenty times the
-average profits for the last three years.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 6.—It is reported that the Germans
-have refused any concessions at the
-Moroccan conference at Algeciras.
-Russia proposed that France and Spain
-control the policing of Morocco. France
-was willing to accept the proposition,
-which was indorsed by Spain, Portugal
-and England. Herr von Radowitz,
-chief German delegate, opposed the
-proposal.</p>
-
-<p>The editor of a Barcelona (Spain) daily
-paper was sentenced to eight years’
-imprisonment for printing an insulting
-dispatch concerning King Alfonso.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 7.—An imperial manifesto has been
-published setting forth the decisions
-of the imperial council with regard to
-the execution of the Czar’s manifesto
-of last October. The manifesto reveals
-the purpose of the government to keep
-a firm check on the Duma. The imperial
-veto is absolute. The Czar controls the
-upper house; and the ministers have
-power to legislate when the parliament
-is not sitting.</p>
-
-<p>The Rouvier Ministry of France is defeated
-in the Chamber of Deputies by a
-combination against the Anti-Clericals
-and immediately resigns.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 8.—Reported from Berlin, intense
-indignation and mortification are shown
-at Russia’s action in throwing off her
-reserve and standing by France in the
-proposition that the control of the police
-of Morocco shall be entrusted to
-France and Spain. It is said that no
-more concessions can be obtained and
-that Germany must now show her hand
-and back down; that Von Radowitz,
-representing Germany at Morocco, will
-be sacrificed. There is also talk of Von
-Buelow’s resignation.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318"></a>[318]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="Along_The_Firing_Line">
-<img src="images/heading15.jpg" width="700" height="225" alt="" />
-<h2><i>Along The Firing Line</i><br />
-<span class="smaller"><i><span class="smaller">BY</span> The Circulation Manager</i></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>January was our best month for
-subscriptions at the time I wrote
-for the March number, but I
-guessed that February would be
-better still—and I guessed correctly.
-Although January had 27 business days,
-as against 22 in February (Lincoln’s
-and Washington’s birthdays cut in on
-the little, short month), yet we received
-nearly fifty-one per cent more renewals
-and new subscriptions in the latter
-month. And if we may judge the March
-business by the first three days (I write
-this March 4), the stormy month will
-bring more subscriptions than January
-and February combined. It may possibly
-be a case of “coming in like a lion
-and going out like a lamb”—but I do
-not think so. Our subscribers, agents,
-and clubbing newspapers are showing a
-much greater interest than formerly—and
-as the list grows our field of opportunity
-broadens.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>One would naturally suppose that
-every subscription received would narrow
-our field—but it doesn’t. On the
-contrary. I can imagine a state of
-affairs—a list so large—that every subscriber
-secured would make it harder
-to get another, for we can’t expect
-every man, woman and child to take
-any one publication. But no magazine
-ever reached that dizzy height.
-Practically every subscriber we get is a
-missionary who brings in at least one
-convert within the year, and many of
-them send in dozens of new subscriptions.
-I need hardly use space in saying
-that we thoroughly appreciate these
-kindnesses and endeavor to show our
-appreciation by making <span class="smcap">Watson’s
-Magazine</span> better and better each
-month. That’s a foregone conclusion.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Temporarily, however, we are embarrassed
-by the great influx of subscriptions,
-and for a little while we ask
-the kind indulgence of our friends.
-Everything shall be taken care of, but
-for a few weeks there may be some delays.
-It takes time to train new subscription
-clerks.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Our one weakness heretofore has been
-lack of proper organization to keep in
-touch with and look after the interests
-of the news-dealers. This has been
-remedied by placing a thoroughly competent
-man in charge of the news-dealer
-circulation. A complete roster of the
-news-dealers is being made and every
-effort will be put forth to increase news-stand
-sales. The tens of thousands of
-booksellers and news-dealers throughout
-the United States, supplied by the
-American News Company and its
-branches, constitute an army of distribution
-which has taken many years and
-an immense sum of money to raise and
-equip. We want to make use of that
-army to the best advantage of our patrons,
-the dealers and ourselves. Probably
-more than one-half of the reading
-public buys regularly of news-dealers,
-and a much larger percentage buys
-occasionally. Wherever our friends
-prefer to buy of the dealer, we earnestly
-wish them to do so; and if at any time
-there is any difficulty in securing
-Watson’s at the news stands, write us
-about it. We are now equipped to
-take care of all complaints of this character
-promptly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319"></a>[319]</span></p>
-
-<p>There is, however, an immense reading
-public receiving mail on R. F. D.
-routes—yet it is only thirteen years ago
-that Mr. Watson, after a hard fight,
-secured a small appropriation in Congress
-to be used in experiments with
-rural free delivery of mail—real “rural”
-delivery, not the kind Mr. Wanamaker
-had tried in the small towns previously.
-But even after Mr. Watson got the appropriation,
-Cleveland’s Postmaster-General
-refused to use it. “Scandalous
-use of the people’s money,” he
-doubtless argued, “and, besides, it
-might develop into something which
-would hurt the express companies.”
-To Mr. Watson is due the credit for securing
-the first appropriation for rural
-free delivery. He is the father. But
-we must give the devil his due—the Republican
-Party built up the system Mr.
-Watson originated. Well, that party
-never was afraid to spend the people’s
-money.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Now, these R. F. D. patrons get mail
-at their respective doors every weekday.
-They need not, and do not, go
-often to the nearest village or town.
-Hence, they cannot so well depend
-upon news-dealers for <span class="smcap">Watson’s</span>. They
-are best served by subscribing and having
-Uncle Sam’s mail-carrier bring it to
-the door.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>The news-stand buyer pays thirty
-cents a year more for <span class="smcap">Watson’s</span> than
-does his rural brother—but he invests a
-much smaller amount each time, so the
-two sacrifices (but it isn’t exactly correct
-to call buying <span class="smcap">Watson’s</span> a “sacrifice”)
-are about equal. This calls to
-mind a suggestion, that has been made
-several times, to allow taxes to be paid
-in instalments. Cold-blooded figures
-say that it is exactly the same whether
-one pays a $24 tax in one payment, or
-in four of $6 each, or in 12 of $2 each;
-but actual experience says, No; there
-is a difference.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Funny, isn’t it, how the Republican
-Party denounces some proposition as a
-Populistic vagary—and then turns
-’round and does the very thing it has
-denounced! In 1896 we were told that
-the people would have none of silver—those
-“fifty-cent dollars”; yet between
-1897 and 1903 the Republican
-Party coined more silver than in any
-other seven years of the country’s history.
-Not “free coinage,” of course,
-but that Sherman silver which was
-stacked up in vaults, and which no one
-wanted.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Public ownership was denounced as
-“confiscation,” anarchy, socialism,
-paternalism, and so on. But Teddy
-and Uncle Sam went into the railroad
-business down in Panama, and only
-recently that fat boy, Taft, bought 300
-acres of coal lands at Batan, Philippine
-Islands, for $50,000, money voted by
-Congress for the purpose, and it is
-given out flatly that “it is the intention
-of the Government not to relinquish
-title to the mines.” They will be
-leased to competitive bidders. The
-Secretary of War is drawing a bill to
-provide for this leasing, and says, oh,
-ye gods, listen: That the Government
-will regulate the price of coal in the
-Philippines!</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Didn’t we hear something about the
-impossibility of doing such a stunt as
-“regulating prices” away back in 1896
-and later? Couldn’t regulate the price
-of silver by letting it into the mints at
-$1.39 plus an ounce. Oh, no! Seems
-to me we ought to have an “International
-agreement” on the price of
-coal. Otherwise, what’s to prevent
-those disreputable “furriners” from
-dumping their pauper-mined coal into
-the Philippines, and carrying away
-every ounce of our gold?</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>Who said the People’s Party is
-dead? Out in Coal City, Ill., the
-Populists recently nominated the following
-village ticket:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>The People’s Party met in Borella’s Hall
-and made the following nominations: For
-trustees, two years, John McNamara, Peter
-Bono, and Axtel Anderson. For village
-clerk, Edward Fulton. For police magistrate,
-Frank Francis. For library directors,
-James Leish and Walter Palmer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320"></a>[320]</span></p>
-
-<p>Some call it the decadence of party
-spirit, but others believe it a recovery
-from partisan insanity—this independent
-attitude of men who formerly wore
-a party collar with meekness, if not
-with actual pride. A year or more ago
-Dr. Engelhard, of Rising City, Neb.,
-expressed it in the picturesque language
-of the West, thus: “I am now
-a political maverick.” At a recent
-dinner of the Wisconsin Society of
-New York, Representative Henry C.
-Adams, of the Badger State, pleading
-for the “insurgents” who are in rebellion,
-not “against good government
-but against bad government,” graphically
-described the political situation
-of today as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Party feeling has run to the lowest ebb
-ever known in American politics. It is hard
-work to tell a Democrat from a Republican.
-The South is swinging toward protection.
-New England is flirting with free trade.
-Pittsburg goes Democratic. New York City
-barely escapes the rule of a Socialist. Missouri
-sends Republicans to Congress. Folk
-is cheered by Republicans. La Follette is
-voted for by Democrats. The House of
-Representatives votes almost unanimously
-for the President’s rate bill, and a Republican
-committee gives it in charge of a Senator
-from South Carolina to report to the Senate.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In Mr. Edgerton’s excellent article
-on “Farmers’ Organizations” (February
-number) he failed to mention a
-very strong one in the grain belt—the
-American Society of Equity, with
-headquarters at Indianapolis. It
-claims a membership of over 200,000
-farmers, and its president, J. A. Everitt,
-asserts that its members will hold
-their wheat for $1.00 and other cereals
-correspondingly—and that they expect
-to win. Let’s hope they may.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>But let’s think a little. That won’t
-cut down railroad dividends, or make
-kerosene and rent any cheaper; and it
-<i>will</i> make bread higher. So suppose
-the Farmers’ Union, down South,
-pushes cotton up to 15 cents; and the
-American Society of Equity pushes
-wheat up to a dollar; and the “Big 6”
-here wins its fight for an 8-hour day at
-9 hours’ pay—won’t all these wealth-producers,
-after matters get readjusted,
-be about where they were before? I’m
-not throwing cold water on the efforts of
-any of these organizations, for I glory
-in their fighting proclivities—but I
-can’t see any permanent advantage
-accruing to any of them so long as the
-railroads and the banks are armed with
-letters of marque and reprisal, and
-legally empowered to rob every actual
-producer and every consumer. Each
-of these organizations carefully avoids
-politics. Is that wise? Possibly; but
-I can’t see it that way.</p>
-
-<hr class="stars" />
-
-<p>“How shall I remit for subscriptions?”
-ask a number of agents. Well,
-most anything that will bring the
-money will do, but we have this preference:
-A United States Post Office
-Money Order, made out to <span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s
-Magazine</span>. That will give us
-your name on the order, making it
-easy to trace errors—and our bank
-charges no exchange for handling.
-But we never refuse cheques, drafts,
-express orders, currency, or postage
-stamps, if sent us in good condition.</p>
-
-<p>“But,” I hear a chorus of voices saying,
-“we thought you’d changed the
-name, and just now you said ‘Tom
-Watson’s Magazine.’” Just so, I
-did. That is the name of the corporation
-which publishes <span class="smcap">Watson’s Magazine</span>.
-The corporation known as
-Tom Watson’s Magazine has not
-changed its name. It has five offices:
-President, vice-president, secretary,
-treasurer and cashier. These offices
-are held by three Populists, as follows:</p>
-
-<p><i>President</i>, Thomas E. Watson.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vice-President and Treasurer</i>, H. C. S.
-Stimpson.</p>
-
-<p><i>Secretary and Cashier</i>, C. Q. de
-France.</p>
-
-<p>I need not introduce Mr. Watson.
-Mr. Stimpson is secretary of the
-People’s Party in New York State; and
-I am secretary of the National Committee.</p>
-
-<p>Don’t make your remittance payable
-to any of the officers, but simply to the
-company, Tom Watson’s Magazine,
-and address your communications to
-the Magazine—not to individuals.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
-<img src="images/signature.jpg" width="300" height="60" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>C. Q. de France</i></p>
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-
-<p class="center larger">Of Vital Importance to Patriotic Citizens</p>
-
-<p class="center">National Documents</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">a collection of notable state papers chronologically arranged to form a
-documentary history of this country. It opens with the first Virginia
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-comprises all the important diplomatic treaties, official proclamations
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-
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-at $3.50 equal to any $6.00 shoe made. The graceful curve
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-wear no other make. Be fair to yourself and do it now. We
-fully satisfy you in every way or return your money.</p>
-
-<p>Write for our free stylebook and measurement blank.
-Delivered, express prepaid, <b>$3.75</b>.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Reliance Shoe Company</p>
-
-<p class="center">40 Main St., Friendship, N. Y.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="center">The Improved Boston Garter</p>
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-<p class="center">WORN ALL OVER THE WORLD</p>
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-<p class="center">LIES FLAT TO THE LEG—NEVER SLIPS, TEARS NOR UNFASTENS</p>
-
-<p class="center">Sample pair, Silk 50c., Cotton 25c. Mailed on receipt of price.</p>
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-<p class="center">GEO. FROST CO., Makers</p>
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-<p class="center">Boston, Mass., U.S.A.</p>
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-<p class="center">EVERY PAIR WARRANTED</p>
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-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="center">DENTACURA</p>
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-<p class="center"><i>The Tooth Paste</i></p>
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-<p class="center"><i>The Ideal Dentifrice</i></p>
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-<p>A chain of testimonials from dentists in
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-<p class="center">DENTACURA COMPANY, 192 ALLING ST. NEWARK, N.J.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
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-<p class="center">MENNEN’S BORATED TALCUM TOILET POWDER</p>
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-<p class="center">Pure as the Lily</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">—healthful and refreshing; that is why MENNEN’S
-is always used and recommended by
-physicians and nurses. Its perfect purity and absolute
-uniformity have won for it universal esteem. In
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-has the scent of fresh cut violets.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Gerhard Mennen Co.—Newark, N.J.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WATSON'S MAGAZINE, VOL. IV, NO. 2, APRIL, 1906 ***</div>
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