flMETRUTHWASTOLD - Revelations of New York Street Railway Investigation. BECOME A NATIONAL ISSUE. Corporation Contribution to Campaign Funds an Abui to Bo Corroetod A Plan to End th Evil Mr. Bryan on tho Influence of the Country Presi. By W1LLU J. ABBOT. The public service corporations of the city of New York are having trou bles of their own. I use the word troubles In tbe plural purposely. Tho unfortunate stockholders In tbe Met ropolitan Traction company and In tbe Metropolitan Securities company are troubled because they found tbe man agers of their properties becoming in credibly rich while the dividends van ished. The other trouble seems to bo coming to eminent defenders of tbe national honor and bitter opponents of Democratic success In either state or cation. The investigation shows Mr. Thomas F. Ryan, who used to think he'd like to be a Democratic candidate for tbe presidency jar for tbe senator chip from Virginia, hand In glove with Mr. Qulgg, a former Republican con gressman, later the chairman of the Republican county committee and now a lobbyist Mr. Qulgg, who used to be a newspaper reporter, received In (our years $271,000 from the traction company. Now, let us be fair. One of the most successful jugglers of Metropolitan Traction was William C. Whitney, Grover Cleveland s sponsor and man ager In politics and President Cleve land's secretary of the uavy. Mr. Whitney engineered tbe nomination Of Cleveland in 1802. He did It with a strong hand and a heavy purse, and the demands he or the people back of him made upon the Cleveland admlnla t ration wrecked tbe Democratic party for many years. Bryan made It a fighting organization, but even his wide popularity and vigorous leader ehlp were not able to overcome tbe burden of Clevelandlsm. Mr. Whitney was strong for national honor In .1890, and yet at that very time be was doing things In connection with a corporation that he controlled amounting to personal dishonor. It may be urged that one should say nothing but good of tbe dead. Person ally I think the maxim should be changed. When the dead has done much to debauch the government of the country, to encourage tbe Idea that tbe mere lavish use of money can make a president and that then tbe power thus obtained can be used to enrich those engaged In the job, It Is time that truth was told. Today the name of William C. Whitney, whom I I'tioiv o ml iVin n-na naponnAllir (I 1 m - able man, figures In every dubious op eration of the Metropolitan company up to the time of bis death. He was the shrewd schemer, and perhaps to htm tbe distinguished secretary of state, Eliliu Root, was nest. Secretary Root has the excuse that all lawyers use namely, that he acted only as attorney. Some day tbe peo ple In this country, who In tbe end are Its lawmaking authority, will enact some sort of legislation to prevent this .subterfuge. 'Why This ts a National Issue. The mere fact of the overcapitaliza tion and tbe Impending bankruptcy of 4 New York traction companies -ild not be a matter of national con cei. except for the truth that a good deal of the money which has reduced these corporations to the pout at which they are unable to pay even the interest of their bonds has gone to hungry politicians in practically ev ery case very prominent politicians al lied with tbe Republican organization. There Is a mysterious check for $250, 000, drawn in the campaign year of 1000, which nobody connected with Metropolitan Traction either can . or will explain. Mr. William M. Ivlns, 'who is Investigating the matter, makes no bones about asserting that It went to the Republican national committee. Then there was the $260,000 fund raised ky Mr. Harriman, largely from men who were Interested In tbe local street railways, and turned over to Mr. Cor nelius N. Bliss, treasurer of the Repub lican national committee, and by him to the preseut secretary of the treas ury, George B. Cortelyou. Much of tbe money raised by Mr. Ilarrlman came from life Insurance companies, some from tbe street railways. If national political committees are going to be permitted to raise cam paign funds In enormous figures from the street railways of any city. It be comes Immediately apparent that these corporations are Interfering In national affairs and therefore subject to nation al attention. Nobody believes that tbe United States government should in terfere wltb the collapse of the various traction companies In New York. But If a Whitney on the bygone Democrat ic side, or a Quigg on the present Re publican side, or a Harriman. or a Cor telyou. or a Ryan, or a Bliss can use the treasuries of these companies to pro cure funds to debauch tbe electoral aincbtnery of state or nation It Is about time that either state or nation took 'Cognizance of what Is doing. When the Investigation now being made by the public service commission of New Tork Is finished, there will be many great financial and political reputations ruined. There may not be a ierfectly clear and plain pan toward tbe ending f such evils suggested, but enough will have been done to show that a vtder system of national and statf publicity for all contributions made by I corporation for political purposes will do much to finally correct this ibuse. City and Country Newspapers. A New York newspaper, the World, k very much distressed or possibly very Indignant because, according to Its assertion. Mr Bryan said t Rich mood that "tbe great metropolltac lailies are controlled by tbe trusts nd their coluruus ire ipen to th. highest bidder." The World's quota tion Is not sccurate. t heard Mr. Bry an's speech and recall that he said, is he has telegraphed to the World, 'maur great metropolitan tallies." Nobody who knows anything of lther Xew Vork w Chicago Journalism will luestloo the Justice if tbe statement o qualified. The World, which show ed the utmost Irritation tbout it nas lone great work In exposing certain trusts. It has (ought bard and well tgnlnst '.he Insurance infamies, the Harriman methods of anance nd 'b Metropolitan Traction. But. ifter Ul. when an antlmonopoly and antitrust candidate appears In either the Dem ocratic or the Republican party we do not find th9 World enthusiastic t even friendly. For Mr. Bryan It hai nothing but ridicule and malice; -tor President Roosevelt, who baa don much and tried to do more, nothing but hostility; for Senator La Follette who on tbe Republican side li em phatically antitrust, tbt World has little except silence or a semloccaslona sneer. Now. what Mr. Bryan really said tt Richmond was of more Importance 'a tbe part not quoted by the metropol itan papers than that wblcb they at tack. He said that the fight tor real popular government, for tho represen tation of tbe people In both the state and the national government, must be and would be taken up by tbe coun try papers. He believed that tbe coun try press was free from tbe Influences, which affect, sometimes Insensibly,' many great metropolitan papers. Tbe country editor, It Is safe to say, does not live In Paris and edit his New York newspaper alternately from Monte Carlo and from his yacht. He does not hold the most honorable posi tion of ambassador to England or to St. Petersburg and conduct bis New York or Chicago paper from either point, so far removed from any toucb with tbe feeling of the common people of the United States. Tho great papers do a great work. Of that there is no doubt. But tbey are not wholly free from the charge of constituting In themselves a trust, and, as It now has come to pass that their owners are multimillionaires and must hold Investments In trust se curities, so beyond doubt tbey are In sensibly Influenced by tbe trust senti ment. Mr. Bryan was not first to say that the couutry press was the one to which representatives of the common people must look for aid. The rage and Indignation of the metropolitan press over his statement go far to prove Its truth. The Trusts Against tho Trusts. There are some students of public affairs, some public men and econo mists who hold that tbe operation of natural law will ultimately destroy monopolies and by so doing break down tbe conditions which have cre ated the swollen fortunes which both President Roosevelt and tbe leader of the Democratic party regard as a menace to the continued well being of the republic. I am frank to confess that I have not agreed with this view. It seems to me tbat legislation by both state and nation, and very drastic legislation at tbat, Is necessary. As the president himself said In effect, one of these millionaire monopolists and stock jugglers in jail would be worth a hundred fines Imposed upon the corporation. Yet tt Is worth while considering whether the trusts are not going to break themselves or, rather, whether the men who have got control of them, In their eagerness to get rich and their personal jealousies, will not bring down the whole artificial fabric In one grand crash upon their own heads. All of the men concerned In the traction trust of New York city have turned against each other, and the revelations that tbey make about each other have made tbe stock practi cally unsalable and promise to engage the attention of tbe courts for a decade at least. Only last week tbe effort of one magnate of a copper trust to beat bis rivals In Wall street resulted In bis being driven out of the banks be controlled and - bis practical, though possibly temporary, elimination from tbe ranks of trust promotors. Tbe I fall of Helnze carried with him to a I certain extent Charles W. Morse, who promoted and Controls the Ice trust I and the steamship trust. He. too. has ( been forced to resign from the direct- orate of every bank and trust com , pany with which he was connected. E. R. Thomas; also widely, engaged In schemes for monopolizing different In i dustrles, 1ms likewise been driven from any connection with the string of banks that he controls Fish anil Har riman are now emulating the Kilkenny cats at Chicago. Terhaps If I irno that as these men go others ult ns eager for power and for pelf " H' re place them. Put there is vin o' ,nv erb os to what happens we i mis of a certain class fall out nnmra I'lfii sclves The matters to consider In !'u- I'n in clal revelations of recen ; v. first, that the men whose ft.; 're swolleu beyond nny rensct ,. i . have secured them by the ' 'i. small saving of the peop'' savings bancs and Inwur t : nles; secoii.t. that at no li ; : hesitated to evai'e or to ;:,;- t'u - for their own profit: thl ' '; thought wa" never for ! i " k holders, but n'vu.vs for th ;n-. I , i Washinirto.v I. C. II SUiKHOOL, Lesson VI. Fourth Quarter, For Nov. 10, 1907. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. V o ULil U GOLD Text of the Lesson, Josh, xxiv, 14-28. Memory Verses, 22-24 Golden Text, Josh, xxiv, 15 Commentary Pre pared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. Copyright, 1007, by American PreM Anoclitlon.l The Lord had given rest unto Israel from all their enemies (xxill, 1); the tabernacle bad been set up at Suiloh and was still there when Samuel, was brought as a little lad to minister to the Lord In the days of Kit (xvlil, 1; xls, SI; I Sam. 1, 3, 24); Joshua was old and felt that bis sojourn on earth would soon be over, so he called to gether the elders and officers of Israel and rehearsed to them all that the Lord their God bad done for them and how He hud fought for them as He had promised, bringing the record down from the days of Abraham to the time when be was speaking. He reminded them that It was "the Lord their God" who had done It all, using that particular phrase about fourteen times In chapter xxill, and In chapter xxiv, 1-13, the Lord nimself, through Joshua, spoke of more than twenty things be had done for them. Joshua testified to the faithfulness of God In these words: "Not one thing hath failed of all the good things which the Lord your God spake concerning you. All are come to pass unto you, and not one thlug bath failed thereof' (xxill, 14). Solomon at the dedication of the temple used almost identical words (I Kings vIlL 56), and it Is our privilege to this day and always to live in the faithfulness of God, re membering such assurances as I Cor. 1-0; x, 13; II Tbess. ill, 3. Now, In our lesson we have the burden of Joshua's heart for this people whom be was about to leave, "Fear the Lord and serve Him In sincerity and truth" (verse 14), and three times the people reply that they will serve the Lord (verses 18, 21, 24), emphasizing It la verse 24 la these words: "The Lord our God will we serve, and nis voice will we obey." Joshua's declared de termination, "As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord" (verse 15), and his very strong plea had a grand result, for we read that "Israel served the Lord all the days of Jobhua and all the days of the elders that overlived Joshua, which had known all the works of the Lord that He had done for Israel (verse 31). The people considered the Lord's mercies to them, saying, "The Lord our God brought us up out of tbe land of Egypt and did those great signs and preserved us In all tbe wny and drave out from before us ail the people; therefore will we also serve the Lord, for He Is our God" (verses 17, 18). Joshua warned them that the Lord Is holy and jealous (verse 19), that He will not tolerate other gods, but the people insisted that they would serve IHm. Note the other six places where ho Is called Jealous In Ex. xx, 5; xxxlv, 14; Deut. iv, 24; v, 0; vl. 15; Nan. I, 2 indicating that He will zealously care for and defend His own, but He covets His own all for Himself tbat He may do His utmost for them. In verse 22 we learn that to serve the Lord means a very de cided stand against ourselves, a de nial and renunciation of self (Matt xvl, 24; Phil, ill, 3), knowing that in us that Is. in our flesh there dwelleth no good thing (Rom. vli, 18). As was the custom, a stone was set up for a witness, as If it had heard all the words (verses 26, 27). See also xxll, 26, 27; Gen. xxvUl. 18, 22; xxxl, 43-49. May it not suggest to us that "the stone of Israel" (Gen. xllx,. 24), "the tried stone, the sure foundation, the precious cornerstone" (Isa. xxvlil, 16) is a witness always to every word and act and thought of ours? May we lay It to heart that our God Is a Jealous God and that we cannot serve God and Mammon (Luke xvl, 13). Israel was redeemed from the bond age of Egypt that they might serve the Lord who redeemed them (Ex. lv, 23; x, 26), and to do this they needed all that they possessed. Not a hoof was to be left behind. Sam uel's great plea was, "Only fear the Lord and serve Him in truth with all your heart, for consider how great things ne hath done for you" (I Sam. ill. 24). One of our Lord's replies to the devil was, "Thou eholt worship tbe Lord thy God, and Him only Shalt thou serve" (Matt. Iv, 10). The height of future bliss for many is described In the words, "The throne of God and of the Lamb shall be' In It, and His servants shall serve Him, and they shall see His face, and His name shall bo in their foreheads" (Rev. xxll. 3, 4). Paul, who testified of his relation to the Lord Jesus In these words, "Whose I am und whom I serve." and who dellghlcd to call himself a bond slave of Jesus Christ, wr :e to tho TlieFK:ilo:iIaus, "Ve turned to God from idols to srrve the living tJod and to wait fc: IMs Son from heaven" (Acts xxvli. 2.T: I Thess. 1. 0, 10). Of 'I a?e!f he raid elsewhere, "Serving ''). Lord wit'j nil humility of mind v wi:'.i nii;v tears and temptations ' ' 'i iiefe'l me by the lying In wait ' the .lev-?" (Acts xx. 19). If the "(Vl rf f"':i'" i was constrained to say S- !'".!!m"s wviu-ts. "Happy ore i, thy j.'-vnn' ' which stand con ' ''iee and henr thy Y ic, "i. how nuicli i::' '"".v Hint h hljr'ier .- t;-! of the ' !-. 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