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3jsw1 HF " f ,1 ' PAGE FOUR THE BISBEE DAlli" ft EV1EW, BISBEE, ARIZONA, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 2, 1911. : - I ill! WWIiW'l I' i' IMIInMlll IW1WBHI11 M'HI I IWMI "- -T -"- HUr ' -,S' aiHgTOOmail IIM1I1MI IIIII31KI.II :. MM If If-!? 2 " fi'V lit. ' 1 : . if s v ' J5S THE BISBEE DULY REVIEW "All the New That' Fit to Print' Entered as second class matter at the Postoffice at Bisbee. Arizona, un der Act of March 3, 1879. Published at Bisbee, Arizona, the best mining city in the west, at the Review Building, corner O. K. Street and Review Avenue. CONSOLIDATED PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY GEO. H. KELLY President TELEPHONE .39 SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL OR CARRIER ONE MONTH $'.75 SIX MONTHS ..-..-. 4.50 ONE YEAR 9.00 ONE YEAR In Advance 7.50 Address all Communications to THE BISBEE DAILY REVIEW. Bisbee. Arizona RESPONSIBILITY OF THE UNIONS. Tho esc of jioleace In labor dla putcs Is jjo much ottener allesoi than proved that even tho evidence !n the Los Angeles case should be submitted to a Jury before tho cess is regarded as established, aid meanwhile Judgment should be hell In suspense It Is something gained that tho spokesmen for labor feci tho necessity for repudiating so chocking1 a crime, and jet thero runs 1 through til their outgivings a dis tinction "between their personal and professional opinions which fairly brings home to the unions tho spirit of tho" crime, if not Ua perpetra tion. Mr. McNamara professed to regard the dynamiting to death of a score of Innocent persons as an act of anarchy. Secretary and treasurer McNamara Is under arrest as the anarchist. Mr. Gompers's expres sions afforded a similar contrast. He Issued. a declaration that "organized labor stands tor peace. Industrial as well as International, 'carping critics to the contrary, not withstanding. The tollers, he says are the great burden bearers ot war's horrors, and pcaco Is the noblest attribute of mans duty tol man the world over. In promoting these noblo sentiments Mr. Gompers the individual, meets with several obstacles placed In his path by Mr. Gompers, tho union official In defer ence to the declared hostility of the unions ho was unable to utter from a platform the sentiments which be now issues a manifesto. It was also In bis official capacity that ho denounced the arrest of the sus pected dynamiters as "kidnapping," the first act in a tragedy contem .plating the assassination of organ ized labor. It is the millions at the command of Mr. McNamara's ene mies which will convict him. Tho Federation has aided his union in every way. No union has been more bitterly attacked." In this utterance of Mr. Gompers the labor official, Mr. Gompers, tho I individual, is as much out of touch with tho genera! sentiments of the I community as with himself. Ills r voice is for peace, but his policy is j for war against whatever opposes the aims ot tho union. There will bo no response to his suggestion that minions win suffice to convict Mr. McNamara If innocenL That would be a. greater crime even than tho Xt Angeles explosion. Nosreater misfortune can happen to a people than the prostitution of any instru mentality of government to tho uses of any faction, whether labor or capital. Whether or not Mr. Mc Namara "was "kidnapped," he will not be convicted unless proved guil ty. Neither will there be any pro sumption of complicity of tho union which will not be held subject to proof. The case against the unions U that whether or not they are SBllty of erica acts they plead guilty of the spirit which Inspire them. Take, for Instance, the preamble of the constitution from which Presl- .., rneri- derives the powers. wMch place Mcduct In such wiucn pi ( contrast -with words of Mr. Oeapers the Individual: -Whereas -a Xmwlr to on in an the na- C5 tlons ot the world between tho op pressors and the oppressed ot all countries, a struggle between tho capitalist and tho laborer. It Is this conception which Is at the root ot tho dynainltlngs and murders and arsons In the Interest ot labor. Rightly considered, neither labor nor capital Is struggling against the other, but both are co-operating In the common Interest against a de ficiency of tho good things of life. Even If tho strugglo of capital for profit, and the strugglo of labor for a wage, be selfish rather than In the Interest ot humanity. It Is not at bottom a struggle ot ono against the other, but rather ot both against want. It is labor which converts this struggle, whatever its character. Into a class struggle, rather than an economic struggle, by substitution ot opposition for cooperation. Labcr does this although It U the chlel gainer by tho substitution of or ganized for individualist production Tho world could net supply itself with what It is consuming on the basis of individual production. Cvee ico crops .could not bo planted or harvested without the cso of capital. And labor's distinctive sharo is more than tho increased rata oz profit to capital, speculative rewaidi excepted. ' The spirit of war In the prcambT? of tho red era 'Jon's cons.ltution is reflected In its provisions, and In its practice. Section 4 ot article 9 en acts the duties ot the executive council in cases of "approved and pending boycotts. And President Gompers is In contempt ot court for his procedure In one such loy cott as to which ho has admitted the charges as proved, and has reg istered his opinion that tfe cour. procedure In his case is only les an Infringement on liberty than In his allegations against the courts which must try the issue in the case of his co-unionist McManlgle, wh) has confessed tho complicity ot the union in tho murder ot, ho guesse. a hundred or so human beings. As Individuals horrors ot war. unionists sec the As a body they refuse to allow President Gompers 10 express ms convictions as an ill- dividual. As president ot the Fed cration he is unable to seo the crime in the acts which the consti tution ot his union contemplates The individual, the official, and tnc union alike stand beforo tho com munity responsible for the spirit which inspires such outrages. But the community will not lynch the unions, even in opinion. Tho cor--munity will hold Its m'nd open un til the confession shall be, told la court, together with the corroborat ing evidence, it such there shall be The unions lack neither for re sources nor for the talent for de tense. But if this country is to ex perlence cither peace or prosperity there must he an end to the spirit manifested in the union's constitu tion, and put In practice by its of ficials, both on proof and on their confession without perception of the enormity of their acts. New York Times. WOULD PROVOKE RUPTURE. (El Paso Times.) If there Is anything in sight that the Insurgent Republican senators have not asked for in Washington, r ',3 clearly a matter of oversight and will be remedied as soon as d'-scof ered. The demands ot these sena tors upon their regular brethren b cs clear a case of the caudal appen dago trying to wag the canine av was ever placed on exhibition. In fact, tho entire procedure present the appearanco of a studied effort to provoke a rupture. COMPLIMENTS COMMISSION. (Arizona Democrat) The Arizona railway commission has performed good service for Art- i PRESS COMMENT ' ln " contest with-WclIs-Farso & Co. This commission Is composed of ,., Bea Md u,e pe3. p,8 of Ar!z0B, jjy ctgag g tmbUb trw tMr taken. 1 D E COMMENTS Use copper Instead of wood ln jour head and help the market. In other ords.ir Wilfrid Laurler will see that reciprocity through If ho mises the coronation. Tho standrattcrs arc referred to as a dying race. Some of them are awfully dead. The rolling pin won over -the, tennis racquet ln tne pretty arm con test Just concluded by a uemcr raper. Back to tho kitchen, girls. The Maricopa crand Jury Is after the roller towel as something carry ing IS different diseases, a dozen il smells and six colors, and this alter an inspection of the poor house. But all roller towels arc alike. Use compressed air. They are talking of revising the ten commandments but only to simplify them so ihat even a dyna miter can understand them. Phoenix won't need that road U it loses the capital. Why do Illustrious visitors in Bis bee always leave tor nomo rigai alter tho serenade? Mark Smith did not have a chanco to Env a word before the nous committee. But statehood still has the ECLalc committee to deal with. TLo nre having one merry time after another ln Globe; butter 40 cents In Globe; same brand 25 cents In Los Angeles; potatoes 3 pounds for 25 cents ln Globe; ten pounds for 25 cents ln Los Angeles, and so on. It Is the altitude. "The Dutch have taken a Philippine Island away from us, and the Joko Is on the Dutch. It is not worth the last syllable ln the name of one of Holland's cities. When Arizona gets statehood, it is going to be particular whom it elects to office. The constitutional convention was aplenty, and then some Hero's one of tho verses written by Dr Jackola of Duluth and sent to Mrs O. H. P. Belmont which caused the latter to call ln the police: "Permit these adorable roses to say. Each fragratt petal (Sic) keep repeating. O lovelier, sweeter Its oa arc than they. And sweeter than my heartfelt greeting. Is'nt the doctor's name slightly missrelled?. Copper would be 20 cents a pound If some mines would close. et Hutte Ai it Clarence Darrow seems to hare the habit of making close dnanclal connection with the leading criminal cases. Will woman suffrage decrease rcatrimonj? asks the Sunday sup- tfemenu No; tho women would pas3 a law compelling the men to marry. A canary lives only 21 years, while tne parrot survrves 100 summers Which shows how little the voice bail to do with It Drink buttermilk and keep your mouth shut Roosevelt wants to die in tattle. but It will be Just like Taft cot to intervene. Good morning; have you emptied mat om sock into cassiay s Est? The first edition of Gray's Elegv Just sold for MZ'M, but Gray is dead. Victor Berger wants to abolish the U. S. senate. We will, if they don't pas3 tbat free list. How was the shortcake? "Ought a husband scratch a pig's lack?'" is the issuo in the divorce case of Irene Osgood, the novelist According to affidavits the curs a-l. 'ally did It and aroused Irene's Jealousy. OUTNUMBERED IN PRAYER. Miss Edith Osden Harrison, the 15-year-old daughter of Carter H. "larrtson, has reen taking an active interest. In her father's candidacy tor rrayor since the beginning of the campaign and in the primary in which he defeated Edward F. Dunne, sas a Chicago disiatch In tho Wash ington Post A few days before the primaries she asked her mother: "Do you pray, for fatoer's nomination, mother?" "Yes, tald her mother. "I prav every night and every morning that lie ma? to nominated and I think about him all day and hopo for It dont you? "Well, no." said Miss Edith, doubtfully i did Tart Jn to pray, but every Hire I bepan to pray that father would be nominated I thought of all those tn Dunnes doing the tame thing, and I thought 1 had no chance." J . Everybody wka raaas sjstI keys) aaws papers, Iwt emi'isai vrka reads aawaimwih docsal kmf sffTrian. Cartck the Drift? Bara'a km aaetiaa fo mcb the paopU ef "tfcja tnmmwitj. I THE MEXICAN INSURGENTS UKE 10 By Permission of the Farmers free list BY SAVOYARD. The District of Columbia Is a territory set down between Mary land and Virginia, states that are pronouncedly democratic In political faith, and SO per cent of their in habitants, who read newspapers, are of the democratic party. Washing ton. too. is a Southern city, and a majority of tho newspaper readers, of this town are democrats. And yet cery dally paper published ln the District of Columbia Is republican In politics tho two leading ones, tho Post and the Star, intensely so and tho other two, tho Herald and the Times, mildly so. In thifc cam munity a democrat must wait to hear from New York or Philadelphia, Bal tlmore or Richmond, or Norfolk, bo fore he can get political opinions to euit him, The following from the Washington Post is not only extreme in its republicanism, but It Is fanatic ln its sectionalism: "The southern farmer never rricd out against Canadian competition ln the past nor has he Joined his northern neighbor in opposing the ratification of the reciprocity agree ment The South was not in sym pathy with tho imposing of a high duty on Canadian products in the first place, for the two-fold reason that it derived no appreciable ben efit, and then It was contrary to tho democratic low tariff policy. The Canadian tariff was Just high enough to protect tho Northern farmer, and he alone could be affected one way or the other by takins the tariff off. "These things being true, why should manufactures used exclusive ly ln tho South go on the 'farmers' free list?' Does it profit the farm ing community along the Canadian border for congress to take tho tar iff off of cotton gins, cotton bas- ging. gunny cloth, and all devices gether with other articles of taann fature never seen in that latitude? The framers ot the free Ust set up the plea that they would remove the tariff on articles used especially by the farmers in order to compensate them for any losses tney-znight suf fer through reclprocityv but bow can they reconcile their words with their deeds? Besides, as the South far mers and everybody would share with the North any gain which might accrue from the adoption of tho free list exclusive of the articles above mentioned, it would look as If the committee had deliberately gone out ot the way to give the Southern farmer all the Northern farmer gets and untold millions taore." Now, let me look at that Not for the moment of Its entire existence has the G. O. P. ,1-eea natioBil. and i isiiaj mum Ab vtbj nnaq was cvwuzmi ; and the PayBe-AMrieh neactrosity I exeeptlesaHy ae. The "ferment' free list" prepared by Mr. Underwood the Chicago Tribune lakes a chunk of sectionalism out of the tariff. Now listen. Binding twine, a necessary to the wheat grower, is on the free list Why? Because the wheat states are at the North and they vote tho re publican ticket On the other hand, steel tics are as much of a necessity to the coUon planter as binding twine to the wheat groier. But cot ton ties are not only taxed in tho Payne monopoly, but the tar Is prac tically prohibitory, made o to swell the millions of Andrew Carnegie and the other forty-eight millionaires that Carnegie boasts he made by mean3 of the tariff on metals. Simple Jus lice demands that the man who tills the soil of the South shall be put on an exact equality with the man who tills the soil At the North. Again there is a tarff of 15 cents a bushel, or 20 per cent ad va'orem, en corn, and It yielded $Jf,352 rev enue in the fiscal year 1900. The corn states are Rt the North, and tbey vote republican. Cotton is on the free list that Is, the cotton In the ownership of him who grows it In 1909 we imported 80,01,0270 pounds of cotton In tbo hale, valued at $13,622302, and there also came ln of cotton "wastes or flocks," 23.830,958 pounds, valued at 51,211, 518. total SH.Si3.320. A duty ot 0 per cent ad valorem on that vould bave yellded S2.968.6C4. But the cot ton states vote the democratic tick et Everybody, even the Washing ton Post knows that had cotton been exclusively grwn at the North, there would have been a protection duty of at least 50 per cent laid on it Now I am opposed to a duty on cot ton in the bale, but I am 'also op posed to a duty on grain of every description. J was present the hot summer of 1909 when Mr- Aldrich said to tne south teat .no was a3 much In favor of protecting what was produced in that section as he was Inclined to protect the industries of the North. What a pity it Is that somo of his Southern friends, who are so anxious to reach 'the tariff test did not fling a 20 per cent duty on raw cotton at him. Just to see htm take water. I heard John Sharpe Williams make an eloquent speech on that very question, and bad there coursed in his veins "all tho blood ot all the Howards" ho could not have done it grander. He said fie was a eoton grower, and the duty would put money In his pocket; but the ser vant was sot a do& and he scorned it If every senator were tar resign who votes to swell his own personal sains by means of the taxing power. I fear a search warrant would fail to discover a quorum rof that body. And why should sot the cotton piaster be put os sa exact equality with the grain grower? "There is bo reason to morals, and the sole reave 1 politics to Uutt'oae Ilea FIGHT ALONG THE U. , . at the South and Is a democrat and the other Is a republican. It Is well understood that co citizen of the South Is eligible to the office of president or vice president It is known ot all men that ..of the bil lions pcid In pensions to Northern soldiers the South cheerfully contri butes her share, though the present republican secretary of tho treasury characterizes the thing thus. "We have an enormous Civil war tension list which Is not a credit to us. It has lost Its patriotic aspects and has become a political list, cost ing the government about. $60,000,000 per year." Nor Is that all. When the South was prostrate, devastate, helpless, in digent, congress levied an Illegal tax on her cotton and collected" $63, 000,444 of it Not one cent has teen refunded, though everybody knows that had this tax been col lected from the corn grower he would have received It back to the uttermost farthing as soon as its illegality was recognized. Read that editorial from the Wash ington Post again, study it and master it What do you conclude? Why, that the South ought to be grateful to congress that her pres ence in the Union Is not proclaimed as an impertinence and considered as an intrusion. What is the question here? The government xercises the taxing pow er for the benefit of a certain class on (he Canadian border, that Is to fav, nil tho peoplo.jro taxed for the benefit of a few people.- But a re publican president smites that in justice and seeks ; reform of it The Washington Post argues that this graft is a vested right and if It be taken from the class it bene fits, something Just as good must be substituted for. it Read that second paragraph from the Post I hae quoted, again. Was ever such nai vete before What do we have? The "farmers" free list gives to the grain" grower free thrashing machines. That Is all right because he Is a republican; but it is awful to give the Southern planter a free cotton gin. Why? I can conjure no reason unless it be that be is a democrat It is proposed ln this bill to give the cotton planter free bagging; but in the same measure free sacla are provided for the wheat grower. The sack is an absolute necessity to the one and tbe bagging an absolute necessity to the other. No, what's the matter is this: Can. adlan reciprocity is tbe tocsin to summon congress to do tbe "pro tection principle" to death. Hence the rage. See Oilman's sealskin purses. When you want-help, you can get it by using a Want ad in the Review. DONT. FOR1ET THE T. F. B NO. 63 DANCE AT THE FAIR HALL, .THURSDAY. MAY 4TH. BflENNAN'SOnCHESTRA. S.BORDER.i 'SPY , y-V"---. --ri-Tva fat- frJ A CHILD'S ENDOWMENT. Most mothers who are Interests in the education of their chlldrea ry to devise a plan whereby thay can set aside nlckles and dimes which the child receives. Thaj generally put it in a lltti tin bank which will mean aoraethlnr tr. ,h child in the future. New York Life has Juat IssuM a new policy to cover thla ground. The .New Tfork Life Ins. Co., la sues these policies payable elthn by annual or semiannual premiums. To secure the payment of an es- dowment of a fixed amount on a- tainlng the age of 18, 21 or 21 years which ever may be selectee at the outset These policies pay an annual dividend. No medical examination is required. The amount assured la always de terred for a .complete number oi vears and the date of the applica tion, (thU 'is the date of the pay ment of the first premium) deter mines the date upon which the aate of the contract terminate. . Thus, supposing the child Is three years and four months of age a the time of the application for 1 Kurance, it will receive the amount assured either at the age ot eigh teen years and four months os twenty-one years, and four nnntk. 'or twenty-five years and four months 'ccorain? to the period of the aa dowment The policy is non-rorfeltl rt tnree full annual payments havs teen paid. The policy baa a guar anteed cash TIue and embraces every advantage of twenty year en dowment policy for an adult aftaa the child is fifteen years of ag. Should the child die before attain 'ng the age of fifteen years the company will return the premiums received and the dividends wn. mg on the policy. The advantage of this method of saving over any other is that the child has a fixes plan for his saving and a perioe to work to. We are going to make ;one Interested In the future welfare ui ineir cciraren can get Mrther particulars by calling- at my office or dropping a card to Box 381. Bis bee. J. M. MCGREGOR. Acent Rnom a Bank ot Bisbee Bids. Phone 1 New York Lit Ina. Co. BUbee. Arisoaa Mound City Palnta wear longest nd look bait BISBEE HARDWARE' Are you out of work? A Review-Want ad wa hdp you finda job. Are vimi t ef wqrtcT Find a job ay MVafwefajaj hi yhji RcvltNa, i W r (' 1 fc r X I I' 1 r-3s& &) i r ) iMM&nHaFrkl T5rT"