by the speeches of public men who, as Senators, Governors,
or Mayors, have served these their masters to the
cost of the plain people. At one time one of their
writers or speakers attacks the rate law as the cause
of the panic; he is, whether in public life or not,
usually a clever corporation lawyer, and he is not
so foolish a being as to believe in the truth of what
he says; he has too closely represented the railroads
not to know well that the Hepburn Rate Bill has helped
every honest railroad, and has hurt only the railroads
that regarded themselves as above the law. At
another time, one of them assails the Administration
for not imprisoning people under the Sherman Anti-Trust
Law; for declining to make what he well knows, in
view of the actual attitude of juries (as shown in
the Tobacco Trust cases and in San Francisco in one
or two of the cases brought against corrupt business
men) would have been the futile endeavor to imprison
defendants whom we are actually able to fine.
He raises the usual clamor, raised by all who object
to the enforcement of the law, that we are fining
corporations instead of putting the heads of the corporations
in jail; and he states that this does not really harm
the chief offenders. Were this statement true,
he himself would not be found attacking us. The
extraordinary violence of the assault upon our policy
contained in speeches like these, in the articles in
the subsidized press, in such huge advertisements
and pamphlets as those above referred to, and the
enormous sums of money spent in these various ways,
give a fairly accurate measure of the anger and terror
which our actions have caused the corrupt men of vast
wealth to feel in the very marrow of their being.
The man thus attacking us is usually, like so many
of his fellows, either a great lawyer, or a paid editor
who takes his commands from the financiers and his
arguments from their attorneys. If the former,
he has defended many malefactors, and he knows well
that, thanks to the advice of lawyers like himself,
a certain kind of modern corporation has been turned
into an admirable instrument by which to render it
well nigh impossible to get at the really guilty man,
so that in most cases the only way of punishing the
wrong is by fining the corporation or by proceeding
personally against some of the minor agents. These
lawyers and their employers are the men mainly responsible
for this state of things, and their responsibility
is shared with the legislators who ingeniously oppose
the passing of just and effective laws, and with those
judges whose one aim seems to be to construe such laws
so that they cannot be executed. Nothing is sillier
than this outcry on behalf of the “innocent
stockholders” in the corporations. We are
besought to pity the Standard Oil Company for a fine
relatively far less great than the fines every day
inflicted in the police courts upon multitudes of
push cart peddlers and other petty offenders, whose
woes never extort one word from the men whose withers