Rensselaer Union, Volume 6, Number 37, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 June 1874 — One Thing Certain. [ARTICLE]

One Thing Certain.

There is one thing our Wisconsin readers may set down as certain. Whenever they see any newspaper or hear any politician furiously finding fault with the Potter bill, that press or person is in sympathy with the railroads in their extortions upon the people, and cannot be trusted an inch. They either have Bt. Paul or Northwestern Road money jingling in their pockets, or they expect to have, and they are working for the interests of those roads and not for the interests of the people. Doubtless the Potter bill is not perfect. It would not be human it it was. But it points in the direction of justice to the people, and putting a stop to the partiality, robbery and injustice that has been practiced upon and suffered by the people of Wisconsin, and so far it is right.. It, upon trial, it shall be found to work injustice to the railroads, the Legislature will with pleasure amend it, and the people of the State will rejoice to have it done. There are not ten men in Wisconsin that want any injustice done the railroads; but they want and they mean the railroads shall not inflict the degree of injustice upon them which they have suffered for the past twelve years, to enrich a few heart ess. Wall street operators.— Industrial Age.