-wnrrwM W l"l'llliWqPHWB'W ft K ' I 2 . war with Mexico limn rlMioiruiB Clorwin, and cvon Abraham Lincoln repeatedly .added his protest against that war, and yet the names of Corwin and Lincoln are among the illustrious of America's dead. TJio dillorenco between a monarchy and a re public is that in a monarchy the people must aoquicso in the monarch's will, but in a republic the public ollicers are supposed to acquieso in the people's will. "The king can do no wrong" so long as he does exactly as he pleases. The pub lic oflicer in a republic can do no wrong so long as he adheres to the Constitution and the law. When he violates that Constitution and when ho trangresses that law, he is in error, and it is just as much the people's duty to criticize him then as it is their duty to commend him when he sustains the Constitution and upholds the law. Men who insist that this nation, in its deal ings with its new dependencies, shall be governed .by the same principle which the founders of this Government claimed for themselves; men who in sist that the Declaration of Independence was written for all time and provides a rule by which all men should bo guided; men who insist that the prohibitions in the Constitution must pro hibit, that the limitations in the Constitution must limit, and that public ollicers and public bodies whoso existence doponds upon that Con Btitution cannot ignore it and assume authority and power not given by it; men who insist that this Government is too great and too strong to outer upon an era of oppression to the weak and tho helpless; men who insist that honesty is the best policy for nations as well as individuals; men who insist that liberty was designed for the brown man as well as for the white man and tho black man theso men are not made of tho stuff of which traitors are constructed. No government has anything to fear from cit izens who adhere to the principles upon which tho government was founded and through which it .has prospered. No .nation has anything to fear From citizons who insist that tho nation must bo true to its own traditions and faithful to its own professions. No nation has anything to fear from citizens who are willing to go down to political lofeat in defense of what they believe to bo the truth. No nation has anything to fear from chi tons who can bring to the support of their cause tho Declaration of Independence, the Constitu tion of tho United States, and the declarations of. every great American in every great political party from the period of Washington to the pres ent day. Hazing Finds a Defender. The Chicago Inter-Ocean rises, or rather sinks, to the defense of hazing. It says: Now this is the sort of discipline many young men entering n new environment greatly need, and which in various ways they everywhere receive. Tho newcomer in schools, in clubs, in lodges, in churches, in offices, in factories, in every place where men must live and work together, if ho show an overweening tenso of his own importance, receives just this kind &f lessons. If administered in the proper spirit such fessons are valuable to the learner. They show him ust what he is worth in the eyes of those by whose judgment he must stand or full. They are means of liscipline which make the social machine work bore smoothly. Excuses must be scarce indeed when a news- The Commoner paper is compelled to liken hazing to initiation into a lodge or to one's experience in joining a church. if tho Inter-Ocean can discover an instance where soap or tobasco sauce was administered by a lodge to a new member, or where a list fight was made compulsory in any religious organiza tion it has only to point it out and it will have the satisfaction of seeing how publicity will put an end to the practice or to the organization. W Trial by Jury Denied. The President, in his instructions to the Philippine commissioners, is careful to exclude trial by jury from the blessing conferred upon the Nation's oriental subjects. The omission is the more noticeable because the sixth amendment to the Constitution is quoted entire with the ex ception of tho clause guaranteeing, trial "by an impartial jury of .the state and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which dis trict shall have been previously ascertained by law." Below will bo found, in parallel columns, tho sixth amendment and the instruction taken from it: The President's Instruction. In all criminal prose cutions the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial; to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be con fronted with witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor and to have the assistance of counsel for his defense. The Sixth Amendment. In all criminal prosecu tions the accused shall en joy the right to a speedy and public trial, nv an IMPAKTIAI, .1UUY 01? TIIK STATE AND YHST1UCT W1IKKKIN TIIK CIUME SHALL 1IAVK 11KEN' COMMITTED, WHICH DISTIUCT SHALL HAVE HEEN PREVIOUSLY ASCERTAINED BY LAW, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be con fronted with tho witness es against him; to have - compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to havo the assistance of counsel for his defense. Ono by one tho safe-guards of the Constitu tion arc being abandoned; bno by ono the doc trines of imperialism are being adopted. There is not a vital principle of government, heretofore considered sacred, which must not ultimately be abandoned if this Nation continues to tax sub jects without representation and govern them, without the consent of the governed. The Presidential Term. The suggestion made by Ex-President Cleve land, to the effect that the presidential term should be extended to six years and the president made ineligible for re-election, has excited discussion. The latter part of the proposition has mot with the more cordial reception. There seems to be a wide-spread opinion that a president should be limited to one term in order to prevent his usino the first term to secure a re-nomination. President Jackson suggested this limitation in his first inaugural message. Mr. TIayes in 1870, in his letter accepting the republican nomination, said: The declaration of principles by the Cincinnati convention makes no announcement in favor of a sin gle presidential term. I do not assume to add to that declaration, but believing that tho restoration of the civil service to the system established by Washington and followed by the early presidents can be best ac complished by an executive officer who is under no temptation to use the patronage of his office to pro mote his own re-election, T desire to perforin what t regard as a duty in stating now my inflexible purpose, if elected, not to be a candidate for election to a'sec-. ond term. Mr. Cleveland in his first letter of acceptance? stated, in even stronger language, the objections to a second term, saying: -' When an election to office shall be the selection by the voters of one of their number to assume for a time a public trust instead of his dedication to the" profession of politics; when the holders of the ballot, quickened by a sense of duty, shall avenge truth be trayed and pledges broken, and when the suffrage shall be altogether free and uncorrupted, the full realization of a government by the people will be at hand. And of the means to this end, no one would, in my judgment, be more effective than an amend ment to the Constitution disqualifying the president from re-election. When we consider the patronage of this great' office, the allurements of power, the temptation to re tain public place once gained, and, more than all, the. availability a party finds in an incumbent whom a horde of office holders, with zeal born of benefits re ceived and fostered by the hope of favors yet to come, stand ready to aid with money and trained political service, wo recognize in the eligibility, of the presi dent for re-election a most serious danger to that calm, deliberate and intelligent political action which must characterize a government by the people. Human nature is as yet too frail to' withstand the temptation to use for selfish purposes tho great patronage of the executive. If it is argued that a nation might be in such a crisis that it could ill afford a change in' the administration, it may be said in reply, first, that the same argument could be made at the close of a second term and, second, that when the nation reaches a condition where only one man out of the whole population is able to assume and 'prop erly discharge the duties of the executive it ,wiir4V scarcely be worth saving. As to the lengthening of the term considera te difference of opinion has developecl. The principal affirmative argument is that business interests are disturbed by a presidential election. If this argument is to have a controlling influ ence we might as well choose the executive, for life, or, in order to reduce the disturbance to a minimum, establish an hereditary succession. There arc. political reasons in favor of the present length which outweigh any business considera tions. Jefferson was an advocate of frequent elec tions. In a letter written . to Samuel Adams, in 1800, he said: A government by representatives, elected by tho people at short periods, was our object; and our max im at that day was, 'where annual election ends, tyr- anny begins;' nor have our departures from it been sanctioned by the happiness of their effects. . -. Sixteen years later he said: The rights of the people to the exercise and fruits of their own industry can never be protected against the selfishness of rulers, not subject to their control at short periods. The fact that commercial reasons are deemed. sufficient with some to. justify the surrender of a principle absolutely necessary for the protection of the public shows the dangerous pre-eminence given to money and money making. To lengthen tho presidential term is simply to enlarge the stake for which great interests play. The trusts could increase their campaign contribu tions fifty per cent, if they could secure control of an administration for six years instead of four. Short terms are necessary not only to proteot fi ...''I 4 m - K ' I1 I 1 I U I fl W-JijjVy. ,jfcj ..m.. .jJlf h-.ut ffiifrtn fftlTntf"!! kUW