ipifWMPmii1 tmww? Jr .- The Commoner. SLUGUST 7, 1903. JIMifiliiiJWWPP la its Fourth of July editorial, tho Chicago Record-Herald said: "The Fourth of July is our great national nouuuy. il full of meaning to tho adults as "well as to tho youth of tho land." Should it not also be "full of meanlne" to all people verywhore, who, like our own fathers, Btrugglo for liberty? And is it "full of meaning" to the people of the Philippine islands, who have had the temerity to aspire to a government deriving 1U powers from tho consent of tho governed? Full of Meaning. Flag Waving Feot. Speaking before tho Iowa republican convon JUon, Congressman Cousins said: "It Is tho wall oi American proiecuun uyuu which tho feet of industry and labor leaped out of the panic and disaster of 1896, waving the flac of employment, pros perity and independence in the face of the world." Henry Watterson, who is sometmng of a figure maker himself, deals the Iowa orator a crushing hlow when he says: "Protectionists are in the liabit of waving their feet -in the faces of other people, but feet that wave flags must be some- jkUJUg 41UYY. Tho Tribune Makes It Plain Quoting from the Iowa republican platform, Jho New York Tribune says: "Duties that are too low Bhould do increased, ana duties that are too high should -be reduced. If not, wny not? Does any rational being think tlin.fr. duties wnicli aro too low Bhould be reduced, and that duties which are too high should be Increased?" Of course! Come to thlok of it, no rational being thinks that duties that are too low should be reduced and duties that are too high should be increased. Everyone must feel profoundly grateful to the Tribune for mak ing tho point quite clear. An Indignant Editor. A young man at Conova, 111., recently took his sweetheart for a ride. It is recorded that she fell out of tu3 buggy, while her lover drove two miles before he discovered that she was miss ing. When this announcement was made to the public, the editor of the Hartford (Ala.) Times became wrathy, and taking his pen in hand, and in a burst of righteous indignation, he wrote: "When wo were a young lover, the hind wheel might come off, the spring break or the horse fall out of tho shafts without our knowing it, but the girl was always safely anchored." Perkins a Bit Out of Line. In his speech before the Iowa republican con tention, George D. Perkins, the temporary chair man, said: "Tho labor of the country is not only to be pro tected in what it has to sell, but also it is to be protected in what it has to buy." There te nothing in the republican tarhf policy to justify that assertion, nor is there anything fn the plat form subsequently adopted by tho convention which Mr. Perkins addressed to warrant the Im pression that the statement of the temporary presiding officer had received the convention's indorsement ''' Tho New York Tribune says: "It Is not al together easy to be patient with tho political critics who try to hide their Just chagrin behind a pretence that as Clear the resolutions of the Iowa con- as Mud. vention are crooked and ambig uous." It is not at all surpris ing that the Tribune has lost its patience with the political critics. The Iowa platform says that "duties that are too low should be increased; 'duties that are too high should be reduced." At first glance, one might be inclined to think that that statement is a hit ambiguous, but on second reading it will appear to be very clear. Boiled down, it means that the duties that are too high Bhould be reduced while the duties that are too low should be Increased. In other words, those duties that are too low should be Increased and those duties that are too high should be reduced. Not at all crooked or ambiguous. A southern newspaper declared: "The lynch ing of negroes in Illinois and other northern states is no justification of like acts here at home." While that pa per admitted that imitation is the sincerest flattery, It added: "We should restrain our desire to please so far as to refrain from negro lynch A Very Candid Confession. tng just because our brethren up north Indulgo In that pastime." All of which moves tho Now York Tribuno to say: "Tho Barcasm Is not un deserved, and tho serious reflection that whilo tho north loves tho negro at a distance the south, notwithstanding its political discrimination against him, really understands him and offers him his best opportunities Is not without truth.--A very candid confession, indeed. Referring to tho recent decision-delivered by the United States supreme court in tho Hawaiian caso, the Philadelphia Ledger Strong says: "It is a severe strain up- Werds 0n tno revcrcnco n which the people have always held tho tribunal of last resort to know that its latest decision is that of Justice Brown, White, McKonna, Holmes, and Day, traversed by that of Chief Justice Fuller and Justices Har lan, Brewer, and Peckham; that in opon court Justico Harlan was moved dramatically to dis sent altogether from an opinion tho effects of which ho represented in tho darkest language, while the chief justice earnestly and with marked emphasis charged tho majority with tampering with tho plain words of tho congressional resolu tion on which tho Issue hung an act which ho denounced as 'almost criminal" Aldrlch Approved Platform. Tho Washington correspondent for tho New York Tribuno, under date of July 1, said: "In tense satisfaction is expressed by republicans in Washington this evening at the news irom Des Moines that the Iowa con vention han arinnterl Lht tariff plank, which, as told in the Tribuno of May 13, Senator Allison submitted to Senator Aldrlch at tho Hot Springs conference, and which received tho approval of tho senator from Rhode Island." Is it possible that those republicans who yet be lieve in the "Iowa idea" can Imagine that tho tariff plank would have received tho approval of the senator from Rhode Island, admittedly the representative of the trusts on the floor of the senate, if that plank had contained anything that could be used to discourage the maintenance of the shelter which tho trusts find In the tariit? I 1Was Hopelessly Lost. The Waterloo (la.) Courier, commenting upon tho platform adopted by tho Iowa republicans, says: "While tho Cummins forces controlled tho conven tion tho Courier is of the opin ion that a 'shelter to monopoly' Dlank COUlrl not hnvn hnnn forced upon it by any combination of circum stances or factions or interests. They could not oven enforce their demand for a majority of the committee on resolutions, which Indicated tho plain purpose of the delegates not to permit open emasculation of republican doctrine and the ap propriation of democratic theory." The Courier adds that "in the spirit of compromise the con vention proceeded to an unwise limit in accept ing the phraseology of the tariff plank, conjured up as a meaningless concession to tho 'Iowa Idea' element The plank in itself is intelligent enough, but is meaningless as conveying cither the letter or spirit of the revisionists' creed." It Is diffi cult to see with what reason the champions of the "Idea" undertake to claim victory for their cause. Tho Boston Herald says: "During tho nlno years that he occupied tho position of the demo cratic candidate for the presl Look dency Mr. Cleveland always had at a plurality of the votes of the 189. People, and it increased with every time it was put to the test, until in the last Instance it was about three times as large as It had been in that immediately preceding and many times of the proportion that it was when he was first a candidate. Here is a lesson of what the democrats threw away when they abandoned the support of .he principles Mr. Cleveland represented, and also a pointing out of tho way to return to the good fortune with which they then parted." The Herald should now tell its readers something ahout the returns of the congressional elections of 1894 when, under the Cleveland administration, the democracy en countered defeat on every hand. The Herald might also explain how It happened that tho democratic party in 189G was seriously embar rassed because It was required to carry the bur dens of the political sins growing out of Mr. Cleveland's second administration. Commenting upon tho rccont decision dolir crcd by tho United States supremo court in the -. . . Hawaiian caso, tho Springfield against (Mass.) Republican said: "Ac- Common cording to Uo position of the Reason. majority judges, the constitution Is wholly without force or effect upon congress in dealing with any territory or peoplo under .o jurisdiction of tho United States and not ombracod In tho regular states of tho Union, and an Imporlal system of colonies or de pendencies can bo engrafted upon tho republic, subject to a government as absolute and despotic and nrbitrary ni that of the czar. To nay that this Is In harmony with tho principles and system of government Intondod to bo established by. the constitution of tho Unitod States Is to violate tho dictates of common reason and common sense." Tho Wall Street Journal has a fairly accur ate idea of tho purposes of tho men whose in v,.. pt, fluonco and notions provailed in viewy the preparation of tho Iowa rc- For publican platform. The cham- Scnator Hanna. P,ons of tho "Iowa idea" may bo Interested In reading tho Inter pretation placed upon tho platform by the Wall Street Journal. Hero it Is: "Not only has Iowa reindorsed Roosevelt, in stronger language than before, but It has adopted tho Allison compromise tariff plank, rejecting Governor Cummins' mors radical views looking toward tariff reform. Tho 'Iowa Idea,' however, has been burled, and the re publican party will stand In 1904 firmly on its time-honored principle of protection. Senator Hanna's policy of 'let well enough alono Is thus approved." Tho London newspapers appear to bid fair to become, rivals to somo of tholr American fel lows in tno matter of newspa paper gambling schemes. The Springfield (Mass.) Republican says: "Perhaps tho most sensn- tionai uevico yot found for ad vertising a novel Is that of a London publisher who is bringing out In installments a detective story entitled 'Hidden, Not Lost,' the plot of which concerns the loss of GOO sovereigns. So cunningly are fact and fancy blended that, to quote tho prospectus, 'Tho story will bo fiction, tho sovereigns will bo real.' They are to be hid den somewhere in a public place in London, ac ceslblo to all, and the story Itself gives the astuto reador the hint as to whero they are." Commenting upon tho guesses being mado as to tho republican nominee for vice president, tho New York Press guesses that lurn tho rank and file of the republl- the Rascals can party prefer to postpone Out. that discussion until a more pressing matter Is disposed of. According to the Press, which, by tho way. Is a republican paper: "There will bo plenty of time to talk about a running mate for President Roosovelt after the postal service has been rid of tho spoilsmen who Infest it the same spoilsmen who for so long have manipulated the national party organization for their own purposes. When these men are driven out of high government and party stations the discussion' of campaign matters can be taken up by republicans with a little more enthusiasm and much more propriety than at present." London's Gambling Game. Colonel Young Knows. Moines Capital. Those who Imagine that It was tho intention of tho platform writers in the Iowa republican convention to leave any rem nant of the "Iowa idea" may obtain a bit of light by re ferring to an editorial that re cently appeared in the Des The Capital says that the first suggestion that Senator Allison bo chosen to write the platform came from the editor of tho Oskaloosa Herald, and the Capital insists that the editor of the Herald be given all "honor." The Capital quotes from some of tho Herald edi torials, printed after tho Iowa convention ad journed, among the extracts being: "And tho stand-patters were thero, with tho goods all along the line." Concluding, the Capital extends con gratulations to the Oskaloosa Herald, "the paper that pointed the way for Allison's work as a com promiser; the peper that pointed the way to the death of the 'Iowa idea.' " There does not appear to bo any doubt In the mind of the editor of the Capital as to what happened to the "Iowa idea" at the recent republican convention in the Hawk oye State. ei fltaifetffc -. aM -aw auxmtoai j-ffl Mfmm'thmm-m i