The Commoner WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. 1 Jol. 5, No. 4. Lincoln, Nebraska, February 10, 1905. Whole Number a 12 CONTENTS Abraham Lincoln Taft on Ultimate Independence , New Jersey's Trust Factory Enforce the Criminal .Clause "Special Cables" Two Religious Addresses A Bad Practice Inventor and Consumer A Bisnop Defends War - Washington News News of the Week Taft on Ultimate Independence Secretary of War Taft recently appeared before E the ways and means committee and m the course of his testimony declared that he expected "tlio' Filipinos to .have independency ultimately, but,,: added that the present status would probably bo maintained during this generation because of pres ent incapacity for self-government. While this p; seems almost like an endorsement of the demo cratic position it differs in two important respects. ' First it makes no promise and therefore give3 the Filipinos no assurances, and, second, it puts this nation in the position of denying ihe present ca pacity of the Filipinos for self-governn??nt a position which is antagonistic to the Declaration ,k of Independence. There is a vital difference be-' tween a promise of independence to be fulfilled as soon as a stable government can be established and a vague prophecy that independence will bo given some time provided capacity for self gov ernment is. hereafter developed. Capacity for eclf-government is relative we measure the capacity of others by our own ca pacity. If we are many generations ahead of ihe Filipinos how are they going to decrease thevgulf between us unless they make more progress than we? If we are going to deal with the Filipinos according to American principles we must -begin by recognizing that the Filipinos have both th9 right to self-government and the capacity for it and then promising independence proceed to assist them to establish a republican form of government, which, when established, shall 'be turned over to the elected representatives of the people, just as he Cuban government, when formed, was turned er to the Cuban people. JJJ ; mm pi6r )' smmmw'' .- r -j if----wmww$ .. - t , . -im. -n ma-'wmmm ."'" -v.., NrT JA JLMvm KvV m ""SSjCjli & it? if ,y WILL HE "STAND FROM UNDER V'From the Omaha World-Herald t&AWt&AHlW4t rwPMuwi'WM.'mr ABRAHAM tofliWtflWiW'WMnWiMVWMW New Jersey's Trust Factory New Jersey's governor has just taken his an nual exercise in annulling corporate charters and some thirteen hundred promising industrial con spiracies will be known no more, because they were too poor to pay the state tax. Just as long as a trust can collect enough money to satisfy the demands of the state it can prey upon the public without let or hindrance, but woe unto it if -its exactions are not sufficient to enable it to pay the annual bribe required--by the New- Jersey -government. "Soberly," said Abraham Lincoln in 1859, "it is now no child'3 play to save the principles of Jefferson from total overthrow in this nation." In this year of 1905, forty-six years after Abraham Lincoln made that statement, it is now "no child's play" to save the principles of Jeffer son from total overthrow in this nation. Mr. Lincoln was born February 12, 1809, and the ninety-ixth anniversary jf his birth will soon be celebrated. It is not likely that Lincoln's birthday .will be generally celebrated throughout the nation, although many organizations will meet and their members will listen to eloquent ad dresses. The American people can not too often dwell upon the sound advice which this man of the people gave to his countrymen; and it is eminently fitting that the approaching Lincoln anniversary be made an occasion for recalling some of the wise suggestions made by this dis tinguished American. Lincoln was not a man of one idea. His thoughts were not entirely centered upon thy slavery question. He knew that, aside from the institution of slavery, there were other deep-seated LINCOLN) iWWWWWMMWWMWWWWtftf MJWrfWlffni problems with which the people of a republic must grapple and his writings and speeches are full of statements which have direct bearing upon tbe great contest in which the American people are now engaged a contest wherein it is to be determined whether a plutocracy or the people shall govern in this great republic. "I hold," said Mr. Lincoln, "If the Almighty had ever made a set of men that should do all the eating and none of the work, he would have made them with mouths only and no hands; and if he had ever made another class that he in tended should do all the work, and none of the eating, he would have made them without mouths and with all hands. But inasmuch as he has chosen to make men in that way, if anything is proved it is that those hand3 and mouths are to be co-operative through life end not to be inter fered with. That they are to go forth and improve their conditions, as I have been trying to illus trate, is the inherent right given to mankind directly by the Maker." Many of the things written and said by Mr. Lincoln seem to have been written for this very InmnVHiffliMHUa aatt-w tsmtfPT.rnr itau-nrMtknmitiMwmMMh