'.(Hnwiw".' ' " VrW. 'mvrffifffKgiiffr -W J V n tSWfWWMjIWF JW The Commoner, WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR t N T ? i - '.;i: Vol. 6. No. 12 Lincoln, Nebraska, .April 6, 1906 ,?. Whole Number 272 5 - J 7 A K'. -V r T " CONTENTS N . Mb. Bbyah's Lettkb" A Powerful Wjcaton. Peepetitai. Fbanoiiisbs . "Tua Touon That Makes Us Kin" Who Iq. to Blame? ReEOBMING THE CAPTAIN MOBTON AND THE PaCKEBS TiiE Real "Defendebs" rT. "" Washington City Lettee comment on cljrbent topics-' ' Home Depaetment " i, Whether Common ob Not News of the Week-- ' REGULATION AND OWNERSHIP ' i' 4 A reader at Heppner, Oregon, expresses the ,C j--opinion that The Commoner is wasting time in ' advocating railroad rate legislation.- This reader siys: "Why waste time scrapping over rates and , such rot when everyone knows that such things ..; an not do any good, There are only two issues, tA public ownership and socialism." ,. The Commoner believes.'tbat public-ownership tj&f-JXifl lo necessary in order tptftring -alioutr.the re- ' ' . forinB required by public interests.. But there ,Jl are many people who, while . favoring these re .!" forms,,, object to government ownership and pre- fer r government regulation. Regulation is one step in the right direction, and The Commoner thinks it is the duty of all who believe in gov ernment ownership to give encouragement to all ' honest efforts toward government regulation. If it -shall be demonstrated, as we believe it ultimate ly will, that government regulation will not pro vide the necessary permanent remedies, then those who, while honestly advocating gov--. ernment regulation, differ with us as to govern- ment ownership will unite in the effort to place the transportation lines in the absolute control ,' -bMhe people. JJJ A SPELLING REFORMER "K Josh Billings once remarked that he wouldn't ' give a cent for a man who couldn't spell a word xuore than one way. This remark is recalled by Mr. Carnegie's recent generous contribution of money to the cause of spelling reform, the chiefs of this reform having in view what they call the simplification of our language. It is gratifying to know that Mr. Carnegie has determined to become a reformer, even though hisjirst efforts - at reform do not comprehend anything of great value to the people. It may simply be the fore runner of other reforms that he will champion. There is tariff reform, for instance. With a .little -iglactice at spelling reform Mr. Carnegie may yet ..become a tariff reformer. No one will venture to submit facts and figures to deny the charge that "- the tariff which has made Mr. Carnegie enormous-- ly wealthy has cast a "bad spell" over this country. . " JJJ "JUSTIFICATION" Referring to Judge Humphrey's decision on - the beef trust case, the New York Tribune (re publican) says: "While from one point of view - . this is embarrassing, from another It justifies - -" the much criticised attitude of the president re ; specting the prosecution of individuals who had co-operated witn me govenimcui, w uuie ruiu abuses and, as an 'incident thereto, had revealed ;: "v long standing methods which needed correction." Yet, somehow or other, Mr. Roosevelt does not appear-to be greatly elated by Judge -Hum- - phrey's "justification" of the adminlstration'3 pos- : itton in the Paul Morton case. THE TWO DROMI6S W !' . 1. , 1 ,, I, -- i i' 1 " 1 ' ' ' ' in 1 1 1 1 , in 1 11 1 1 I, 1 I j. . "Methinks you are my glass and not my brother; I see by you V am: a sweet faced youth." Comedy of Errors. CHINA'S AWAKENING Mr. Bryan's Twelfth Letter . ,; In what I have said of the Chirfese govern ment, system of education, religion and super stitions, I have referred to the nation as it has been for some twenty centuries chained to tradi tion, stagnant, asleep. Society was stratified; those in power seemed to have no higher aspira tion than to live upon the labor of the masses, and the masses seemed to entertain no thought of emancipation. The life of the people was oc cupied with ceremony, but there was no genuine fellowship or sympathetic connection between them, outside of the family 'tie, and even the fam ily was likely to be a storm center because of the conflicting interests collected under one roof. Edu cation was monopolized by a comparatively few, and there was no breadth to sucii instruction as was given. Superstition took the place of religion and the placating of the spirits of the deceased outweighed the nurture and development of those still on earth. But a change is taking place in China such as has revolutionized Japan within the last half century. The sleeping giantess, whose drowsy eyes have so long shut out the rays of the morn ing sun, is showing unmistakable signs of an awakening. There was a vitality among her peo ple which even two thousand years of political apathy could not exhaust a sturdiness which centuries of poverty and superstition could not entirely, destroy. Increasing contact with Europe and America is having its influence and the ex ample of Japan is even more potent, for the people of Japan are not only neighbors, but are more like them in color .and race characteristics, Let me note some of the evidences of this change. The government, so long an absolute despo tism, is about to become a constitutional mon archy. In 1898 the emperor under the influence of some radical reformers, prepared a. program almost revolutionary- in Its character. Recogniz ing that his aunt, the Dowager Empress, would oppose him, he prepared to put nor under guard while the change was being made, but the old lady, learning of his plan, promptly took him in hand and made him a prisoner in his own palace. Since that time she has been the unquestioned ruler of the empire, the nominal emperor affixing his" slgnaturo to the, papers which she prepares. But so rapidly has the situation developed that she is now instituting the very reforms for tho suggestion of which she so recently imprisoned her nephew. A commission of prominent officials is now abroad, some in Europe, some In America, studying the constitutions and governmental in stitutions of other countries. What a concession when we remember the self-sufficiency of China, the characterization of surrounding nations as "rude tribes" and the use of the term "barbar ians" to designate even those with whom she made treaties'! It is reported that the dowager-em press re cently called her councilors together and -asked how long it would take to establish a constitu tional government. When told that it would prob ably renutre twelve or fifteen years, she replied that it must be dooe sooner than that as she could not hope to live much longer and wanted it in operation before she died. Whether she ap preciates the full Importance of tho change may be doubted, but the fact that the great nations, with the exception of Russia, have constitutions has doubtless made its impression upon her and ,R"B8ia'i defeat at thr hands of tho Japanese, I lit HM&VSJk U&L ,V ,. ,4kAit di, ..rtrtaMiflfaatt Bftji iMnfc,A ..M4l