'j "ffjp'' rSWj t The Commoner 9 FEBRUARY 22, .1907 ment, only to take the canal out of their hands and turn it over to contractors? The widespread belief Ulat Thomas F. Ryan is the financial power behind the contractors who seek this work makes the duty of the government to avoid entanglement With any such combinatidn all the more obvious. Mr. Ryan denies tiTat he is connected with the Oliver company. So long, however, as John l. McDonald is put forward to head the contractors, and so long as Ryan himself is so busy in the fore ground, visiting the president and showing his hand in other Avays, it will take more than his diplomatic denial to convince. But if it is not Ryan it will be somebody else. It is the principle that is wrong. No private individual or corpora tion should be entrusted with this groijt undertak ing. It is a public service that should be divorced from every suspicion of jobbery." DR. WILLIAM II. RUSSELL, the famous Crimean war correspondent, died last week, aged 87. Dr. Russell was familiarly known in this country as "Bull Run" Russell, and was the Lon don Times' war correspondent during the Crimean war. His Crimean letters were remarkable for their interest aud they were widely copied in the papers of the United States. When the civil Avar became inevitable the Times sent Dr. Russell o the United States, and he witnesseTl the first battle of Bull Run. His sympathies were Avitli the soiuli and his description of that battle and his prophe cies of the outcome of the Avar made him odious in the camps of the Union armies. He was de risively called "Bull Run" Russell, and soon was recalled to England by the Times. But Dr. Rus sell's .Avork in the Crimen wns such that he aviII ahvavs be remembered with gratitude. It was his description of the dread work of filth and disease In the camps that aroused action which resulted in materially mitigating the hardships of the soldieis. It Avas after reading his letters that Florence Nightingale gathered about her the thirty or forty earnest young women and proceeded to the Crimea to do the magnificent work that has since re sutled in the organization of the Red Cross. THE UNITED MINE WORKERS' JOURNAL, representing 300,000 organized mine workers, opposes the ship subsidy steal in the name of or ganized hibor. The Journal says: "This sugar 'steamship syndicate has virtually given our Pa cific, islands to Japan under the cry of cheap labor. They are endeavoring to do the same tiling to our Pacific coast. At the time they are working this foul scheme they are also demanding a high tariff on sugar and tobacco, ostensibly to 'protect Amer ican labor.' The employers of coolies championing the cause of American labor. Bah! If the Ameri can Avorkingmen were all of the same mind as the editor of the Journal the employers of cheap and coolie labor would also have to compete. It Avould'be laid down in unmistakable terms that if the American Avorkingmen had to compete with coolie labor there would also bo universal free trade Avith the world. The hypocrisy of protection to American labor would bo done away AV.ith, and speedilv at that. Let no man deceive himself Avitli this talk of protection while the interests that ar profiting bv it arc determined to flood the country Avith coolies. Every steamship brings tangible evidence of this. Already in San Antonio, Tex., the negroes arc being driven from employment ny Japanese. The white laborer and mechanic m the Pacific coast states have reached the alternative of working at coolie wages or become criminals or hoboes. This is no time for theorizing or spec ulative pamphleteering. It is a time to act, to let the 'interests'. knoAV that this tiling niust cense or there Avill be more of it than they aviII like to confront." ' -' O PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, like thousands of other men, is disgusted with the disposition to go into details sIioavii by neAVspapcrs in report ing the Thnw minder trial. On February 11, the president gave to the Associated Press tins state ment: "The president has communicated AVitu the postmaster general to know whether it is fea sible to bar from the mails the papers that p the full and disgusting particulars ot the thaw case. He does not know whether or not it is fea sible but if it is he wishes it done." r ANDIDATES for positions in the new stntewf 'VJ Oklahoma are flocking to Washington, lho Washington correspondent to the Houston, .Lex.it,, Tost savs: "The federal judgeships are regarded as the best plums and the fight for them is s hap tag faster than for other places. Oklahoma w ill lluno two district judges. John R. Buford a judge ,..r one of the existing districts, wants to be made the .presiding Judge of the western district of the now state and his friends are putting up a fight. Charles Watson, a brother of Ropresenta h cjnt son of Indiana, is seeking to become clerk of om. of the courts and Ib lining up his friends. The president has given all inquirers to understand that he Avill pay no attention to patronage until the state has been admitted. He will then listen lo the appeals to bo made. The president is also non committal as to his action when the new Okla homa constitution readies him In case it contains the proposed "Jim crow" provisions. It is believed, however, that he would refuse to issue the proc lamation required by the enabling act passed by congress on the theory that such a distinction no 'tween the races is repugnant to the federal constitution." I") EPRESENTATIVE POLLARD of Nebraska, Aj republican, announces that he is in favor of the ship subsidy bill. The Lincoln News, a repub lican paper, calls Mr. Pollard to task and says: "The ship subsidy scheme is based upon grat'l. It means that in return for benefits of n doubtful value Ave shall tax ourselves tAVo or three times that value. It is a poor business proposl-. tion, it js not proper function of government, anfl it is Avrong in principle. Mr. Pollard ought to get in closer touch Avitli the sentiment of his people. The state legislature undoubtedly expressed the ideas of the great majority of the people of Ne braska in its resolution of condemnation. We feel sure that it at least expressed the sentiment 'n Mr. Pollard's district. While it is true that the bill uoav pending before congress ajpropriates but a small amount, yet everybody recognizes that this is but the entering Avedge for the installation of Avhat avo believe to be a vicious system." O HEALTH OFFICER SOMERS of Atlantic City says that kissing causes la grippe. An At lantic City dispatch to the New York American says: "In order to prevent the spread of intl enza here Dr. Seiners has issued a statement Avarning the public against osculation. Dr. Som ers holds that 0 per cent of all kisses are laden Avith germs, particularly grip germs, and that it is not possible to sterilize kisses, therefore lie is sues the following public statement: 'In view of the rapid spread of grip throughout the city, and in view of the known fact that osculation, com monly described as kissing, is the most fruitful agent of the propagation of the grip germ, it is advised that temperance and moderation in respect to said practice bo more generally observed.' Chief Inspector Beck and the board of health is backing Dr. Somers up in his attack on kissing, and the council Avill be asked for an appropriation to have the Avarning printed and displayed in rail road stations and public places in general." O THE BERLIN cafes are drawing the color line. A Berlin cablegram to the New York World says: "A 1'cav nights ago a negro Avas hustled out of one of the leading cafes for making eyes at a barmaid, following which a notice was posted on the door reading, 'Negroes not admitted.' Next morning tAvo other Avell knoAvn cafes followed this example, 'and it is expected Unit the boycott Avill extend to the whole of Berlin." O A READER in the Philadelphia Public Ledger recently quoted General Viscount Wolseley as giving an' outsider's view of our late unpleas antness. The general said: "In common with all southerners, Lee firmly believed that each Of the old states had a legal and indisputable right, l)y its individual constitution and by its act of union, to leave at Avill Uie great union into which it had separately entered as a sovereign stale. This was with him an al-ticle of faith of which ho wns as sure as of any divine truths lie found in the Bible." O SAMUEL TROTH of Philadelphia, writing to the Public Ledger with reference to the above quotation says that in a letter to his son dated January 2.'), 18(51, quoted by his biographer, the Rev. J. William Jones, on page 1.'57, Robert E. Lee wrote: "Secession is nothing but revolution. The framers of our constitution never exhausted so much labor, wisdom and forbearance In its formation and Mirrounded it with so many guards and securities, if it was intended to be broken bv every member of the confederacy at will. It wns intended for perpetual union, so expressed in the preamble, and for the establishment of a gov.r eminent, not a compact, which can only be dis solved by revolution or the consent of all the peo nlo in convention assembled. It is idle to talk of secession. Anarchy Avould have been estab lished, and not a government, by Washington, Hamilton, Jefferson, Madison and the other pat riots of the revolution." ' ' o REPRESENTATIVE WHARTON of Illinois has introduced a resolution authorizing the president to exclude from the mails any and all publications "containing the revolting details" of the Thaw murder trial and cases of similar na ture. In Lebanon county, Kentucky, the grand jury returned Indictments against the Cincinnati Enquirer, Louisville Herald, Louisville Times and Evening Post for printing and circulating "offen sive and indecent proceedings of the Thaw trial." The Union League club of New York has adopted a resolution commending the president and other federal officials for their efforts to sup press from public circulation the details of iv Thaw case. A Pallas, Texas, dispatch carried by the Associated Press follows: "W. II. Atwed, United States district attorney for the northern district of Texas, issued a letter of AvaVnlng to the newspapers of his district with reference to the publication of the TIwiav trial proceedings. M, At well calls attention to that section of the fed oral statutes which prohibits the depositing of obscene matter for mailing and delivery in the United States, and says: The nauseating testi mony of a witness in the Thaw case, now being tried in New York, in my opinion is superlative obscenity within the statute above mentioned and federal courts so have repeatedly held. The re production of further testimony giving rise to libertinous thought and forwarded through the United -States mail in tills district will be made the basis for presentments to the next federal grand jury convened in this district.' " any one ran from PROFESSOR CREEXIIILL asks if can determine how fast Hiawatha the following data: "Strong of arm was IlhiAvalha; He could shoot ten arrows upAvard And the tenth had left the bow-string Ere the first lo earth had fallen. SAvift of foot was Hiawatha; He could shoot aii arrow from him And run forward Avith such swiftness That the arrow fell behind him." The London Post answers: "Neglecting the resistance of the air and granting that Hiawatha could shoot one arrow a second, the solution Is as folloAVs: The time of lliglit of the arrows shot upAvard must haAe been nine seconds. Therefore, the velocity Avith Avhich they Avere shot, being equal to the time multiplied into half the value of the constant of gravity, Avas 11-1 feet a second. Now, In shooting an arroAV from him Hiawatha, to obtain the furthest fight, would let fiy at an angle of 45 degrees, and by a simple trigonomet rical calculation avo therefore arrive at the fact that the horizontal velocity of the arrow Avould he rather less than 1M feet a second, and Avould In fact be 102 feet a second, or 70 miles an hour. HiaAvatha Avould therefore have to run faster than this. Could he do It on a sprint? Again having recourse to calculation avo find that an arroAV shot at 1-M feet a second Avould fly 210 yards, or nearly a furlong. Hiawatha Avould run that distance in about seven seconds, so that he would be able to give the present holder of the record some 113 yards start." W HEN PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT returned from Panama he sent to the senate a mes sage on the canal. Referring to tills the Balti more Sun says: "Mr. Roosevelt proved that the canal was rapidly being built by producing wllb his message actual photographs of forty-eight scenes, among Avhich Avere the following: 'Presi dent Roosevelt climbing a steainshovel.' 'Presi dent Roosevelt making four speeches at the same tilne to the astonished multitude.' 'President Roosevelt eating his Avay through a Panama din ner.' 'President Roosevelt Avatching at their work the three laborers avIio are actually digging the canal.' 'President Roosevelt's smile, Avalk, face, feet, ears, boots, clothes, and conversation in sun dry front, rear, and profile views.' To avoid an other such message, the senate agreed to let Mr. Roosevelt dig a three-story canal, Avitli basement and cellar, and put in modern plumbing if he thinks best. Noav Senator Beveridge proposes to embellish his speech on child labor with all kinds of harrowing photographs, accompanied by af fidavits of the photographer that they Avere taken by a camera and not by a hand-organ. These photographs of the evils of child labor ought to be mighty aids to the Indiana senator's SAveeping eloquence." GOVERNOR HUGHES' HINT In a Lincoln Day speech Governor nughes of NeAV York said that whenever it appeared that the interests of the people tis a whole imperatively demands the extension of the federal power "the whole people will provide for the assumption of that power." A very plain hint indeed to those public officials who may he tempted to assume authority never contemplated by the builders of our government - '10 MSjjAgmmm&iXiit'iA -. .