SffisPcsSEl w&&rifafflM9mmimm The Commoner. VOLUME 7; NUMBER 35 6 K i'h ,(i I i '! ibr; Wl M:" :iu;i I hm! J 11 j ij' -it ' 1 41 fail Wim iinll' J "U rtw i, It The Commoner. ISSUED WEEKLY. VlI.T.TAM J. IJUVAM Editor nnd Proprietor. 1UCJIA.1U) h. llKrCAhVK .A MocltUn Editor. ClIAHLICS W. MllYAN Publisher. EdltorJnl Koomu nnd JIuhIiicm Ofllco 324330 South 12th Strcot. Entered nt tho PoHtodlco at Lincoln, Neb., ns Bccond-clnfcs matter OiteYonr - - 8J.OO TJnco Montlin - JBo KlxMoritliH - - .00 Single Copy - - Co In CJulw of Five or moro, Sample Copies Frco. Per Tear - - ,7S Foreign PofitURoMContBExtrn.. SIIISOIUPTIONS can bo sent direct to Tho Com moner. Thoy can also bo sent through newspapers which havo advertised a clubbing rato, or through local agents, whoro sub-agonts havo been appoint ed. All remittances should bo sent by postofllco money order, express order, or by bank draft on Now York or Chicago. Do not send Individual chocks, stamps or money. 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' Address all communications to THE COMMONER, Lfncoln, Nob. But will Speaker Cannon be able to sec the brakes when the president takes the whip and starts the congressional team? "Uncle Joe" Cannon says that the next con gress should do nothing. "Masterly inactivity" seems to be the slogan of the standpatters. Is Secretary Taft the great postponer in favor of postponing national Incorporation or is that one of the few things that should be at tended to at once? The' news feature about the report of trouble in the Oklahoma republican convention 'was concealed in the fact that therd were enough 'republicans present to permit of a riot. ' ' , A. lot pf Oklahomans are opposing the adop tion , of , tho constitution ostensibly on patriotic grounds, but really for the reason that state opd, -would end their territorial graft. i. 'nn TA ?teel trust made a net Profit of $45,- r.000,000 during the last quarter. This "is in .money The moral profit will not be known until the celestial bookkeeper strikes a balance. A New York farmer is mourning because a barber cut off his twenty years growth of whiskers while he was aBleep. He can console himself with the thought that they will havo time to grow out again before tho republican party reforms the tariff. Schonoburg.Germany, has decided to put a double tax on vacant city lots. Is this a blow at the "unearned increment?" It is easv to guess what the speculators will say about this scheme to prevent them from profiting by the improvements made by others. The Filipinos should begin their legislative work by passing a resolution declaring that the Z? n(mera?e? ,0f ?e PhlPPine commission should be selected by the Filipino assomblv They can not be expected to represent the Fili. pinos unless they are selected by them. J7R nTnhn ntted States government is spending $75,000 to ascertain the population of Okla homa ari& yet Secretary Taft complains that the democrats did not carve out the legislative dis tricts with exactness. Are the democrat pre sumed to know more about the population Uian the government officials do? Washington Letter Washington, D. C, September OfRecently tho New York Herald came out with a strong editorial urging that the United States should sell the Philippine Islands. The Herald did not qualify its recommendation by suggesting the purchaser. It merely urged that this nation should got rid of a province which has been only a source of expense expense in money and expense in the lives and the blood and the health of young Americans. A proposition of this sort coming from an ultra conservative newspaper like the Herald has naturally awakened widespread interest and discussion. There is in Washington a subordi nate office of the war department called the bureau of insular affairs. The chief of this bureau, General Edwards, is now engaged in making an estimate of what the Philippines has cost this country to the present day. The initial expenditure of course was $20,000,000, but tho resulting expenditure for the suppression of tho native uprisings and the policing of the islands runs well up into the hundreds of millions. General Edwards says that his estimate is al most completed, but it can not be made public until congress meets, when it will be presented as an official report. Talking to that universal character, the average man, any suggestion that the United States should rid itself of the Philippines will be met by two arguments: First, that having taken tho islands we owe a responsibility to their people and must discharge.it; second, that the islands are necessary to us as a naval and military outpost in order to maintain our con trol of the Pacific. As to the first argument. The Filipinos do not seem to regard bur responsibility very seriously, nor do they prize our benevolent pur poses toward them as they should. After we had been in possession for nine years we gave them an opportunity to vote for representatives to a national assembly of their own. What was the result? Four-fifths of the representatives elected stood for the immediate independence of the islands, and made their campaign on that issue. That seems really ungrateful on the part of the natives who have for so long enjoyed the beneficence of American military rule, have been taxed to pay the bills of their rulers and have had the market for their best products shut off by the operation of the United States tariff. As a matter of fact the movement which the Herald has inaugurated is meeting with sup port from unexpected quarters. That paper has been first to give public expression to what has long been the opinion of representatives and senators at the capital. It is probably a safe statement that nine out of ten of our public men wish we could be out of the Philippines with honor. It iB true that not all think we should sell. Many believe, and with reason, that should we sell it it should be to the Filipi nos themselves, taking their bonds and maintain ing tho neutrality of the islands by our national power exactly as we support the Monroe doc trine. Others hold that we should wash our hands of a bad bargain and sell to Japan the only probable purchaser. ' It is rather curious to find a public man so closely allied with the administration as John Barrett, chief of the international bureau of American republics, publicly urging the sale of the islands. Few men in the United States know more concerning Asiatic conditions than he. He has served not merely as a journalist in Asia, but was minister to Siam and to several South American countries. He said yesterday that he had urged upon President McKinley im mediately after the conclusion of the Spanish war that the United States should attempt to exchange the Philippines with England for the British possessions in the West Indies, including Jamaica, Bermuda and British Guiana Any one who will take a map of the United States and study the relations which these islands bear to this country will see how inestimably more valuable they would be than the far off Philip pines. Mr. Barrett tells me that the suggestion was received with interest and without unfriend liness' on the part of England, and that Presi dent McKinley himself at first favored it. Later the president said that the possible moral re sponsibility of this country toward the Filipinos was such that it might seem necessary to hold tho islands until the, natives should be fit for self government. Who is going to judge when they are so fit, Mr. Barrett did not specify, in their last election the Filipinos seemed to indi- eate that if they "were the judges they are al ready well fitted for self-government. The acting director of the census bureau in Washington said yesterday that practically .ninety per cent of the census of Oklahoma had been completed. It indicates that that terri tory has about 1,500,000 population. Under the enabling act passed by the Fifty ninth congress Oklahoma and the Indian Ter ritory are to be joined in one state as soon as the people of both unite in approval of a con stitution. Nearly 400,000 inhabitants of tho Indian Territory are to be added to the Okla homa population when the wedded territories shall become a state. In brief the new state if Mr. Roosevelt, Mr. Taft and Mr. Roosevelt's Rough Rider appointees will permit it to become a state, will have a population equalling that 0! Alabama, California, Iowa, Minnesota, New Jer sey, Virginia, and closely approaching such his toric commonwealths as Massachusetts, Michigan or Indiana. It is seriously suggested now, and strenu lously urged by Mr. Taft, who speaks for the president,' that tlfe two million people in the proposed state of Oklahoma are unfit for self 'government. The most serious charge brought against them is that they created a constitu tional convention which had a nine to one ma jority of democrats; and that this convention adopted a constitution which strove to re-establish in that southwestern community the rights of the citizens that date back to the time of Magna Charta. It prohibits government by in junction; it is in line with the constitution of the United States in demanding for every man a trial by a jury of his peers. It provides for the truest form of democracy by establishing the initiative and referendum and the election of senators by the direct vote of the people; it makes provision for the conservation of public lands and for the proper control of public fran chises to the end that these gifts from the people shall not be used to, exploit the people. Yet Mr. Taft goes into Oklahoma and at tacks the constitution and even more bitterly be rates the ninety per cent of the voters of the territory who adopted it. It seems to be a case of the eleven obstinate jurors. Taft is the one wise man; the some tens of thousands of voters who live in Oklahoma, have built it up, who know its needs are expected to submit to instruction upon their own affairs from the pro consul of the man in the White House. WILLIS J. ABBOT. MR. BRYAN IN OKLAHOMA (Continued from Page 3) cratic members from Oklahoma may cast the de ciding vote on impbrtant- legislation. "The president has proposed the national incorporation of railroads and other corporations engaged in interstate commerce. As I have , praised the president whenever he has recom- , mended anything good, I shall not hesitate to criticise this proposal as one of the most danger- ous devices in recent years. Its object is to transfer from the states to the nation entire control of railroads and other large corpora tions. "And, my friends, because of my personal , acquaintance with him, I want to ,uay one word about your candidate for congress in this dis trict. Mr. Fulton livjd in my district when I was a candidate for congress fifteen and seventeen years ago and I had no more faithful, loyal suppprter in my campaign. At that time, this, young, man had developed a character that made him admired and loved by all who knew Iiim then; but he has had fifteen years added to his intellectual stature, and hehas grown in strength and character, and I rejoice that you, in this district, are likely to have as your con gressman, a man who fills my ideal as to what a congressman ought to be in the United States. I believe that he has the ability. I believe that he has the strength of will, and I know that his heart beats in sympathy with the toiling masses of his state. I know him so well, that I am willing to endorse in advance, any speech he will make, every vote he will cast, and if he goes wrong, charge it up to me I stand behind him." ' OOOO The eastern papers are exploiting a pur ported interview in which a friend, of -Mr. Bryan is represented as announcing that -Mr. Bryan has chosen the chairman of the next national con yention and the chairman of the next national cpmmittee. The Commoner does not believe that the gentleman .quoted made , the state ments attributed to him. But in any. event no spnslble man would .believo"thaJ; bespoke t with authority. M s ,,;..,.,. V ; IP'4. fflili J !M '.'jL..."Bt. ...j-dj; iwpitarf.yi.aLlifa.- --n