w?r&m'wmim 'wgwr'- I The Commoner VOLUME 13, NUMBER 25 fCURE6NT 1 1 If v ! ttt'w.'wmw -- 'SAS .w N CrtffS&Msaa. ;;3L:2m w3 M. i I? s THE treaty of London, signed by Turkey and tho Balkan states, is very far-reaching. Referring to this treaty, a writer in tho Denver News saya: Under tho terms of tho treaty tho Ottoman was formed to cede to tho allies and Albania 60,000 square miles of his European territory. This virtually drives tho Turk out of .Europo and leaves him only with a narrow strip of 5,000 square miles guarding Constanti nople, tho Bosphorus, tho Dardenelles and tho Sea of Marmora. Tho "sick man of Europo" has overy reason for increased illness after his ex perience in treaty-making in London. It was only natural to expect that tho pact would not bo ratified without a strong protest from Monte negro, the plucky little principality stuck in tho hills abovo Cettinge bay. For of all of tho allies that battled against tho continuance of Turkish authority in Europe, Montenegro, gauged by her size and resources, was easily the first in bravery and unselfish sacrifice. Monte negro's dream of years has been the acquisition of Scuarti, as an outlet to tho sea as a defense in times of national poril, and for tho sake of tho rich stretch of lowlands that surrounds it. Montenegro won this right by tho conquest of arms but the bullies of Europe affected to seo in its retention by Montenegro a menace to Austro-Hungary stability and they forced its evacuation under the frowning guns of their dreadnoughts. The protest of the Montenegrin delegate, registered after the treaty was signed, was not alone historic, but pathetically so. "Wo have signed," said he, "because nothing else remained for us to do. We are profoundly dis satisfied with the terms on which we have been obliged to accept it. Proportionately, my coun try made greater sacrifices than any of the allies, yet, after a succesful war, we have been despoiled of the fruits of our victories. We have been made tho whipping-boy of Europe." And he told the precise truth, this representative of one of the pluckiest races that has ever struggled anywhere for national honor and tho right to greater prosperity. The treaty of May 30 last was the seventh in importance which was signed in London. All of them had to do with the regulation of affairs in the Levant and were closely connected with Turkish and Grecian affairs. The first was in 1827, when Great Britain, France and Russia sought to obtain the independence of Greece, which they did establish three years later through the second treaty of London. In 1840 Great Britain, Prus sia and Russia, unknown to France, arrived at an understanding "for the pacification of the Levant," and establishing the heredity of the Pashalik of Egypt in tho family of Mehemot All. A year later, almost to a day, Austria, France, Great Britain, Prussia, Russia and Turkey reached an agreement to close tho Dardanelles and the Bosphorus, and in 1863 the same powers, with tho exception, of course, of Turkey, forced the cession of the Ionian islands to Greece. Tho penultimate treaty of London was in 1871 when Germany, Austria, France, Great Britain, Italy and Russia, abrogated the neu trality of the Black sea. v w1 w SENATOR SIMMONS, chairman of the senate finance committee, has issued the following statement: "So much has been said in the press concerning the president's alleged connec tion with certain amendments recommended by certain sub-committees of tho finance committeo that is misleading and erroneous, that in order that the public may understand tho real facts, I wish to say that, while tho president has ex pressed to tho members of the finance com mittee, as he Is reported to have expressed to members of the ways and means committeo when tho bill was in the house, strong views and convictions with respect to placing on tho free list both wool and sugar, he has not, so far as I know, expressed any views aB to tho other pro visions of tho bill except when his opinion has been asked, and has not in any way attempted to dictate to tho committeo. The view current in tho newspapers to tho effect that a sub-com-mitteo of tho finance committee had decided to Tecommendthat wheat and live stock as well as meat ana nour should go on tho free list at tho instance and dictation of the president, ia not correct. So far as I know, tho president has expressed no opinion with respect to this matter except that when told of tho probable action of the sub-committee putting these articles on the free list, in response to an in quiry as to his opinion on the subject, he ex pressed approval. Nor is it truo that the sub committee adopted the countervailing proviso with respect to wheat and flour at tho presi dent's dictation after much discussion, as has been represented. On the contrary, the presi dent has expressed no views so far as I know to the committeo on this subject, and tho com mittee's action with reference to the counter vailing duties on these articles was taken at the same time it was decided to recommend that they be put on the free list." v v i&& IN an editorial entitled, "Tired of Life," tho Washington Post, in commenting on a sui cide prominent in tho current press dispatches, points out some of tho real underlying causes that lead to self-destruction. It says: "Eugene Maggi and his wife, said to be the wealthiest couple in Switzerland, recently killed them selves. He was aged 41, and she 35. Together they were worth $10,000,000, They had no children. They were tired of life, and so ended it. This is a rather strange story of riches, comparative youth, and unbearable discontent with existence. It could hardly have been a case of momentary insanity, for two persons seldom go insane at the same time. Too much money may have led to satiety, yet that hardly satisfies the situation. Many theories will be advanced, any one of which is probably worth as much as any other. Perhaps they had already ceased to live, in the true sense. Lacking the spur of need or the Incentive of further ambi tion, they may have seen no reason for con tinuing. Tho absence of children gave them nothing-to look forward to, either for responsi bility or comfort. What a blesing it would have been if these two had been confronted with a genuine trouble, a positive sorrow, to break the lethargy that found its only relief in death! For the Maggis the problem has been solved in a somewhat forlorn and hopeless way. For others like afflicted, there remains tho solace of the day's work, of engrossing self-forgetfulness in a worthy task, of even intense activity in do ing nothing. Work may be a blessing or a curse, as one chooses to view it. In either case some kind of occupation is necessary if health! sanity, and an abiding interest in life are to be maintained. Rightly preached, the gospel of work is not championed merely for work's sake It is rather for the exultation that its accomp lishment brings. The game is worth more than the candle. Nothing stands still In the living universe. One grows by what one does. It Is the living, and not the having lived, that counts. The closed blade alone gets rusty, and it is only the closed house that gathers dampness, dust, disease, and death. A man or a woman must have something to do. Children force many to an active and cheerful life. The lonely are miserable only when they retire within them selves. The most morbid people ore those that are isolated from their kind. The sano way is to wear the harness of honest toil or even honest frivolity to the end. Then life lasts till the last breath, and the game holds zest until its natural end. & J& FAG DAY waB celebrated in the different government departments at Washington with appropriate ceremonies. Tho Washington correspondent for the New York Herald says: In tho state department Mr. Bryan, the secre tary, made a brief address. At his request President Wilson agreed to make a speech at next year's celebration. A double quartette composed of employes of tho bureau of con struction and repair of tho navy department cal ed on tho secretaries of state, war and navv 22? B?5 Patritic airs, such as "America "Tho Star Spangled Banner," "Dixie" and "Old Black Joe." Tho exercises opened with the singing of "America," after which a bripf Bpeoch was mado by M. D. Schaefer, chief clerk of tho bureau of construction and repair on tho birth of tho flag. This was the fi?st cel celebration of its kind in the government a. partments. At exercises in the court of the in" terior department, presided over by Secrph Lane, Mr. Bryan vividly pictured a world nf friendly nations among which war would hav no place. He believed that long steps now were being taken to Insure universal peace and added: "Love is a stronger force than fear It is the proud boast of this nation that our'flae is loved, rather than feared. No gun ever mounted is as strong as a great thought. Great thoughts are the controlling forces of the world and love is the basis of every great thought" In an apotheosis to the flag, Mr. Bryan compared the ideals represented respectively by Christ and Pilate: "The -power of the unarmed Man of Galilee is represented by that flag, and no man will dare to put it on the side of Pilate who was the embodiment of force. Let us al ways make it a symbol of the nation's purpose a purpose pure enough to be represented by such a flag. The ideals of this nation shall bo greater than its armament and it always shall represent a cause so just that it will bear the blessing of Almighty God." & & & BISHOP CANDLER, of the Methodist Epis copal church, south, spoke recently at At lanta, Ga and charged that the recently an nounced gift of one million dollars by Andrew Carnegie to the Vanderbilt university at Nash ville, Tenn., is "not a donation, but an effort to get control over the university property," and that money is being offered for this pur pose. Bishop Candler characterized Mr. Car negie's offer of a donation to the university as an "impudent proposal of an agnostic steel monger." "This loud-heralded gift," Bishop Candler's statement recites, "on close inspec tion of its terms appears to be no gift at all, but a shrewd attempt to get control of a part of the property of the Vanderbilt university in order to set up a medical school fashioned ac cording to the particular ideas of Mr. Carnegie. Vanderbilt university belongs to the Methodist Episcopal church, south. The church ownership having been denied, suit was brought some time ago to settle the question, and the chancery court decided every point in the church's favor. From that decision an appeal was taken and is now pending in the supreme court of Tennes see." Bishpp Candler quoted Mr. Carnegie's letter in which the latter states his objections to denominational control of colleges and uni versities and imposes conditions on his donat on consequent upon determination of the question of denominational control of the university. "It appears," 'said Bishop Candler, "also that the Episcopalians see in this affair an effort to defeat the proposed medical department of tho university of the south. If they are correct in their opinion, Mr. Carnegie is proposing at one blow to destroy the medical school of tne Episcopalians and denature the medical schools of the Methodists and raise on the ruins of ooin a Carnegieized establishment in his own image and likeness." V 2lfa t7 HE people of the District of Columbia were Vioii Ar ... i, TTfi Qfotps BUDrerno court. A Washington dispatch to the WJ York World says: The federal civil rlgl s aw was pronounced unconstitutional by the unite States supreme court. The opinion was unani mous. It was read by Judge Van Beyanter. This decision removes the last slender barrier standing between negroes and discrimination the matter of public utilities. It was the oniy legislative thread upon which they could cu tend for equal accommodations when travel"" by train and boat, in seeking hotel Quarters, desiring to be served in restaurants, drug bw and other places and in demanding other e u privileges with white persons. Some years w. the supreme cqurt held that congress iiau ceeded its powers in passing the civil Jig" . and declared that so far as it interfered W 1 1 rights of a state it was "repugnant. opinion in reality left the act operative aione concerned the District of Columbia, the va . territories and the high seas. The cases issue involved extending the civil rights u Nl "ijjaifj.