' " W T ' > > . 'n.J JL V fc V " -TOfc11. . T3be Conservative * 11 ANTI-EXPANSION SENTIMENT. Wo now propose to take under our control eight millions of n race on the other side of the world who are as much below the American negro in civiliza tion as the American negro is below the American white. Is it any wonder that with the great race question at our own doors , puzzling our own statesmen and leading to an appalling annual record of crime , many a thoughtful American is disposed to call a halt on the Philippine experiment and to ask that wo shall look more to civilizing our own inhabi tants , botli white and black , than to civilizing an unknown population , sav age or semi-savage , 7,000 miles away from our shores ? Philadelphia Bulle tin ( Rep. ) . The question of the Philippines is still an open question. The republican party has not passed upon it. Public opinion is still in doubt. The country has not spoken decisively. Patriotic Ameri cans and good republicans are at perfect liberty to differ upon this question ; and they do differ. Hartford CourantRep. ( ) . The national ideal lowered ? The na tional ideal is lost , unless we awaken to our dangers , and reverse what appear to be present tendencies. The lesson of the sacrifices of our Civil War has be come a vague memory in danger of sinking into utter oblivion. The forces that appear 'uppermost are the lust of power to bo irresponsibly exercised , the greed of gain , the passion of conquest. I The equality of man is a claim that is met with contempt. The monarchies of the Old World say we have come to occupy new relations. We certainly have. They are the relations which they prophesied when we entered upon the experiment of self-government. They said it could not succeed , and if the recklessness and folly now at work prevail to the end , they will have been proved fatally accurate prophets. Bos ton Transcript ( Rep. ) . There is little doubt but that the pro- Imposition of the Massachusetts anti-imper ialists to extend the anti-imperialist movement to cover the whole of the United States will find a ready and a hearty response , and it is not unlikely that such a volume of sentiment , op posed to imperialism , will be found among the more enlightened and more thoughtful of the American people that congress will hesitate before committing the country to such an un-American policy. New Orleans Times-Democrat ( Dem ) . I believe that a majority of the people of the United States , if the issue is ever brought squarely before them [ for decis ion , will never be willing to take under our jurisdiction a people , n vast majority of whom , for reasons of wise public pol icy , are not allowed by our laws to come within the United States. I firmly be lieve it to bo most desirable to extend in every way the commerce of the United States. A joint protectorate , providing for equal privileges to all nations , in my judgment , would effect this as regards the Philippines , and such a protectorate would strengthen our sphere of influence in China. Charles S. Hamlin. And this is our successful experiment in popular government ! It is to be hoped that our treatment of the Pillager In dians in Minnesota and the state of af fairs in North Carolina will not reach the ears of the foreigners before whom wo are asserting and are anxious to de monstrate our ability to govern "sub ject races" humanely and to their ad vantage. Chicago Advance , Congrega tional. We believe that an appeal from the American people drunk to the American people sober will reveal the truth that this wild and sudden policy which its advocates do not even attempt to justify , and the solid arguments against which they only meet with "generalities and cheers , " is not to prevail , that the civic conscience is not dead , and that this constitutional republic will not long consent to stand merely for an unscrup ulous appetite. Boston Transcript ( Rep. ) . The now issues of "imperialism" and "territorial expansion" born of our recent conquests in war present the gravest and the most dangerous prob lems with which this republic has had to deal. They cannot be disposed of by the snapping of fingers , by the cheering of crowds at railway stations , iior even by the president of the United States hiirself , unsupported by the conserva tive second thought of the people. St. Paul Globe ( Dem. ) . The question is settled , Attornoy- General Griggs says ; there is no xiso of discussing it. It thus appears that in his view the people of the United States have nothing to say about it. They have in the past claimed the right to be consulted on tariff taxation , or such an abstruse matter as coinage questions. But when it conies to a policy that ignores the fundamental principle of democratic government , for which they will have to pay $50,000,000 to $100,000- 000 annually in increased taxes to sup port the military and naval establish ments in the East , and in pursuit of which their sons and brothers must face Asiatic diseases and the bullets ol natives obstinate enough to aspire to self-government , the people of the United States have nothing to say. The matter has been settled without consult ing them. Pittsburg Dispatch ( Rep. ) . After having called the world and the God of battles to witness that we fought only from the noblest and most unselfish motives , after loudly proclaiming our virtues in the sight of all the earth , and thanking God that wo were not as other nations , we deliberately demand of Spain nearly all her territorial possess- ions and threaten her with even worse things , if she does not comply. Phari sees among individuals are common , but a Pharisee nation , which for a pretence makes long prayers and robs the weak and defenseless , was loft for exemplifi cation to the nineteenth century and to the land of liberty. Spain , however , is not so much to be pitied as ourselves , if the policy of imperialism becomes an accepted fact. She will lose an encum- brancewhich she may well be glad to get rid of , while wo will gain a Pandora's box of evils , which will plague us in definitely. It is not yet too late for the sober second thought of the country to assert itself , and to prevent by constitu tional means the consummation of an imperial scheme that threatens the very life of free institutions. The country never faced a crisis so pregnant with far-reaching national danger and disas ter , and true patriots may well pray that the people of the United States may realize it before it is too lato. Baltimore Sun ( Dem. ) . There are indica- " th ° r ; rounding political atmosphere that Governor Stone of Missouri , is a very lively mortal at about this time in having his foot-gear measured - ured for presidential mountain-climbing. He laiows that the sixteen to one busi ness is likely to cause Mr. Bryan a sudden stumble , if not a fatal fall , next year , and the gifted and gyrating states man of Missouri is not to bo caught nap ping. It is known , because he has been heard to say , that he is not bigoted about the ratio in the silver issue , upon which Mr. Bryan insists as being vital to his plan for paying public and private debts in clipped coins of the realm. A double- barreled statesman , is Mr. Stone , and ho shoots both ways on the silver question. Make it six to one , governor ! The Scientific NIKOLA TESLA. American pub lishes drawings of the device by means of which Mr. Tesla , if ho is reported correctly , expects to "make war impos sible , " and moreover devotes an editor ial to the subject , which is of a distinctly disparaging tone. It seems , however , that Tesla has taken a patent on his ap paratus , and this at least gives him tan gibility ; some people have maintained that there was no Tesla , that he was a creation of the Now York reporters , who kept him going for their own diversion ; but in view of the fnct that his nmch- heraldcd inventions are always things that ho is going to do , instead of things that ho has done , wo may still bo per mitted some skepticism as to the results to be looked for from them. This may be an unjust suspicion ; but Mr. Tesla is certainly unfortunate in having a num ber of injudicious friends on the Now York newspapers.