w J'V,"Wr!' ? -v - The Commoner. WILLIAH J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. Vol. 3. " No. 32. Lincoln, Nebraska, August 28, 1963, Whole No. 136. What About Taylor? . In his letter to the governor of Indiana, Presi dent Roosevelt very properly entered a strong protest against lynching. There are, however, in that letter some statements that, might he inter preted into a rebuke for the course pursued by the Indiana governor with respect to Mr. Taylor, for- mer governor of Kentucky. Mr. Roosevelt probably did not intend that anything in that letter should bo construed int connection with the Taylor case and Governor Durbin probably did not read the letter in the light of his attitude toward the notorious fugi tive. At the same time, however, some of the things Mr. Roosevelt said should be carefully con sidered by tho Indiana governor and should prompt him to surrender the fugitive Taylor to tho Kentucky authorities. Mr. Roosevelt said: "The slightest lack of vigor in denouncing the crime or bringing tho criminal to justice is in itself unpardonable. More over, every effort should be made under the law to expedite the proceedings of justice in the case of such an awful crime." To be sure, Mr. Roose velt here refers explicitly to criminal assault, but he would not undertake to say that the rule ho has laid down does not with equal propriety ap ply to every crime. Mr. JRoosevelt said: "It certainly ought to "be possible by the proper administration of tho . laws to secure swift vengeance uppn tho criminal, and the best and immediate efforts of all legisla tors, judges and citizens should bo addressed to securing such reforms in our legal procedure as to leave no vestige of excuse for those misguided men who undertake to rea; vengeance through violent methods." And again Mr. Roosevelt said that "the law must work swiftly and surely and all the agents of the law should realize the wrong they do when they permit justice to be delayed or thwarted for technical or Insufficient reasons." Again Mr. Roosevelt said: "We must show that the law is adequate to deal with crime by treeing it from every vestige of technicality and delay." The present governor of Indiana, as vell as his republican predecessor, permitted Mr. Taylor, the former governor of Kentucky, to find refuge in the Hoosier state. Mr. Taylor is charged with being accessory to the murder of Governor Goebel and so far all efforts to persuade the Indiana exe cutive to surrender Taylor to the Kentucky au thorities have failed. Neither Mr. Roosevelt or Governor Durbin would undertake to say that the rules herein quoted and as laid down by the president do not apply to all crimes; and yet while Mr. Roosevelt presents these rules in a ve:y dramatic way and Governor Durbin accepts them as being an in dorsement of his course with respect to the Evans vllle riots, it is not at all probable that Mr. Roose velt will ever address to the governor of Indiana a letter by way of rebuke for tho course pursued in providing protection to Mr. .Taylor, the fugitive from Kentucky justice. And it is not at all prob able that Governor Durbin, while pretending to adhere to these rules, will withdraw his protection from Mr. Taylor and permit the sheriff to return him to Kentucky in order that he may be re quired to answer to the serious charge preferred against him. JJJ The Money Question. - The Chicago Tribune reports Senator Daniel of Virginia as saying that "the financial question wili be the most important subject before the next congress." Tho Tribune adds that the senator be lieves that tho question "will precipitate a long aeDate, -which will cover the wnoie money ques tion with its old Issues and bearings on politics," lief that in tho banking and financial issues to bo precipitated this winter in congress, the democrats will have a live, powerful issue." Senator Daniel is correct; tho financial Issuo will bo a live one in congress and the democrats have it in their power to put tho republicans on the defensive if they will only take up tho ques tion and mako an earnest fight But tho party Is handicapped by the presence of a lot of corporation democrats who have secured onlco on a harmony platform and these men will, If possible, prevent tho party's taking a firm stand against the Aldrlch bill and an asset currency. The democrats who are with tho people ought to assert themselves In both the house and tha sen ate and leave exposed to tho wrath of tho people those who would surrender tho treasury Into tho hands of the financiers. JJJ Barriers to Competition. In a speech delivered at Creston, la., August 10, Congressman Hepburn said: "What aro pro tective duties other than barriers to free competi tion? When wo agree to a tariff schedule Impos ing duties upon our foreign competitor, we say to him, we do not rely upon your competition to secure diminishing cost for our :iecessariqs of Hfo, but we propose to give our own people oiir entire market and then rely upon their competition, one with another, to secure the just and fair price." It is not difficult for tho intelligent man to understand that tho republican party has built up at our ports these "barriers to free competition." But it does not provide among our own peoplo "competition, one with another, to secure a just and fair price." Tho republican party builds up "barriers to fiee competition" at our ports and then fosters the trust system whereby free competition is de stroyed at home; tho wholo tendency of the re publican policies being to benefit tho few at the expense of tho many. JJJ No More Confidence Games It is apparent that the reorganizes are at tempting to play another confidence game, first on the democratic party and then on the public. They want a platform that is ambiguous and can didates who are not openly pledged to anything, but who are secretly pledged to the representa tives of organized wealth. Then they propose to collect a large campaign fund from the cor porations and use it to buy the floating vote. The word "democrat" Is to bo used to cover anything that tho schemers want and the campaign Is to bo run on plans approved by modern republican ism. This is what was done ia 1892 and the bunco game was fully developed during Mr. Cleveland's administration. Every effort made today in tho direction of reform Is handicapped by the disgrace-, ful record of those four years and any prominence given to the unrepentant members of that admin istration gives the He to all promise of improve ment Will the party travel again througn that valley of the shadow of death'' Will the honest and earnest advocates of remedial legislation per mit the party to be used frr th3 betrayal of the hopes of the people? Never! As soon as tho rank and file understand the nature of tho strug gle they will arise in their might and overthrow the political highwaymen who wear the mask of democracy, but wno are bent upon the spoliation of the masses. No more confidence games during tu. generation, and if the loyal democrats do their duty there will be such a modification in the methods of government that rings will find it impossible to impose on the people longer. Tho ?Cflirmatln OI me ivausas uuy iJiau.urm aim iub niinntinn of Kansas City platform principles to Ell new questions will keep tie party true to its high purpose. Philo Sherman Bennett Mr. Bryan has Geon called upon to mourn the death of "another close personal and political friend Mr. Philo Sherman Bennntt of Now Hnyjpn, Conn. Ho was senior member of tho New York wholesalo firm of Bennett, Joal & Co., and was one of tho fow prominent burincsa men of the east who refused to bo intimidated by tho finan ciers in 1890. Ho began at tho bottom of the lnddcr and ' worked his way ui to a command ing position in the commercial world, and yet ho never lost his sympathy with tho struggling masses. The address dollvcred at tho funeral by Rev. Artemus J. Haynes, pastor of the United church, so accurately described tho controlling purpose of Mr. Bennett's llfo hat It Is given in full: "Tho most appropriate words on such a occa sion as this are tho words of the Holy Scripture, leading our thoughts and feelings out Into soma simple utterance of prayer. It were bettor under ordinary circumstances to v'tnhold our testimony of praise until some hour when tho mind could dwell moro calmly upon the character and achieve ments of him who has gone. But the circum stances of this occasion aro not ordinary; tho man whom wo honor today was no ordinary man. Ho was unique by virtue of the opinions which ho hold, tho Ideals which he followed, and the type of manhood which he exemplified. Such a life calls for some direct and simple word of apprecia tion. To go out from this sorvico without voicing the sentiments that have moved you to come to this house today were to tempt the very stones in the street to render tribute to him whom you have known and loved. "Even had I been well acquainted with Mr. Bennett, It would hardly be fitting that I should enter into the intimacies of his life and character. He whose personality was mad" beautiful by tho rarest modesty, would shrink, I am suro, from hav ing his private virtues shown forth for the ad miration of the crowd, 'ino sacrcdnoss of per sonality Is not destroyed by the death of the body. In every man's hfe Is a holy o! holies; aid God alone has the right to enter that Inner sanctuary. Of that religious life which Is the expression of a man's sense of relationship to his brother tho world has a right to take note, but of that life which is hidden with Christ in God the world can know nothing, and into the secret workings of that life no man should attempt to Intrude. Jesus spoke to his disciples of their obligations to the brotherhood that was one side of the religious life, but when he would worship, ho went apart Into the mountain that he might be alone. Of that side of Mr. Bennett's life which, as I be lieve, was profoundly religious, that side which had to do with bis relation to God, I shall say nothing. The life of faith and aspiration and prayer only God knows that life, knows Its sweetness and beauty. Concerning the other side of his personality, that side which wa3 open to all the world, his relation to the men and women about him, the great brotherhood concerning that side of his life I would venture to say a few words. "And that which I would say has defined it self very clearly to my thought It is not of a general character the ordinary commonplaces which may be attached to ev.ry good man who dies but something definite and distinct May I come to my thought by way of a much slighted word of scripture? I cannot help feeling lhat if Mr. Bennett had chosen a text it would have been this: 'He that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath, not seen?', "Brothierhood! that was the great word in the language to him. He believed in the democracy of religion and in the religion of democracy. Laws, customs., Institutions nothing was sacred to him ana he is also "strongly Impressed witn tne ue- uu4M4to4iM!ji2