Si VOLUME 4, NUMBER 22. ) .v. x ft assuredly Bondarof deserves nounccd upon him by Tolstoi , , The third reason given In support of the the ory of bread-labor is that it closes tho gulf be tween the various classes of society and brings people into sympathy with each other. Tolstoi declares (and can tho truth of the declaration bo doubted?) that lack of sympathy between man and man is tho tap root of most, if not all, of our social troubles. If there existed everywhere fel lowship, friendly interest and a gonuino brotherly Jove, men would not cheat each other, they would not steal from each other, they would not oppress each other, they would not do injustice to each other. Neither would they bo indifferent to each other's welfare, or to tho welfare of each other's childron. It is not sufficient that one's ancestors should havo tolled; it is not oven sufficient that one should have himself tolled at some time in his life. Some of the worst taskmasters havo been mon with a recollection of former servitude. It Js necessary that there shall be such a constant and permanent acquaintanceship with labor that ono may be ablo to understand its fatigues and thus appreciate tho necessity for rest and re creation. Tolstoi regards love as tho great instructor. Ho Insists that love will guide the mind aright. Ho criticises those who devote themselves to en tertaining the rich while the poor die of hunger, t and in tho presentation of this criticism uses lan i guage which shows his aptness in the use of illus 1 trations. He says: "As the spring cannot question where its waters aro to flow upwards, splashing tho grass and tho leaves of the trees, or downwards . to the roots of tho grass and trees so a be liever in tho teaching of truth cannot ask what he must do first whether to teach peo ple, defend them, amuse them, supply them with the pleasures of life, or save them from perishing of want. " And just as water Irom a Bprlng flows along the surface and fills ponds and gives drink to animals and men, only after it has soared tho ground, 'so a believer in tho teaching of truth can servo less urg ent human demands only after ho has satis fled tho primary demand: has helped to feed men, and to gave them from perishing in their struggle ngainst want. A man following the teaching of truth and love not in woids, but in deeds, cannot mistake where lirst to direct his efforts. A man who sees tho meaning of his life in service to others can never make such a blunder as to begin to servo hungry and naked humanity by forging cannon, manu facturing elegant ornaments, or playing tho violin or tho piano." Ho concludes his essay with an eloquent ap peal for human brotherhood. No one can read this appeal without catching a glimpse of tho spirit of Tolstoi, and when this spirit Is under stood it is easy to understand how Tolstoi has touched the heart of the world. He says: "Go to tho bottom to what seems to you the bottom, but is really the top take your place be side thoso who produce food for tho hungry and clothes for the naked, and do not be atraid; it will not bo worso, but better in all respects. Take your place in tho ranks, set to work with your woak, unskilled hands at tho primary work which feeds the hungry and clothes the naked: at bread labor, the struggle with nature; and you will feel, for the lirst time, Arm ground beneath your feet, will feol that you are at homo, that you aro freo and stand Urmly, and havo peached the end of your journey. And you will feel those com plete, unpoisoned joys which can be found no where else not secured by any doors nor screened by any curtains. "You will know joys you have never known be foro; yqu will for tho first time know thoso strong, plain men, your brothers, who from a distance haye fed you until now; and to your surprise you will find In them such qualities as you havo never known; such modesty, suek kindness to yourself as you will feel you have not deserved. "Instead of the contempt or scorn you ex pected, you will meet with such kindnoss, such gratitude and respect for having after living on them and despising them all your life at last recollectod yourself, and with unskilled hands tried to help them. "You will see what seemed to you like an Island on which you were saved from the sea that threatened to engulf you, was a marsh in which you wore sinking; and that tho sea you feared, was dry land on which you wllj: walk firmly, quietly and happily; as must be the case, for from a de ception (into which you did not enter of your own wish, but into which you wero led) you will es- The Commoner. the eulogy pro- cape to. the truth, and from the evasion of God's ' ' nurnosd'you 'Will pass to its performance. y n (Government Paper v. Notes. . Some of the gold bug papers are disturbed be cause the Nebraska platform, recently adopted at Omaha, favors government paper "issued without the intervention of national banks." These papers declare that this is more populistic than the Chi cago platform. The Nebraska plank on the money question is in lino with the historic policy of tho party. The Chicago platform said: "We therefore denounce the issuance of notes intended to circulate as money by na tional banks as in derogation of the consti tution, and we demand that all paper which is made a legal tender for public and prlvato debts, or which is receivable for duc3 to the United States, shall be issued by the govern ment of the United States, and shall be re- -deemable in coin." The Nebraska platform indorses the Kansas City platform and the Kansas City platform in dorses 'the Chicago platform. The Nebraska plat form on the question of paper money is therefore entirely in harmony with the Kansas City and Chicago platforms, and is also in harmony with earlier platforms of the party. The democratic platform of 1840 said: "Resolved, That congress has no power to charter a United States bank; that we be lieve such an institution one of deadly hos tility to the best interests of the country, dangerous to our republican institutions, and the liberties of the people, and calculated to place the business of tho country within the .' control of a concentrated money power and , above the laws and the will of the people." This platform was reaffirmed in 1844, 1848, 1852, and 1856. A great many democrats have been deceived by the reorganizers into believing that the opposition to the Kansas City platform was merely an opposition to the silver plank. The fact is that the silver plank, while it presented the paramount issue in 1896, was only a part of a larger issue, namely, the money question. If you ask a gold bug what objection he has to tho Kansas City platform, he tells you that the in creased production of gold has made the free coin age of silver unnecessary, and yet while giving this excuse he is just as much against the green back as he is against free silver. Now, the issue between government paper and bank notes is not affected by the increased production of gold. If the gold bug Insisted that the increased produc tion of gold made the greenback unnecessary, his argument would atleast be consistent with his argument against silver, but the volume of na tional bank notes has increased since 1836 so that while he is objecting to the issue of government paper he is willing to have more bank notes is sued. At St. Louis the gold bugs will oppose the Kansas City platform on the ground thjt it brings up tho silver question, but they -will be unwilling to state the party's position on the question of greenbacks versus bank notes for the reason that they are in favor of a bank currency issued by tho banks and controlled by the banks, while the democratic voters prefer the greenback to the bank note. If the national bank note is issued we must either have a perpetual debt for it to rest upon, oi we must have some other basis, and tho other basis is tho asset basis. No one who Is ac quainted with the situation doubts for a moment that the asset currency is sure to come if the na tional bank note is continued. The democratic party, therefore, must tako a position upon this subject or stand convicted of secretly participat ing in the scheme of the financiers to turn tho note issuing function of tho government over to the banks. Jefferson declared that banks of issue wore more dangerous than standing armies and Jackson, according to Thomas Benton, saved the country when he destroyed the bank conspiracy The responsibility of framing the next na tional platform for the democratic party rests upon the delegates appointed to the St Louis convention, and they must either meet this ques tion boldly or dodge it, and dodging would ho vir tually taking tho side of the banks, for they work by stealth and never submit to the people any question in which their Interests aro involved The fight at St. Louis will expose the hollow pretense put forward by the opponents of the Kansas City platform. When the resolution com mittee meets, the representatives from the vari ous states will find that the reorganizers aro against the spirit of tho Kansas City platform and against every needed reform. The issue is not so much between silver arid' gold, w between honest and dishonestybetween square dealing and de- JJJ Senator Knox. The press dispatches announce that Attorney General Knox has been selected to succeed Sena tor Quay His selection was brought about by a conference between the heads of the various ror porate interests of Pennsylvania, Frick, of the steel trust, arid Cassatt, of the Pennsylvania rail road, being the most conspicuous figures. When he was agreed upon the matter was presemed to President Roosevelt, and he conseated to Mr Knox's retirement, saying that he would be useful in the senate in the preparation of legislation on the trust question. The fact that he was urged by Frick and Cassatt makes it plain that he is to bo put in the senate as a representative of the trusts, just as he has been their representative in the cabinet, and the fact that President Roosevelt is glad to have him there is further evidence (if any further evidence were needed) that the president has no intention of interfering with the trusts. The corporations control Pennsylvania. Some ono has described the Pennsylvania legislature as a body of men loaned by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company to the Standard Oil company when not needed by the railroad company. Quay was the political representative of these influences and the selection of Mr. Knox as his successor is a confession that Mr. Knox Is and has been, as fre quently charged, merely the representative of cor porate interests in the cabinet. It is strange that the ordinary man farmer, merchant, or mechanic can fail to understand the significance of the bargains that are made between the great corpora tions and public officials. It is strange that they are so slow in finding; out that no remedial legis lation is possible so long as the corporations con trol the senate. Will the appointment of Mr. Knox by the trusts strengthen the democratic position in tho coming campaign? That depends. If the demo crats will adopt a sound platform and nominate a candidate free from the taint of corporation con trol, the Knox incident can be turned to advant age. But with an August Belmont candidate on the ticket, the democrats would not be able to say anything against the trusts without exciting a smile of derision. Republican mistakes can only he taken advantage of by an honest and straight forward campaign in the interests of the people, and that is just the kind of a campaign which the reorganizers do not want. What trust repre sentative will President Roosevelt select as Mr. Knox's successor? It is probable that Mr. Knox will retain his position in the cabinet until after the election and thus save the president the em barrassment of selecting a new attorney general during the campaign. JJJ Daniels Not In Contempt. Hon. Josephus Daniels, the North Carolina memuer of the national committee and editor of the News and Observer, who was recently fined for contempt by United States Judge Perneli, has been released upon habeas corpus. Mr. Daniels criticised the action of Judge Perneli in appoint ing receivers for the North Carolina railroad. The appointment waff overruled by Chief .Justice Ful ler, but Judge Perneli fined Daniels $2,000 for con tempt, and upon refusal of the editor to pay the fine sent him to jail. Judge Pritchard tried the case and released Mr. Daniels, saying that there was nothing in the statutes to warrant his arrest. Mr. Daniels is to be congratulated upon his victory, and deserves also the gratitude of tho profession for insisting upon his right to criticise the judge. Judges, like other public servants, aro open to criticism, and as all questions must ulti mately be settled by the courts, it is especially necessary ,hat the judges themselves shall bo tried at the bar of public opinion. No judge need fear criticism if ho has done right, and no judge should be shielded from criticism if he has done wrong. Conscience As a Proecutr. After all, the conscience Is the prosecutor from whom tho criminal cannot escape. This truin has been verified ovor and over again. The most recent case is that of Tascott. He died recenuy in the Klondike country and a person present at his death makes public his last words. A proj- iJcuLu- luunu mm aioue m a uiimub m.- was safe from the officers of the law, but his cu science had kept him 'company for fifteen yea and had been persistent In ,ite punishment. ww ' rfAlkWoAta Mvv?anr3Piff)gvMrwuHMM WagfllW