M U 12 The Commoner. VOLUME 4, NUMBER m - "The Religious Argument" An editorial from tho pen of Dr. Winston, editor of tho Nashville Chris tian Advocate, follows: "A very" largo number of thought ful American citizens deplored the ac quisition by our country of tho Phil ippine islands, since they believed our national government not well adapted to tho management of col onial dependencies. Probably a much larger numbers are heartily in favor of setting these islands up in self government at the very earliest day that such a step is justified by condi tions. But tnere are comparatively few among us though the, numuer compnaes some vei aule citizens not conaueu to any section 01 country or party in politics who tniuit mat the only pussiuie remedy for cue mis take 01 aeijuirmg the rnnippines is tno granting oi immeuiate independence to tneir people. There is sucn a class, however, and its members maive up ior what they lack In numbers by vigor of language. It is but speaidug mod erately to say that these gentlemen .would be more worthy of attention if they reasoned on the basis of the tacts and not merely from theory. J It i3 all very well, for example, fol us to speak of the Philippine and the Filipino, as if those islands constituted a unity and their people were homo geneous. We got them from Spain In a' lump, since . most of-us .scarcely had heard of them before 1898, and, aa our language concerning them proves, know very little about them now. But what are the facts? The islands are a straggling group that if thrown down beside our coast would reach from Maine to Florida. Their inhabitants, often even those of a single island; are not merely divided by tribal boundaries; they differ from each other in everything in racial stock, in language, in religion, in de grees of civilization, in dress, habits, and even n physical appearance. There is .absolutely not a trace of any bond bf unity. They were nominally under the Spanish government, but most of them yielded allegience but grudging ly, and the administration of affairs in one tribe or island was not connected in their minds with that in any other. According to Senor Buencamino, former "secretary of state" to Aguin algo, only about twenty-five thousand of !he population that is, less thin one-half of one per cent can use the Spanish language. Probably a larger ' portion of our people that tliat under stand German, yet who would suggest thq German language as a bond of unity for the American nation? As to intertribal relations, a recent visitor to theislands. writes: "In Lu r Son there are the Christian Tagalogs, the Ghrlstaih Matabelesr (who murder ; Tagalogs as a tribal virtue), the non Christian Igorr-tes, and the Negritos, "besides several tribes of head-hunters. In the "Visavan group is another tribal division speaMng a Malay dialect dis tinct from Taeralog; and in Mindanao, Sulu, and Tawi are the Moros. Mus sulman savaee3, enemies of the rest and continually warring among themselves." Now how can an indeppndent nation i,u" "w ujueppnnenc nanon 77 " , uwwou muuey put he formed of these mutually repellehtJ " ?nnnPnnnn ' 80me beInS as low and impractical elements? Acruinaldo appeared to the imagination of many AT I crM'er fcllttiT Bes ' focine ,. BALSAM H"W as the Washington or tho Hidalgo of his country. But Aguirialdo was in fact the leader of a not very unani mous movement in a single tribe of tho island of Luzon, a tribe aerainst which tho othera even of that island cherish hereditary enmity. Had he been able to assert his leadership among his fellow-Tagalogs, and coax pr bully the United States into grant ing him independence, there was not tho remotest posibility that the Mat abeles and Igorrotes on his own is land, to say nothing of Moros, Visa vans, and the rest on others, would treat his government with anything but scornful indifference and-implacable hostility. Philippine nationalty, Philippine self-government, is a dream will long remain a dream. Economically and politically rpeaking, we had no need of those Islands. We may indeed have paid dearly for them quite aside from tho twenty millions of money. But should not the meaning of the nreaant situation q sought not in what we need but rather in what they need? Says the visitor above quoted: "I went to the Philippine islands con vinced that our retention of them was an international crime: I left thorn convinced that any other course than that we are pursuing would b a breach of international humanity, comparable to leaving a helpless Infant to perish in the storm. When they will be ready for self-government is ah interesting question, but at present it is acade mic. It is a fact that they are not ready or capable for it." He quotes Stenor Buencamino as saying: "The Filipinos have three great needs, and none of them is independence. The first is schools, the second V mr schools, and the third is more schools." If the peoph of the United States the Christian people, especially fail to heed a plea like that, then they have departed from their traditions. We have written thus because this constant atritation in favor of grant ing the Filipinos immediate indepen dence, while in one senso the discus sion of a purely academic matter, has In another a very serious practical side. Tt plavs into the hands of irresponsible and ambitious agitators in those is lands whose wish is not to see their neople free, but to be themselves left free to exnloit them. It hampers the administration of government thereby mariner uelv , restive the itrnorant and half-trained ponnlation, adding to the unhanninefis of all concerned and waTrinsf-'Sn obv.ionpiv difficult situa tion farVmore difficult" $17,000,000,000. It does not seem pos sible that any very great decrease can have taken place since 1896? Germany is believed to have about half as much money invested abroad aa Franco,. or twice, as much as Bel gium, but German wealth and Gorman enterprise are alike fast gaining ground, and these proportions will soon bo radically changed. Russia is tho great debtor nation of Europe, and in that country billions of dollars of French, Belgium and German money nas round employment, xt renter or less risk, and with widely varying re turns. Ex. The South' Attitude Referring to he prospective visit by Mr. Roosevelt to the South, the Hous ton Post says that "if it is necessary that anything be done, rather let the president exhibit a spirit of broad na tionality and repair the mischief he has done so far as he can. Personally, he know3 little about the S'outh, its institutions, its civilization, its prob lems, except what he has gained from sectional partisans and an unfriendly press. Let bim inform himself thor oughly and act with wisdom, and it is in his power to restore the conditions which .McKinley brought about. Let him look the South over and see if he cannot revise the opinion he holds of us as set forth in his writings and manifested by his acts. He has the power to correct his own mistakes; it is not within southern province or power. The South will hold to its self respect and look to the future for the vindication of its position and for the justice and fair dealing which ought never to be withheld from any state nor any section. In the meantime; the South is busy." " '. ferently charged earth strata or bodies with conductors that would givo tS electric current an easier road than it now has. He suggested that too Jl mIlr0ad properly connocSd t t. mo ucl a8 a conductor , J s connectlon may bc' recalled the belief of many wesern pioneers that the building of railroads has in creased rainfall. That belief is per sistent in maiiy observing and crediblo men. The truth behind it probably is that since railroads have been built across the western prairies their rain fall ha3 become more equally diffused tnrougn tne year. The rails have, per haps, acted as electrical equalizers, lessening the difference of electric tension, and so breaking up the occas ional violent electric storms which brought rain upon the unbroken plains into more frequent and less violent at mospheric disturbances, with a conse quence diffusion of rainfall. Whether Mr. Guanni's suggestion will lead to any practical results In the way of prevention of earthquakes or of lessening their violence it is im possible to predict. The task pro posed is so vast and so far beyond what would seem the limits of human power that speculation on the subject would, be idle. But it a striking illus tration of the range and scope of science that its sober votaries should even venture to suggest that the pre vention of earthquakes to any extent may bo within human power. Chicago Inter-Ocean. Subscribe' Advertising Department Nations Lend Monty . - A German authority estimates the country having 6,000,000 inhabitants and about one-quarter as large an area as Ohio, at no less than $1,500,000 000. In proportion to the numerical natural resources these figures make the $6,000,000,000, or thereabouts, which represents French capital put into Investments outside? of France look small, and they compare well with the largest .current estimates of Great Britain's Investments beyond the narrow limits of the British isles. Authorities differ wlrioiv . Ing the amount of British money put as $6,000,000,000, not counting British possessions, like India, and British colonies. To include those favorite fields for British enterprise might double the figures given. "Rnf im,, j not many years since the Tvmvinn stock exchange calculated tho prob S1toti,.?.f,the foreIn investments Ul " iwiuan people at more than Can Earthquakes be Prevented In an address before tho "RoiP-inn Astronomical society recently Mr. Gaurini made an interesting sug gestion about earthquakes. .It was that if the theories of Dary and Plante with regard to tho cause of these disturbances are correct, then it may be within human. power to lessen their violence. Reduced to untechnical language, the theories of Dary and Plante are that earthquakes are' subterranean electric storms, similar in character to those of the atmosphere.' Different strata of the earth become electrically charged at different tensions, as the earth and the atmosphere, or strata of the atmosphere, become charged at different tensions before an elec trical storm. In an effort to find an easier road, the electric current leans from tho body under high electrlc pressure to that under low pressure. When this happens between the earth and the atmosphere We call the leap a bolt of lightning; When the same leap oc curs .between strata of the earth we call the resulting shock an earth quake. That is the theory. Accepting, this theory as correct; it iseasy to see how it, might be possible for man to give tWoarth. currents, to a certain extent an easier road, just as he. gives the atmospheric currents easier roads to the earth with lightning rods and by jjxuuuug ireea. For it is well known that a light ning rod does not actually arrest the thunderbolt when it comes. Whatever service it performs is by so drawing off the electricity from the air above luo uimumg mat tnunderbolts are less likely to occur there. That trees per form a similar service is believed from the observation that when large desert tracts are reclaimed electric storms seem to decrease in violence there. Mr, Guarini suggested that the vio lence of subterannfnn ainnf.in . I might be lessened by connecting dif- A little thought will convince aat this department of The Cor moner of fers superior advantages to these who desire to secure publicity. Only Com moner subscribers are showed to use it. and y only responsible articles are allowed to be advertised. Confidence in the advertising management will explain in large measure why ad vertising in The Commoner is profit able. The manager Is in receipt of many letters from advertisers who have used this department with profit. The rate is the lowest made in this publication 6 cents per word per in sertion, payable in advance. Address all orders to The Commoner, Lincoln, Nebraska. "WRITE TOR BOOKLET AND COLOR CARD vy of the bot wntcrproof paintB on earth. American Roofing Co. 6G5-67 N. 15th St., Phlli delphia, Pa. The little hotel wilmot in south A Perni Fqunre, Philadelphia have a number of good rooms for Jfl n day, 1f you hrlncr vnur wife S2 a day. Tho Commoner alwnyfl on fiio. 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