WIH1 'ilUi'WPUiFffJIB r The Commoner. WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR Vol. 5. No. 22 Lincoln, Nebraska, June 16, 1905 Whole Number 23o CONTENTS The Next Awakening A- "Tainted Money" Pkeoedent A Queer Situation - "Happy -Dispatch" A Lawyer's Conscience ' t "Scattered at the Feet of Man" A Trust's View op Trusts- QUEERNESS OF REPUBLICAN LOGIC t Comment on Current Topics The Primary Pledge News of the Week "HAPPY DISPATCH". Richard Weightman, writing in the Chicago Tribune, says that American methods have failed in the Philippines because we have tried to make . Americans of the Filipinos. He declares that General Wood is making "distinct progress in his particular line of benevolent assimilation." He inaugurated the work in Jolo, Mr. Weightman says, "by killing several hundred of them out right and only a few days ago he administered the happy dispatch of three hundred more." This tone of levity in speaking of human life is quite characteristic of imperialism, and the more peo pie talk of the "happy dispatch" of subjects the cheaper will life become in the United States. Our methods have failed in the Philippines be cause we have tried to give to the methods of monarchy the sanction of a republic. People in stinctively hate hypocrisy and the Filipinos ill resent our government even mor than they would the government of a nation which openly re pudiates the doctrine of self government. JJJ . A QUEER SITUATION Uncle Sam owns a single track railroad in Panama. Its business has grown so great that Uncle Sam finds it necessary to double track it. This brings him up facing a strange proposi tion. If Uncle Sam's laws apply to the canal zone through which the railroad runs, then he will have to pay $28 a ton for the rails, for the steel rail pool organized under Uncle Sam's beneficent tariff laws has made ttiat price and provided a heavy penalty on the member of the pool who underbids. If Uncle Sam's laws do not apply, then he can buy steel rails for $20 a ton, that being the price that the steel rail pool makes in the foreign market to meet foreign com petition. It is a queer situation for Uncle Sam. If he Is under his own law he is mulcted to the tune of $8 a ton on every ton of steel rails he buys for his own railroad. If he is a foreigner he can buy them for $20 a ton. If he owns to his relationship to his nephews he pays $8 a ton for giving his nephews recognition. If he disowns his nephews he saves $8 a ton. If he pays $28 a ton for the rails that his foreign cousins can buy for $20 a ton he confesses that he permits his rail making nephews to rob and plunder his rail consuming nephews. If he buys them as a foreigner in order to save $8 a ton he con fesses that he is willing to make his rail con suming nephews pay a tribute that he himself is unwilling to pay an unfilial act that even Uncle Sam would hesitate to commit. But Uncle Sam must double track that -Panama railroad. If any of his nephews can give him some sound advice doubtless Uncle Sam would appreciate It very much. ti AY III' iffl i ( J ! li FCANNDN i . ; Vf;' vtZZ , i m& W! , dELLLMBkJn MiHlBinffii :ii 'fcrfKWY'nn iil uw ii llltr' i" lifi'il.i IffiM.Sf SjiteostatcM U'.l- wr THEPtOPLLOf M DENOUNCE THE DUYINb Of SUPPLIED FOR THE PANAMA CANAL IN FOREIOW MARKETS MERELY 10 SAVE A FEW MILLION DOLLARS. GIVC OUR DAR TM5T5 A CHANCE. T-ArMrrr- I HANDS OFF THE TARHT? mm wk F7D Bi Iff I k . .ir r.. m WW, ft1 jf"M 1 h 4 II . jl u I i in 'HI Ml l 7 M l I " ! i . . THREE TAILORS OF TOOLEY STREET Three tailors of Tooley St., Southwark, England, not being satisfied with the official note of tho House of Commons addressed a petition of grievances to that body, beginning: "Wo, tho People of England." The Next Awakenin Written by W. J. Bryan for "Public Opinion" and reproduced by Courtesy of that Journal. The conscience is the most potent force of which man has knowledge. Its decrees are more binding than statute law; its mandates are more imperative than the warrants of a king, and the Invisible barriers which it raises are stronger than prison walls. There Is no resisting the con science when it Is once aroused. To satisfy its demands many have faced death without a fear; in obedience to its promptings, and aglow with an all-pervading love, others have traversed oceans, buried themselves' among strangers, and devoted their lives to the elevation of men and women to whom they were bound only by the primary tie which links each human being to every other. The conscience, quickened, has substituted altruism for selfishness as tho controlling purpose of an individual life, and so changed that life that instead of resembling a receptive, stagnant pool it has become like an overflowing spring. As the conscience of an individual may trans form him from a fiend incarnate into a minister ing angel, so the conscience of a community, a state, or a nation contains dynamic force suffi cient to destroy any threatened evil and to pro pagate any needed truth. There is evidence today of the awakening of both the individual and the civic conscience. In some places this has taken the form of a re ligious revival where the regeneration of the hearts of a multitude of people has manifested itself in changed lives, changed customs, and changed social conditions. Tho recent revival in Wales is an illustration of the far-reacliing effect of a spiritual awakening. In the United States there have been recent indications bf a return from materialism and commercialism to a higher spiritual life, and there Is going on a world-wide study of the teachings of Christ as they apply to cvery-day life. Sometimes religion has occupied Itself main ly with the contemplation of tho unknown future life; it Is today busying itself more with tho life that now is; tho emphasis is being placed upon tho here rather than upon tho hereafter. Sometimes the Christian has sought to prepare himself for immortality by withdrawing from tho world's temptations and from the world's activi ties; now he is beginning to see that he can only follow in the footsteps of the Nazarene when ho goes about doing good and renders "unto the least of these," his brethren, the service that the Master was anxious to render unto all. In an article written almost twelve years ago, -Tolstoy quotes a letter written by Dumas a little while before, in which reference is made by the latter to the coming of an era of human brother hood. Dumas says: "Agreement is inevitable, and will come at an appointed time, nearer than is expected. I know i 1