- , lWMMwWHPS?) JRSHB'Hr (i ) lampw wwiwuV.f jf ' jp"igflj lip; p JJPIiW' "iWIHfWllllilPi 6 The Commoner .VOLUME 5, Number 3l C.1 . 1 tjW'W'M ii "Jju-ilj CUKR8NT VPCS iikyi -"","v. v -wr TRi. w' sr i , TThjC. "" mu vOMy V- fr A REMARKABLE story is told by the LcSeur, Minn., Correspondent for the Chicago Chron icie. This correspondent says, that "Jacob Vard man, a farmer of Blake Township, in this county, and his wife and three small children were saved from death in a most remarkable manner recent ly. They were on their way home from town, driving a team of powerful horses, when the ani mals were frightened by a dog that ran out and barked at them. The horses sprang forward swiftly, and when Mr. Vardman attempted to rein them in both lines broke, leaving him without any control over the team. The animals realized this at once and ran at high speed down the road. The bridge is washed out at the Remison farm and the road fenced off at'tho first corner this side to make travelers drive around the other way, but the runaway team paid no attention to the barrior. They smashed through the light obstruction and rushed along, headed directly for the rocky thirty-foot gully that formerly had been spanned by the bridge." MR. VARDMAN attempted to creep out on the tongue of the wagon, and thus to reach the horses' heads, but was provented from' doing so by his wife and the children, who clung to him so closely, in a paroxysm of fear, that lie could not free himself from them. The gully was only 100 feet ahead, and the endangered family seemed to have but a few seconds more to live, when help came in a marvelous way. A storm was coming up and the heavens were .shrouded in a black pall of clouds, rent now and again by vivid flashes of lightning, succeeded by deafening peals of thunder and just as the ragged chasm seemed yawning at their very feet a glittering lance of electricity shot down from the clouds and pierced the running horses through and through. They instantly fell dead, their bodies sliding along the road as far as their own momentum and thai of the wagc-i would carry them, and came to a stop within less than ten feet of the edge of the ravine. Some persons who were not far away, and who were looking on at the time, ran at once to give what aid they could. They found the Vardmans all lying senseless in the wagon, but only pros trated by the shock, and all soon fully recovered, i, yardman's horses were insured against lightning in a St. Paul insurance company, and the company has offered to pay him the loss, which is $250, but he will not accept the money, holding that in so doing he would be showing the rankest ingratitude for the wonderful escape of himself and family. v. TNT7A .,EDIT2PIAL entitled "sd at the X Roots the St. Louis Republic says: "Morals are just now possessing an almost sensational N and dramatic interest for the American people. Popular a scussion is getting down to the ethical question involved, in business, in politics, in gov ernment, with a peculiar and sharp zest which is eloquent of a strong, alert and at tlfe same time fnnitem!?tal m,oral . sense' Whatever are the 2, f, lfndut in various lines which the period exhibits the country by its wholesome and keen interest for the moral consideration is 2SffSn8n?ting,.tB Psaessia an essentially fine Si .n mot,ve conclusive of advancement in ffSMfiiW011 and upon wnich faith an not Uneuteli T&Wy f?r future beh-avior. A Jis monor th?Q Mjssourlan who sends to The Com- whS til eel C &l& SayS "Tw years ag0 a man dreamed WaS rGgarded as a sentimental TH?hinLSUnCti0nlt0f being the oldest living X tnmg, according to a writer in tho Phiii delphia, Public Leaser, t "on ot tta to locate this tree and to determine its ace h-ivo been made and he adds: "A century age De Candolle found two yews-one at Porting to Perthshire, and one at Hedsor, in BucksthS were estimated to be respectively 2500 and 3 240 years old. Both are still flourisl ?ng, and the older tree has a trunk twenty-seven feet in cir cumference. A gigantic baobab of Central Amir ica with a trunk twenty-nine feet ttouth is estimated to be not less than 5,150 years old , Mexican botanists believe they have now dht cqvered a life-span even greater than this! and from the annual rings a cypress of Chapultepec, whose trunk is 118 feet in -circumference, is as signed an age of about 6,200 years." FORTY-EIGHT of the fifty-one members of the Indian Territory statehood committee met recently at Muskogee. The committee agreed upon the name of "Sequoyah" for the new state. Referring to the selection of this name, a writer in the St. Louis Globe Democrat says: "Sequoyah was the Cherokees' Cadmus. He Revised their alphabet, and in it a newspaper has been printed for many years. No other man of his race has conferred more credit on the Indian name, al though many Indians have won a high reputation in war, oratory and statesmanship. Sequoyah deserves to have some permanent memorial erected to him, and a state which would carry his name would, of course, be a particularly high honor. But there is not the faintest chance to get the Indian Territory admitted separately. The leaders at. the Muskogee convention of a few days ago knew this. Some of the rank and file of the Indian delegates may imagine that if they persist in their agitation for a state by themselves they will get it. But the chiefs of the . Cherokees, the Greeks and the rest of the five tribes are aware that this separatist crusade is an iridescent dream. Congress would never admit the Indian Territory except as a part of the proposed state, of Oklahoma. This has been shown so often and so plainly that no intelligent person in either of the twin territories has any doubt on this point." BACON'S observation that a wife is an impedi ment to enterprises of mischief received support according to the New York Evening Post in the yearly record. of the New York dis trict attorney's office. The Post says: "Only. 718 married man, as against 1,579 bachelors were found guilty x of crime. Once you are married, Stevenson said, there is nothing left for you but to be good. 'You have wilfully introduced a wit ness into your life . . . And your witness IP not only the judge, but the victim of your sms. Most crooks are single: they may play confidence games on their own sex, but not on th$ other. (Even in bigamy the ratio of female to male offenders is 1 to 4, whereas, in the total, all kinds included, it is only 1 to 13.) Burglary 13 peculiarly the occupation of men who have not domesticated the Recording Angel. In this county the record was 280 single, seventy-seven married. Under other heads the account stood: Stealing 828 to 303; rape, 16 to 8; murder, etc., 20 to 14. Strange to relate, the opposite holds true of women. The married were the chief offenders! The tables show six td nothing in favor of the spinsters, as to abduction; 35 to 25 " as to stealing; 2 to 1 as to manslaughter; 4 to 1 as to forgery. A husband and child seem to hde- meeaVof SSSL " MRNR?EVELTS remarljs at Chautauqua, i ''mye atracted more than ordinary attention. The New York Evening Post 2 ? ttathe8 ""r8 n tlatoccaS slio,. that he is not nearly so sure of his ground as formerly. The Post adds: "Mr. Roosevt be trays a nervousness and irritability on the sub ject, quite new to him. No longer is he for tie bill, the whole bill, and nothing but the bill to fix rates. All that he asks now is power to remedy the abuses in connection with railway tna!X0rftati0,n; N?fc yet' lt api)ears' has he looked to see if existing law does not furnish adequate power provided that it were used. And Tow after having refused to allow his chosen in vestigators to prosecute Paul Morton can the president rage, as he does, against those rloh men who knowingly violate the law? h! mav h? Whthat Morton case will be thVownT his teeth many times at Washington next win ter. How unconsciously Mr. Roosevelt drops Into the language of a benevolent autocrat is' seen if tawsibl?l,B,l,peedl- HWthStTt is impossible for him longer to show 'lohlpnnv to offenders against the anti-trust laws But that is .the tone a gracious monarcb A con- ulo,ua, ms-soie duty is .to-enforce the law. And what could be more futile than the president's begging the corporations 5 acquiesce in the 'mild kind of governmental trol' he proposes, 'lest some agitator comet power and deal with them in a far more St ft manner? Sensible men will consider his Z posalB on their merits; as they will those of th0 wilder confiscator when he turns up." M. DE MARTENS one of the Russian dele gates declared, during the peace confer ence, there was no precedent in history whero a country whose territory was not occupied in whole or any part by the enemy had paid war tribute upon the conclusion of peace. He said Should Russia consent to pay tribute to Japan in any form, it would be her political death The powers would understand that she accepted the proposition of President Roosevelt, not be cause she was desirous of an honorable peace but because her power had been annihilated and she recognized that itwas impossible for her to continue the war. It would mean a public con fession that Russia is at Portsmouth helplessly kneeling before Japan, imploring peace, and ready to accept any terms imposed. No one will seriously contend' that the Muscovite empire is in any such position." MANY interesting historical examples were . by M. de Martens. He pointed out that in 1807 when Napoleon imposed the peace of Tilsit, French troops occupied practically all of Prussia, and the Prussian royal family had fled to Russian soil. France could dictate terms. She exacted a war indemnity of $3,000,000 and gar risoned several Prussian towns with French troops at the expense of Prussia as a guarantee of payment. She required that the Prussian army should be reduced to 40,000 men. In 1815, when Napoleon was annihilated at Waterloo, after the famous "100 days," and the second treaty of Paris was concluded, the allied powers occupy ing Paris, as the Prussians did later, in 1870, im posed, in addition to other conditions, a war indemnity of $500,000,000, to be paid in five years, during which time the allied troops were to hold a portion of French territory. That sum, how ever, was considerably- reduced by Wellington at Aixla-Chapelle, and France completed the pay ment of the indemnity in three years. The largest war indemnity ever exacted was imposed by Prince Bismarch, upon France, in 1870. It amounted to $1,000,000,000. But Napoleon III had fallen. Gambetta was powerless. Prussia was at Paris. The third republic succeeded in liquidating the- indemnity in two years, while, according to, the treaty, she had five years' time in which to pay. IN OTHER CASES where even a portion of the territory of the fated, country was oc cupied, M. de Martens said that no indemnity was exacted or even asked. For instance Russia in 1856 was not- asked to pay tribute. Neither did Austria in 1859, after having been de feated by the l Franco-Piedmontese and having lost Lombardy, or in 1866, after having been beaten by Prussia, pay an indemnity. Den mark in 1864 lost Schleswig-Holstein to Prussia, but paid nothing. "A new precedent was mado by America," added M. de Martens, "in her war with Spain. Although victorious and in a po sition to claim indemnity, she ended the war on principle and actually paid $20,000,000 to tho Madrid government for the Philippine islands." Independent of all these considerations, M. de, Martens said, Russia's objection to the pay ment of an indemnity, under no matter what form, comes from the fact that in all her history she never paid a cent in tribute to a foreign power, not even during the time of her worst defeats under Peter the Great, when a large por tion of the country was in the hands of the in vaders. AT THE MEETING' of the Grange held re cently at East Plymouth, Ohio, resolutions introduced by L. W.Stevenson were adopted as follows: "Whereas wo have been having bank failures for the past forty years .or longer, and our legislatures have taken - no ",steps to protect the people. Of late they are getting so frequent ii & ,.m ' i r . .jWMtm