'Tyf irV""ygffliw r Fw l". ??' ''"JPME" -,- The Commoner, WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR ir . VoI. 6. N6i13 . f- Lincoln, Nebraska, April 13, 1906 Wftble Number 273 i .h- JW HjWPPpp- "?qp"tc dtiA SXuSnC ? CONTENTS i . ; I ' u Mfc. Bbtan's Iiixxn. . WlIAT TCCKIXS MjCAWT . : r - OeGANIZATIOX r5 .: TlLLBCAN AT THE OtD STAND- .: The Long .Amendment , , . The Chicago Election ..-. State Insurance 1 Kneeling Among the Lilies r. Washington City Letter v ' '"' ''""' COMMENT ON CuiiBENT TOPICS ;:- Home Department Whether Common or Not News of the Week V ' f "BATTLING FOR THE PEOPLE" The St. Louis Globe-Democrat,, a republican . paper, says that the Issue of the congressional .: campaign will be the trusts The Globe-Demo- crat then makes these remarkable statements: K ":A vlntnrv fnr tho dfimonraftv this vear would be itvio.tbrv for trustism in, the in oat offensive shane in whichit;cnpe ocratic candidate; for 'congress wiir stand nhe re sources and the nower of the Backers' combine. Jfor the Hills and the Morgans of the Northern Securities company, which Roosevelt overthrew in 1904, and the rest of the .aggregations of con solidated capital whose existence will be menaced if the republicans win. Against the banded barons of corporate greed the republican party is battling for the industrial freedom of 85,000,000 of Americans in the congressional canvass of 1906, and the fight which it is preparing to put up and the principles which will be involved will make the contest memorable." Comment upon such statements as these is unnecessary. They serve to give a fairly accurate - Idea of the estimate which some of these repub- lican editors place updh the intelligence of tho 'people. . JJJ WHAT ECKLES MEANT " . Referring to tho democratic nomination for 1908, James H. Eckles of Chicago, who was. comp troller of the currency under the Cleveland ad "' ministration, said: "The desirable qualities in such a candidate would be a belief in those things which are absolutely democratic and are wholly -removed from populism. The democratic party can win if it is willing to be democratic; it can nofwin If it is not democratic." Thomas Kendrick of Glenwood Springs, Colo rado, referring to this statement, says: "I don't quite understand it. Will you please explain just what Mr. Eckles' means by being willing to be democratic. And what is" 'wholly removed from populism?' " - .-J-- By "absolutely democratic" Mr. Eckles means absolutely subservient to special Interests. By ' "wnolly removed from populism" Mr. Eckels means entirely free from the temptation to sym pathize with the oppressed, and ah indisposition to deny the divine right of the oppressor. . JJJ fV ROLL CALL IN WASHINGTON 'V- At the Jefferson banquet of the Douglas club, held at Springfield, Mass., April 2, former Con- gressman John R. Thayer according .to the New ""York World said: "A United States senator said to me 'Thayer, it is so rotten in Washington that when the roll is called. in congress I don't know whether to say present or not guilty " Yet there areNsome eminent republicans. who '-"Wee ttie people to" "let well endujdi ainnn" v' ..' ' - ' - ' , PLUTOCRACY AT THE BATH & " The Philippines "The Northern Is1 ands and Their People iVlr. Bryan's Thirteenth Letter 4 '"' h' "-" While a deep interest in the political prob lems tempts me to deal at once with the policy to be pursued by our government with respect to the Filipinos, I am constrained to proceed logi cally and discuss first the islands and their peo ple. And in speaking of the Filipinos, a distinc tion should be made between those who inhabit the northern islands and are members of one branch of the Christian church and those who inhabit the island of Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago people who are followers of Mo hammed. While a considerable number of Fil ipinos are to be found in Mindanao and some in Sulu, the Sultans and Datus have dominated the country. Even Spanish authority never extend ed over the southern islands and the garrisons maintained at the seaports were constantly In fear of massacre. Leaving the southern islands for the next article, I shall confine myself at present to Lu zon, Panay, Negros, Cebu, Samar and the smaller islands which make up the Visayan group. These islands contain the bulk of the territory, a large majority of the people, most of the material wealth and practically all of the civilization of the Philippines. Luzon, the largest of the entire group, reaches almost to the nineteenth parallel and is about six degrees long.. Like the islands of Japan, " it is mountainous and well watered. The other islands of the group are considerably smaller and extend nn far emifh no tha ninth 'narallftl. Tbev. toO. are mountainous, but the valleys are fertile and support a large population. The principal indus try is agriculture, and the soil produces a variety of cereals, fruits and vegetables. Rice, as in other oriental countries, Js the chief article of food, though hemp Is by far the largest export, . The hemp plant looks so much like tho banana that the traveler can scarcely distinguish be tween them. Sugar cane Is also grown In many parts of the islands and would be cultivated still more largely but for the low price of raw sugar. Sugar, however, can not be raised here with tho same profit that it can in Hawaii and Cuba owing to the fact that It must be replanted more fre quently. Tobacco of an excellent quality is pro duced on several of the islands sufficient to sup ply the home demand (and' nearly all Filipinos use tobacco) and leave a surplus for export. The cocoanut Is a staple product hero of great value and Its cultivation can be indefinitely extended. Of all the crops it probably yields the largest income on the investment, but as the trees do not begin to bear until they are about eight years old, they are only cultivated in small groves or by those, who can afford to wait for returns. Copra, the dried meat of the cocoanut, Is now exported, to- the value of two and a half million dollars, but systematic effort ought to very large ly increase this, export. TJie methods of cultivation and the imple mentB used are not as modern as one would ex pect The carabou, or water buffalo, is the one 1 1 A Hj-i.. I T..1 ft.rti3,'ai!ij ..