S-. if i The Commoner. VOLUME 8, NUMBER 14 r Newspaper Comment on the Message New York Sun: Wo may only re mark lliiLf. In respect of tone, of nub jitanco, and of Intention Uio mossago delivered to conKroHB yesterday by llio chief rnuKlHlnito or tho United Stales Ih abHoluloly without preco dont or parallol in our do(!iimontary hlHlory. Comment on Its contents Ih unnecessary; It Is tho method, tho manner, (he aura that aro most dis turbing. Can any person skilled In tho psychologic Indlcallons road Mils portenloiiH diatribe without perceiv ing that Its legitimate place is rather In tlio Inwards of a carefully framed hypothetical question addressed to exports than In any respectable col lection of slate papers? It Is an oven more disturbing reflection that tho hand which penned this message is tho same hand which directs tho American navy, now on its mission toward unknown possibilities. God send our ships and all of us good luck. Now York Times: It Is our belief that Mr. Roosevelt, has at last gone whoro tho people will not follow. It Is not that tho measures he advocates aro boyond tho range of candid and reasonable discussion. Thoy are, as wo havo said, arguable, but ho docs not arguo either with candor or with reason. Tho passion, tho excitement, and tho intemperance of speech with ,utnh iio nnnn.ils to congress and to tho country aro so lamentably out of keeping with the dignity of his great office, and his delusion that those who disagree with him and who op iimmo lihn are criminals banded to gether in a conspiracy is so palpable that even among his sympathetic ad mirers there must be engendered tho gravest doubts of the prudence of further submission to the leadership of a man with such a temperament, with a mind thus organized. New York Journal of Commerce: Tho sentiments and purposes ex pressed and tho ends desired aro in tho main commendable, but tho idea that practical effect is to be given to them by legislation and adminis tration, by tho exercise of public authority, is carried to an extreme that is visionary, not to say absurd. Agitation for higher standards and bettor methods and legislation for tho protection of definite rights and tho punishment of specific wrongs are necessary instruments of progress, but tho regeneration and elevation of mankind is not to be accomplished by congressional action or the Culmin ation of official messages. Your Nerves Are tho Ilfo, tho vitality, tho energy M your body. It Ih tho nerves that cause tho heart to iHilflute, tho lungs to inhale tho oxy gon, tho brain to direct the motion of ovory organ of tho body, tho stomach to digest food, tho liver to secrete tho mlo, tho kidneys to illter tho blood, and tho bowels to carry off tho waste. When tho nerves of tho stomach bc mo weakened or exhausted, Indiges tion, Constipation and Inflammation ro k' bocausu tho stomach is Inactive. IhlH Is true of all tho organs of tho body, and proves that to euro dlseaso you must strengthen the nerves. Dr. Miles' Nervine is the great specific for the nerves, and In bringing them back to health never falls to cure all eases of Nervousness. Sleeplessness Neuralgia, Headache Spasms, Mackaehe, Muscular Twltch Ings St. Vitus Dance, Epilepsy, Stom ach. Uvor and Kidney Troubles. lI,,l!r Wn y,Jl,'H Physicians and health resorts failed to relievo mo of a compli cation of stomach, Uvor, kidney and heart, affections. Six bottles of Dr. Miles' Nervlno cured mo." G. W. AllCIlBOLD, C.rocer, The urst bottle will bStfnot ho druggist will return your money. Now York Evening Post: Some overanxious people have feared that tho president would fall below that high dignity with which he has hith erto invested his office; thrt he would bo garrulous, repetitious, impatient, cocksure, querulous, hot-headed, and impracticable. But we now see that all these anticipatory complaints were unfounded, if not actually malicious. Lot doubters read the message itself, and they can not fall to be delighted with its calmness, its poise, its tol erance, and its terse writing. sions and the laying off of working people, to expose and punish the am bushed defiant rascals who have made all the trouble and have corrupted our financial and commercial system. Boston Transcript: Wo believe the country stands back of the great Roosevelt policies, and that public sentiment will ratify the further steps which he proposes. He does not give credit enough for what the laissez faire system has accomplished in de veloping the best talents of men. Probably we can go as far as the president now asks with entire safety but tho general direction in which his teachings lead is one that all hu man experience warns us to take with some deliberation. New York Herald: Taking the views expressed by the actual presi dent and the possible candidate and comparing them with the declarations of the platforms adopted by both the great political parties in 1896 one gets some measure of the progress made in public sentiment to which the platforms always cater in the direction of authorizing government supervision over business affairs and the regulation of great corporations. New York World: Roosevelt is intemperate, abusive, hasty. His message is more like a stump speech than a state paper. It is less an arg ument than a shriek. Richmond News-Leader: Wo be lieve this message will make the president stronger than he was be fore. Tt will clear away all tho mist and smoke that have been blown over tho situation, bring the real facts and issues vividly into the pub lic mind, harden the determination to go on in spite of panics and depres- The Omaha World-Herald AUI.Y lOIHTKI) :-: NKWSY :"s DEMOCRATIC Oor Special Offe r Pri Dully World-Herald.. Dally World-Herald, UxetnYt' siiminv' " i ' SiMnl-Weekly WorliMiernld y" ' Publishers Our Price x-nco Willi Thn Commoner 00 $4.00 00 n.25 IjO 1.2K SEND SUUSCKIPTIONS NOW TO THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Nebrask - - """""'"-"TIIMIIIIIIIMI. ii WORD ANDWORK Published Monthly "ilV- Ktiv. IKL. R. HICKS EDITOP m Itar. M. n. Hicks- A,m,mc tor 1008 icsiilur ,rlTO of those two'PertwfflT1 m'd th c-aUon is nowhSaid wuoSTffiJ Wova and Works Tho Commoner $1.00 Total 11JL00 Tills rniiMnvn ,-. -TrilSZ .V... "COJ", Nob. Muxunuttami I New York Tribune: These views may not find expression in legisla tion this year or next year, or even in the year after. They are the legacy of Mr. Roosevelt's administra tion to the administrations which are to follow. But they contain seed which is bound to come to fruitage, and from that point of view they are of general and permanent importance and deserve tho searching and sober consideration of the American people. Baltimore American: The style of the message is quite unusual when it is considered as a state paper con-, veying the views of the chief execu tive to a co-ordinate branch of the government. But if regarded as a bit of offensive and defensive oratory well, when considered in that light perhaps it will go far to justify those who have expressc.: the opinion that Mr. Roosevelt is the ablest politician of his generation. New York Globe: It isn't worth while to hammer away at a man of strawthat he is assailed because he has attacked intrenched dishon- ,?'., iio would never have been called the man on the barrel if his 5emAe had merely been that of standing for decency and cleanness in business. It is the evidence of the presence of a disorderly mind in a place of great responsibility that has bred the scare. Philadelphia Record: Tho presi- M,?iS IS0!?1 e,arnestness is inspiring. Much of the legislation he asks for wirS' faml ?. Could be obtained mviinS fo,montinS Jn the minds of Srian W .a,re not much given to iitt!o tb. idea tllat wealth Is gen erally obtained by oppression and li?7, iUd wIthut giving the n w?i0n th.at corPrations are to Sf SfdJSSt dyenaged CHminalS Philadelphia Press: These crpir reforms President Rooseve t cange because no man doubts his sincerity He has done a great work. He haq ?h?.ed the raoral consciousness o? StoJSX;, H, IS hated by men d corporations who profited by them praise!"6 hatred te the "Wrt ident ignores the fact that hi? fortunate condition 11, hIs, un" brought about by what L-m been than by what he d7d Said more ELIHU BURRITT, PIONEER The citizens of New Britain, Conn. aro preparing to erect a Lut monument to their distinguish townsman, Elihu Burrltt. Contri. buttons should be sent to Airs. Annie unurcnm, New Britain, Cbnnectl. cutt. Mr. Burritt was a plo. neer in the peace movement and hij services were important enough to de serve commemoration. Tho folio. ing comments upon his work are worthy of reproduction: Tho Great Peace Congresses The idea of an international meet. ing to promote the cause of peace had taken shape in 1S43 in tho Lon don peace congress. Mr. Burritt naturally revived the idea as em bodying the purpose of the League of Universal Brotherhood. Very largely under his leadership a series of great meetings was held from 1848 to 1851 in Brussels, Paris, Frankfort and London. It is im possible in the space of this sketch to describe the sessions of these congresses or to show how large a part Mr. Burritt had in carrying them out. The judg ment is correct that the suc cess of the gatherings depended up on his initiative and effective organ izing ability. He traveled very widely in Europe and America, pleading for the cause represented in the congresses and awakening inter est in them. The great meetings were due more largely to Mr. Burritt than to any other person. The men with whom Mr. Burritt became related in this movement were the leaders of the higher life of the world. Richard Cobden, John Bright, Victor Hugo, de Tocqueville and many others were the associates and friends of Mr. Burritt in this great enterprise. Certainly uo na tive of New Britain and few Ameri cans of his day enjoyed so wide, so noble and so sacred a range of per sonal friendships and sphere of la bor as did Mr. Burritt during these years of most distinguished service to the cause of humanity. The Congress of Nations Idea If we were to think of Mr. Bur rit, however, as 'the organizer of suc cessful international meetings wo should do scant justice to the great contribution made by him to the cause of peace. He presented at the congresses in Brussels, Paris and Frankfort that which became known as "the American plan" and was in many respects the most significant of all the deliberations of the con gresses. This was the proposition for "a congress of nations, for the purpose Subscriber' flawrtisins Det. This department is for tho exclusive use of Commoner subscribers, and special rate of six cents a word per in sertion the lowest rate has peen made for them. Address all communi cations to The Commoner, Lincoln, Nod. 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