y.'atasftftaF.tii'ir'. .FfflEr :vmum '"WjmSfT k l' u t i h I t i v I -. m ' .iT( c 1 IF I ' F A flit MAT DEMOCRATIC VICTORY Following to an Associated Press dispatch: "Washington, May 14. Supported by all tho progressive republicans, tho house tonight passed tho Clayton anti-injunction bill. Every democrat present voted for it, and the result was announced to tho accompaniment o a re markable demonstration. "Tho legislation is regarded as one of tho most advanced steps yet taken in tho interests of organized labor. Throughout tho debato President Gompors, Secretary Morrison and a half dozen members of the executive committee of tho American federation of labor woro in terested listeners. Gompers occupied a front seat in the members' gallory. "Tho opposition to tho measuro attempted to put through a substitute drawn by Representa tive Sterling of Illinois. This modified tho swooping terms of the Clayton bill, but it was defeated, 219 to 48. "It was generally said that the Clayton meas ure would meet with little opposition in tho sonato. Tho bill amends tho law to prohibit tho issue of injunctions without notice being served on those affected. "Such injunctions would bo effective for seven days only and renewal would bo possible only when the court was convinced such injunc tion waa necessary for the conservation of rights of property. b " 'Jotik Doo' injunctions would be impossible and tho right of 'peaceful picketing' in strikes or tho 'peaceful boycotts' would be recognized." Tho following plank appeared in the demo cratic platform of 189 6: "Wo denounce arbitrary Interference by federal authorities in local affairs as a violation of tho constitution of the United States and a crime against free institutions, and wo especially object to government by Injunction as a new and highly dangerous form of oppression by which federal judges, in contempt of the laws of tho states and rights of citizens, become at once legislators, judges, executioners; and wo approvo tho bill passed at the last session of tho Unltod States sonato, and now pending in tho house of representatives, relative to con tempts in federal courts and providing for trials by jury in certain cases of contempt." Tho following appeared in the democratic platform of 1908: "If judicial processes may be abused, we should guard them against abuse. "Experienco has proven the necessity of a modification of the present law relating to in junctions, and wo reiterate tho pledge" of our national platforms of 189G and 1904 in favor of tho measure which passed tho United States sonato in 189G, but which a republican congress has ever since refused to enact, relating to con tempts in federal courts and providing for trial by jury in caso of indirect contempt. "Questions of judicial practice have arisen especially in connection with industrial dis putes. Wo deem that tho parties to all judicial proceedings should be treated with rigid im partiality, and that injunctions should not bo Issued in any cases in which injunctions would not issue if no Industrial dispute were involved." AT THE TITANIC MEMORIAL Mr. Bryan was one of tho speakers at tho Titanic memorial services in New York on the 21st of April. The meeting was arranged by Mr. Frederick Townsend Martin, whose activity In public affairs of a popular nature is giving him increasing distinction. There were a num ber of persons on the program, and tho local papers only published extracts of the various speeches. By request, Mr. Bryan gives below a brief abstract of his remarks: Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen: "Wo aro all indebted to Mr. Frederick Townsend Martin for this opportunity to give joint expres sion to the universal sorrow which the Titanic catastrophe has brought and to put into words our sympathy for tho relatives of those who were lost. There are just three thoughts. I deslro to present each thought in a word. First, tho death of so many at ono time under condi tions so appalling shows that whatever dif ferences may separate us in matters of creed or politics or social environment, wo are one at heart and speak a common language when we mourn. Death by accident is not infrequent in these modern times it is only too frequent but occasional deaths, however great in the aggregate, do not shock us like the burying of a multitude in one watery grave. The great 'stream of our national sympathies is swollen from time to time by the tragedies that occur upon the rail, 1n the mines and in the factories i but those, like the swollen tributaries of a great river, do not come all at once. A calamity. The Commoner. like the sinking of the Titanic raises human sympathy to a flood. The second thought is that the world is full of heroes who only wait the necessary staging to play their part. As we meet peoplo upon the street, we can not always tell the real man from the villain, but an emergency furnishes a stage where the character of these is dis tinguished. The Titanic disaster has brought to view a nobility in men and women that makes us proud of our civilization. Men who in the presence of danger can stand back and at the risk of death invite others to precede them ex hibit a self-control and an unselfishness that makes us all proud of these illustrations of man hood that were not confined to the rich or to . the poor. We found the men of means and employes upon the ship vieing with each other in manifesting a high conception of duty. Women, too, proved themselves equal to the occasion. One will be especially cherished in memory, tho wife of Isador Straus, who pre ferred to risk death by his side rather than to be saved without him a modern Ruth. Tho third word is the lesson to be learned. Mr. Martin has coined a splendid phrase when he says that one can see farther through a tear than through a telescope. Our sympathy ex cited by this enormous sacrifice of life will be quick to point out improvements that may be made in seafaring for the safety of the pas " sengers. I remember hearing a man quote some , thirty years ago the declaration that without the shedding of blood there is no remission of sins, and ho made a broad, application of it by adding that no great reform comes until the tragedy of death has startled the country and made it acquainted with .the evils that need to be remedied. Already numerous remedies have been proposed, and we can not doubt that as a result of this great misfortune, the lives of those who will travel upon the sea will be made more secure. The speed mania will bo checked if not entirely cured; more attention will be given to the safety which has been in some cases sacri ficed to luxury. A sufficient number of life boats willbe required and better regulation for tho transfer of crew and passengers to the life boats. Two wireless operators will be put upon all ships, and other precautions will be com pelled. Out of the grave new hope will come, and the dead by their death will aid the living. In conclusion let me add that one thought which must come to us all on an occasion like this is that the soul can not be swallowed up by the sea any more than it can be confined in a tomb upon the land. That which is best in us can not be destroyed by the elements that battle so successfully against the body. Many of us were personally acquainted with thosa who lost their lives upon the Titanic. That which we knew in these friends still lives, and we shall greet them in the world beyond. DEATH, THE GREAT LEVELER King Frederick of Denmark fell dead upon the street a few days ago and not being Identi fied his body was taken to a morgue, where the members of the family afterwards found it. Death is a great leveler; it comes to prince and to peasant alike. While this mysterious thing which we call life animated the body of the king he was supreme in his land, but the mo ment the golden cord snapped, his authority passed to another, and that which was mortal of him was carried to the common receptacle of tho unidentified dead. Mystery of mysteries is man; he comes into the world without his voli tion, he lives moulded by conditions that he can not largely change, and passes out of this temporal existence he knows not when. He works with an interrogation mark before him, and must qualify all of his plans with an "if." He surrounds himself with that which he calls' his own, and sometimes builds artificial walls between himself and others, but when death comes his plans are at an end, and the temporal abode of his spirit falls back to the dust whence it came. Surely death is a great leveler. THE INCONTROVERTIBLE BOND The Commoner, in a recent issue, called at tention to a suggestion made many years ago by Tom L. Johnson and renewed by Mr. Jones, tho New York banker, in reference to giving elasticity to the currency by the issuing of money on government bonds. Here is a kind of elasticity that can be given without the ex tension of special privileges and without doing Violence to n.nv rlAmnnrn ln lVKt-nntio. mi -- .wvUwv. iiiuwj.jc. xuere is noi reason why every holder of a government bono; should not be able to use ijt as security in time of financial stress.- When the government loansliflioney on its own bonflnft not only (eases VOLUME 12, NUMBER 20 the money market but it saves the interest while the loan is outstanding. At present only banks could borrow on government bonds, and the money which, they borrow is of course loaned to the public at a higher rate of in terest than they pay for it. Why should banks bo given a monopoly of this privilege? The plan is commended to the democratic members of congress as one that can be used to satisfy the demand for elasticity. But possibly tho Wall street crowd 'does not want any elasticity that enables the public to get directly from the government. It Is worth while to put the advo cates of tho Aldrich bill to the test; or if they oppose the incontrovertible bond, it will show that their real desire is not elasticity but a mdre complete control of the financial situation by Wall street. TIT FOR TAT Assailing Mr. Roosevelt, Mr. Taft says: "Just in what respect I have failed, just in what re spect I am different from what I was when ho recommended me, I have been unable to see. "I am here to say why he should not be nomi nated, and why, if nominated, he will run tho risk of defeat in election. "Theodore Roosevelt would be a dangerous man to intoxicate with the compli ment of putting him in a place and giving him the power that has been denied to every Ameri can president since the beginning of the govern ment. "Is it fair, is it honest, is it a square deal for him to turn on me and denounce me for a reac tionary for following the only course which he advised "me to take?" Assailing Mr. Taft, Mr. Rgosevelt says: "Four years ago Mr. Taft had not discovered that I was a flatterer, a demagogue, and egotist, and engaged in honeyfuggling the people, and yet I stood then exactly whero I stand now. "We have not changed position, we progres sives, and we stand exactly where we stood four years ago.. It is Mr. Taft who has left us, and who has joined the enemy. Therefore our atti tude toward Mr. Taft can be expressed in the words of Abraham Lincoln, when he said: 'I will stand with anybody who stands for the right; stand with him while he is right, and .part with him when he goes wrong.' " ARIZONA'S INNOVATION Arizona, under the leadership of her reform executive, Governor Hunt, is setting the older states an example in the regeneration of con victs. Success to his efforts. The following Is from the Philadelphia Enquirer's Arizona cor respondent: "Two hundred converts in tho Arizona state penitentiary at Florence have organized a 'law and order league,' the constitution of which sets forth belief in prison reforms, and names the purpose to be the promotion of better morals and the abolishment of crime. The membership includes 96 per cent of the prisoners, who above their signatures have agreed to observe the following seven rules: " 'To try each day to do some good deed. " 'To set aside from each day a certain time for the study of pure and noble thoughts. " 'To assist each other in all matters of grievance. " 'To assist the officers in the discharge of their daily duties. " 'To avoid and prevent disorderly conduct. " 'To refrain from profane language. " 'To respect each other, assist the weak, and do all in our power to uplift the principles of prison reform and the policies of our new state.' " GOOD FOR THE MINORITY Men of all political parties will heartily ap prove the action of Senators Lea and Kern, democrats, and Senator Kenyon of Iowa, re publican, in protesting against the retention of William Lorimer in the United States senate. They have submitted for the consideration of the senate this resolution: "Resolved, That corrupt methods and prac tices were employed in the election of William Lorimer to the senate of the United States from the state of Illinois, and that his election was therefore invalid." The resolution ought to pass. Senators Lea, Kern and Kenyon may be depended upon to make a hard fight for it. It is to be regretted that the name of any democrat was appended to tho majority report, but it goes without say ing that Senators Lea and Kern are better repre sentatives of the-democratic party than Senator FJetcher ,of Florida and Senator Johnston' of AiaDama, i,um jo ; i 'j i mjf a i ftfl w'dri f sHilH