The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, April 01, 1915, Page 28, Image 28

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The Commoner
Figures Showing How New Tariff Act Has
Exceeded Expectations of Framers
Imports of merchandise into the United States during the flrst 10 months
October, 1913, to July, 1914 of the Underwood tariff, compared with
corresponding 10 months of preceding year under Payne-Aldrich law:
Oct., 1912 Oct., 1913.
Free of Duty to July 1913- to July 1914
Crude materials for use in manufacturing $426,288,885 ?7 6,6 31,873
TiVinrifltnrrn in nrudo condition, and food animals 146,127,571 180,5900
Foodstuffs partly or wholly manufactured 9,288,333
Manufactures for further use in manufacturing 153,525,916
Manufactures ready for consumption 78,521,292
Miscellaneous 7,856,170
41,469,374
170,823,497
109,463,260
9,724,132
Total freo of duty $821,608,167 $988,704,396
Dutiable.
Crude materials for use in manufacturing $ 98,538,931 $ 67,893,620
Foodstuffs in crude condition, and food animals 28,347,016
Foodstuffs partly pr wholly manufactured 151,422,902
Manufactures for further use in manufacturing. 144,152,526
Manufactures ready for consumption 256,257,749
Miscellaneous 3,499,712
40,010,806
161,950,132
84,223,980
259,841,767
4,344,675
Total dutiablo $682,218,836 $618,264,980
Total imports for ton months 1,503,827,003 1,606,969,376
Exports of domestic merchandise from New York for six months, taking
in horses, buckwheat, corn, wheat, wheat flour, automobiles, copper, cotton
raw, cottons unbleached, cottons knit and cotton wearing apparel, cart
ridges, firearms, machinery, wire, bacon, lard, illuminating oil, lubricating
oil, cotton-seed oil, sugar, leaf tobacco, wool apparel, zinc:
1913. 1914.
August $ 76,188,975 $ 32,841,243
73,274,514
82,623,762
71,141',834
80,426,235
1914
January ; 71,789,264
September
October .
November
December
60,323,690
86,086,309
82,891,122
94,326,218
1915.
100,841,418
Totals $455,444,584 $457,310,000
Record-making days of exports "of domestic merchandise from New York
In the present year: March 10, $10,575,191, the largest in the history;
March 11, $8,392,404; March 8, $8,049,006; February 24, $7,064,004;
March 4, $5,461,110; February 25, $5,425,645; March 9, $4,978,509;
March 5, $4,642,160. New York Herald.
Senator Stone as a Prophet
The Republic is glad to have given
to tho American public a speech on
the senatorial filibuster which Sen
ator William Joel Stone prepared
but had no opportunity to deliver in
the hurried hours of the demise of
tho Sixty-third congress. Here is a
passage which should burn itself into
the consciousness of every member of
the United States senate:
' "Mr. Preside republicans contend
that we can not close debate and vote
on a bill so long as any senator de
sires to speak, unless we change the
rules, and when we try, as we have
tried for days at a time, to change
the rules they tell us we can not vote
to change the rules as long as any
senator desires to speak on that ques
tion. Thus one filibuster is piled up
on another, and tho senate stands be
fore the country in a state of pitiable
helplessness. Here is where courage
even the very audacity of courage
is needed; here we need a sword
to cleave a Gordian knot. The sen
ate can do business if it will, and do
it without violating the spirit' of its
rules and in strict conformity with
its constitutional rights.
"It lookB, however, as if the fes
tering fingers of stale custom are so
By WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN
51 ESS AGES FOR THE TIMES
i'Jmo, boards; each, net, 35c.
"Pour eloquent and plcturesquo deliverances by one of tho great masters
ot English spoech. They are lucid, suggestive, practical, and present a
real and accessible standard of both national and individual living.
TIIE MESSAGE FROM BETHLEHEM
A plea tot tho world-wide adoption of tho spirit of the angels song
rood-wl'l to Men." Tho context and import of this great principle has
tightly fastened on the senate that
there must be an infusion of new red
blood before tho senate will have the
courage or capacity to cope effective
ly with a filibuster."
Youth, after all, is not primarily a
question of the number of a man's
years. According to the biograph
ical dictionaries, Senator Stone is
rounding into his sixty-eighth spring;
but the spirit that inhabits his frail
body is as young as it was a full half
century ago. The secret of Senator
Stone's leadership in the upper house
of congress does not lie primarily in
his vast experience of public affairs
and his wide knowledge of men and
things; it is in the spirit of the man.
It is in his courage, his disgust with
outworn precedents and hampering
rules.
Senator Stone carries the weight
of years upon his shoulders; but his
spirit goes out in welcome to the new
men who are coming into the Senate
of the United States men whose
enthusiasms, like his, are construc
tive, who will measure their effective
ness by things accomplished and not
by the hours in which the public busi
ness waits while they stand on their
feet and utter words with the sole
object of preventing action in a time
when reasonable men are tired of
talk.
It is men like Senator Stone who
preserve popular respect for the sen
ate of the United States. The general
public has no respect whatever for
the senate's rules. A body of 96 men
whose regard for the value of its own
time is so slight that any obstructive
half dozen of reactionaries is permit
ted to hang up its activities indefin
itely, even for weeks, can not com
mand mu:' respect 'for its regula
tions in an era of time clocks and
efficiency experts.
But such words as these from a
veteran legislator, a master of assem
blies and a commanding figure in the
dominant party, addressed to the
spirit of youth and progress in party
and nation, have in them the prom
ise of better things. There is noth
ing sacred about traditions that are
wrong. There is nothing sacred about
the action of democrats when they
go squarely back on democratic prin
ciples and join forces with reaction
aries, as did the senators whom Sen
ator Stone has condemned.
The older such a tradition as that
of "senatorial courtesy" in debate is
the greater need for sweeping it
away. A Missouri congressman was
the chief figure in the great change
which democratized the rules of the
house of representatives and made
another Cannon autocracy impos
sible. And stranger things have hap
pened than that the transformation
of the senate, making impossible for
all time the building up of another
Aldrich oligarchy, should come about
through the courageous and magnetic
leadership of a Missouri senator,
William Joel Stone. St. Louis Republic.
VOL. 150, 4
diplomats as tho silly work f
babe in diplomacy, and they ZA
a& uiBuuw ui tun. oi mm of
in a quiet and private way.
made
course,
"Good
Net, 35c.
never boen more understanding Bet forth.
THE ROYAIi ART
A lucid exposition of Mr, Bryan's views concerning the alms and ideals
o righteous government. Net, 35c.
THE MAKING OP A MAN
A faithful tracing of tho main lines to bo followed if the crown of
manhood is to bo attained. Net, 35c.
THE PRINCE OP PEACE
Mr. Bryan's famous locturo delivered ere now in tho hearing of tens of
thousands. In its present form it enters on an enlarged sphere of use
fulness. Net, 35c,
THE FRUITS OP THE TREE
"Either for tho reinvigoration of tho faith of tho roligious man' or for
tho dissipation of the doubts of tho irreligious man, this littlo volume is
a document of power." Continent. Net, 35c. l a
New York Chicago
FLEMING H. REVELIi COMPANY,
London and Edinburgh
Toronto
atu
.,
CITIZENS ARE CONTENT WITH
"PEACEFUL AMATEURS IN
DIPLOMACY"
In quite a lengthy article in the
New York Independent, entitled
"Utopia or Hell," Theodore Roose
velt says:
"Neither our foreign affairs nor
our naval affairs can be satisfactorily
managed when our president is will
ing to put in their respective depart
ments gentlemen like Mr. Bryan and
Mr. Daniels."
Roosevelt sometimes is extremely
unfair.
His opinion of Secretary of State
Bryan is not the ono hold now by
foreign governments, foreign min
isters, and foreign journalists.
At flrst, his frank and open state
I ments were looked upon by foreign
But, little by little, they began
see that what they considered child
ish and amateurish was only a Z '
method in diplomatic intercourse tn
which they were not accustomed--the
method of direct statement from
the beginning. w
Little by little, the foreigners be
gan more and more to admire the
man at whom they had sneered
until, but tho other day, a distin'
guished German diplomat bore high
testimony to Mr. Bryan's ability, and
declared the world some day would
thank him for having done more
than any- other one man to
steer diplomacy out of the path of
deception, if not lying, and to en
deavor to lift it to the plane of frank
and open business, rather than a
tricky art.
This German went on to say that,
in the new diplomacy practised by
both Mr. Wilson and Mr. Bryan, the
cards were thrown on the table from
the beginning while in the old di
plomacy they were concealed as long
as possible, although inevitably
forced to be revealed at some stage
in the game.
And the critic said he was not
certain whether, in the long run, it
might not be shown that "these raw
new-world amateurs in diplomacy"
were not playing the better gome of
the two.
Of course, it is too early to
judge whether Bryan has made or
will make a good secretary of state.
Time alone can determine that.
But one thing is certain: At this
particular hour, when nearly all Eu
rope is at war, and when the United
States is most particularly desirous
of keeping out of the fight, even
those American citizens who admire
Theodore Roosevelt are content that
President Wilson and his Man Fri
day are at the helm even if they he
peaceful amateurs in diplomacy
probably just because they are such.
Sacramento (Cal.) Bee.
CLAIM NO. 54
Homer E. Aylsworth of Aurora,
Nebraska, junior partner in the law
firm of Hainer, Crafts & Aylsworth,
held policy No. 6386 in THE MID
WEST LIFE-for $5,000. It was is
sued to him nnder date of July 9.
1914.- The total premiums he paid
to the company amounted to only
$112.40. Late in the same year his
health began to fail him and on Jan
uary 29, 1915, he died of pleurisy.
In less than ueven months after
Mr. Aylsworth passed a satisfactory
medical examination, his life work
ended. His clients, his friends, asso
ciates and family know him no more,
only in memory. Among all the
many business deals he had in the
latter months of his life, the one
which most benefited his family and
his estate was undoubtedly that o
by which he became a policyholder
in this company
TheMidwestLife
of LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
A STOCK COMf ANY Se'NhcE
GUARANTEED COST LIFE INSURANT
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