Conservative * TROPICAL KXPANSION. EDITOR THE CONSERVATIVE , Nebraska City , Neb. Sir : In "Dutch Colonizers in Mal aysia" and "The Annexation of the Philippines/ pamphlet published six months ago , I set forth some of the conditions of tropical Oriental countries dominated by Europeans , specially re ferring to Java and the state of the sub jugated natives there , who after n long period of exaction and oppression , are gradually coming to a realization of some of their rights , and are therefore no longer fully submitting to the tyr anny of their foreign masters , but are slowly emancipating themselves from the despotism of their alien rulers and thereby making the exploitation of their lands and people a source of less yearly profit to European owners. As one reason for my opposition to the policy of colonial expansion pur sued by the present administration of the United States government I quoted very liberally from statistics gathered from English , Dutch and French records of colonization and now pre sent an epitome of these in a condensed form , to-wit : The Caucasian cannot thrive , physi cally , nor perform manual labor of any kind for any considerable period in the sea-level tropics. It is said that in col onizing the Congo Free State nine out of every ten Europeans going there were either buried or returned home invalided within three years. The largest of the 120 Belgian trading companies main tains a service of only seven mouths out of every twenty-four. In constructing the Panama railroad across the Isthmus of Darieu a human life was sacrificed for every tie that lies in the road. The outcome of our own exportation of troops to the Philippines bears out the statement that our people cannot endure the sea-level tropical climate. "The strength of Anglo-Saxon civilization lies in the mental and physical activity of men and where activity is fatal to life , the Anglo-Saxon decays , mentally , morally , physically. " Even by shielding himself from every exposure he cannot many years remain in tropical coun tries , aad no third generation survives him there. Civilians and soldiers alike succumb to the baleful effects of the enervating climate , and both yield to the unfavorable influences of Eastern customs and conditions. In Oriental colonies the Caucasian is outclassed by the hordes of skilled nat ive artisans , mechanics and laborers ; laborers work for wages that the white man can not live on. "Ten or fifteen cents a day is not a free man's scale of wages. There is no room for free la borers , no welcome for them , and no pay. There is no chance for the American workman , but for the syndi cates they offer great opportunities for the syndicates who handle politics as an incident in business. "For our extermination of the Indian , there is , in general , no moral justifica tion. There is a good political excuse in it that we could and did use their laud in a better way than was possible to them. We have no such excuse in Luzon ; wo cannot use the land except as we use the lives of the people. Should we exterminate these people we could only replace them with Malay , Chinese or Japanese , not with our own. " The maintenance of law and order at home , respect for manhood , of industrial wis dom and enterprise , and commercial integrity is the true "White Man's Bur den , " while as now considered and il lustrated in practice it seems to bo a desperate effort to force the black man to support himself and the white man , too. too.The The Oriental tropical "colonies ( so- called ) are merely military posts exer cising despotic control over the natives for the benefit of the exploiters the capitalists of the home country or gov ernment. The exploitations of Euro pean colonizing nations have always been and will continue to be for the benefit of the few the high civil and military officials sent out by the home government and the plantation owners and rich traders. There never was a tropical country governed with any de gree of success without a system of con tract labor , vide the Hawaiian islands. One of the commissioners appointed by this government to investigate the labor and other questions at the time the islands were annexed , called attention to the fact that the sugar and coffee in terests of the islands cannot got along without the cheap contract labor. The prizes for colonial service under English imperialism ore not only wealth wrung from the natives but a title and a pension. A correspondent from Ma nila said : ' 'The only imperialists in all the American forces now in these is lands are to be found among the tem porary government appointees , who see coming within their grasp large , fat of ficial plums ; and a large per cent of the well paid army officers , surrounded by their large retinue of cheap servants , a la ante bellum days in the South. It is not true that a superior race gov erning an inferior one in the tropics , when the superior race cannot take with it the wives and children and create homes there , will benefit such race by example. It is only exploited by schem ers who stay in such countries until they take a "sack" BO as to be able to return and live comfortably in their own country. Our exports to the Philippines have not exceeded an average of $180,000 per year for twenty years past. During the year ending Juue 80 , 1899 , we exported only $127,000 worth of goods to the Philippines , while to the remainder of the world wo exported $1,820,000,000 worth. They were less than 1-100 of one per cent of the total exports of this country for the year ending June 80 , 1898. Our imports from the Philippines were from $4,000,000 to $8,000,000 per annum , according to the kind of money they are valued in. These exports from the Philippines hemp , sugar , tobacco , etc. all bore , under Spanish rule , an export tax to defray expenses of admin istration , which our constitution forbids. Moreover all interests of value in the Philippines are already controlled by the English , German , Spanish , French and the Chinese , of the latter of whom there are GO.OOO in Luzon alone ; be sides the Filipinos' rights , property titles , positions of vantage , etc. We do not need the Philippines to maintain the prestige of our commerce in the Orient. Commercial growth does not depend on territorial expansion. The cant that "trade follows the flag" is a shallow sophistry. Trade is determined by fitness , price and transportation , all of which may be summed up in the one word price. The four leading colonizing nations , Great Britain , Germany , France and in the five 1898-97 inclusive Spain , years , - , ive , as compared with similar preceding period , lost over 1,500 million dollars of their export trade , while the United States , without colonies , and a very limited tonnage , increased its export trade with foreign markets over 270 million dollars. And it is a surprising fact that the export trade of Great Britain with her colonies , protectorates and spheres of influence decreased more than 200 million dollars in this same time. This should afford conclusive evidence that the commerce of the world has inexorable laws of its own. In the pursuit of glory , expansion , benevolent assimilation , or other high- sounding terms , in reality a war of ex termination of the most indefensible character in the records of civilization , we are trying to hold a large and active population by force , without visible plan or purpose , or reason for so doing. Thousands of lives have been sacrificed , millions of property destroyed and mil lions of money expended in this unneces sary invasion of an unoffending people's rights. And yet , despite all the evidence con firming these facts those who protest against this distressing waste of life , property , treasure and against the viola tion of the principles of our government are glibly disparaged for "treason , " "sedition. " As a writer in The Dial of July 10 , very pertinently remarks : "Not since the days of the assault , in the United States congress on John Quincy Adams and Joshua Giddings , for their grand defense' the sacred right of petition , has the public been so swayed by ignorant and servile intoler ance as during the past six months. The press of the country , with a few \l \