"ftfr"jT"WW'iJwtiP f f""1 The Commoner WILLIAM J. .BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR VOL. 10, NO. 5 Lincoln, Nebraska, February 11, 1910 Wlole Number 473 Cannon Not Alone A Taft elector from Ohio, Mr. E. M. Higgins, returned from a visit to Washington a few days ago and gave his impressions to tho Ohio State Journal as follows: "I have seen in the concrete in Washington "what I have always known in the abstract, and that is Cannonism and Aldrichism in control of the legislative machinery of the national gov ernment, directing tho party's policy, suppres sing reformative measures, blocking the presi dent in his program, insolent with power, defy ing public opinion, celebrating their successful exploitation of the people and planning further to serve the special interests of which Cannonism and Aldrichism are the agents. I am a repub lican. All these evils are done in the name of the republican party. If these forces of cor ruption and deplorable political methods are not dislodged the republican party will collapse by the very weight of them. The issue is be coming more a1 moral than a political one." Referring to this interview, the Kansas City Times, a republican paper, says: ' "All of which means, in a word, that if the republican party is to be saved it is to be saved, by the insurgents, whom Speaker Cannon has been trying to read out of the organization." But why lay it all onto Mr. Cannon? What about Mr. Taft? Is he not trying to drive the insurgents out of the republican party? Is it not about time that republicans recognize that Aldrichism and Cannonism is as thoroughly en trenched in the' White' House as it is-.in the capi tal building? oy - . .v A STERN. REMINDER Mr. Roosevelt's suit against the New York World and Indianapolis News has. been dis missed by the federal court at New York. It was a mistake to begin these 'proceedings and the fact that the president of the United States seriously undertook to hold newspapers to account- for the criticisms of individuals, seeking to establish that there is such a thing as lese majeste in this country, must have been re gretted by thoughtful men in all political parties. The Philadelphia Public Ledger" puts it well when, in approving the dismissal of these proceedings, it says: "Every citizen has access to the courts; the government can not stretch out its imperial hand and distort a plea of personal libel to the ar bitrary suppression of public criticism. The de cision is most important, not merely as it con cerns the liberty of the presst but as a reminder to those- in authority that ours is a government of law." WHY NOT LAFOLLETTE? A Washington dispatch carried by the As sociated Press says: "President Taft read in the papers today that the senate was marking time while the house is struggling with the va rious appropriation bills. So he sent for Sen-' CONTENTS CANNON NOT ALONE ABRAHAM LINCOLN REPUBLICAN PROSPERITY ITEM IN OLD VIRGINIA ADDRESSED TO BRITONS BUT VALUABLE TO AMERICANS WHERE THE OLD SHIP IS LEAKING PRACTICAL TARIFF TALKS HOW THE FARMER PROSPERS TIMELY QUOTATIONS A YOUNG GIRL'S LESSON CURRENT TOPICS HOME DEPARTMENT WHETHER COMMON OR NOT NEWS OF -THE WEEK , WASHINGTON NEWS LINCOLN'S "PURPLE PATCHES" BIGGER ISSUES THAN PERSONALITIES " If the cost of living continues to in- , crease, the masses of tho people will awaken to the truth, already realized by a few leaders that there is a vital rela- tion between legislation and life, and - that the quarrels' between polit'ical lead- ers of the Aldrich-Cannon typo, and . those who would see them succeeded by , others, involve Issues bigger than per- sonalities. Voter Magazine, Chicago. . ators Penrose of" Pennsylvania, Crane of Massa chusetts and Carter of Montana and asked why it would not be a good thing for the senate to "get busy" on some of the measures he had recommended. Senator Aldrich was not includ ed in the summons, he being absent from the. city." Mr. Aldrich was out of the city otherwise he would have been included. But Messrs. Pen rose, Crane and Carter are good enough "re formers" in this year of 1910. How does it happen that Mr. Taft's political conferences are held with such men as Aldrich, Penrose, Crane and Carter? If he is the reformer that some of our repub lican friends would have it appear, why do wo never hear that he is in consultation with Sen ator LaFollette? STOP THAT EXTRAVAGANCE The Spokane Spokesman-Review, republican, has an explanation for tho increased coBt of liv ing. It says: "Some part of the increased cost of living is due to higher prices of necessaries, but personal indulgence and extravagant desires are the chief factors." This will bo interesting reading to the con siderable number of people who have stopped eating meat by way of protest against trust im position and to the even larger number of people who have curtailed their supply of moat and of other foods because of inability 'to pay the high prices fixed by tho men who have secured a' monopoly upon the necessaries of life. "Per sonal indulgence and extravagant desires are the chief factors" says this republican organ. Is it possible that the American people are so simple as some of the arguments addressed to them by republican editors would indicate? REPUBLICAN PARTY DOCTRINE Referring to the statement attributed to President Taft that New Mexico and Arizona must submit their new constitutions for the ap proval of congress before they are admitted to the union, the Lincoln (Neb.) Journal, republi can, says: "If the territories are competent for statehood they are competent to draft their own consti tutions, without further limitations than are imposed by the fundamental law of the re public." The Journal must remember, however, that the present day republican party doctrine is: "Government without the consent of the gov erned" which, in the case of proposed states or AviRHner colonies, means tho right to carefully scrutinize all constitutions and statutes that Tnitrhf In mv wav interfere with snejiifflJikin- "o " " JMfl terests. SDBftJ MORE PEOPLE THAT'S EASY Professor Milton Whitney of the United States department of agriculture has an explanation for the high cost of living. He says: "People are eating far more now than they did fifty years ago." And in his opinion that goes a long way to explain the Increase in cost. Of course "people are eating far 'more now than they did fifty years ago," because there aTe more people. But there are a whole lot of people who are not eating quite so much today as they were during the summer of 1908 while the republi can party was trying to secure an extension in its lease of power. Abraham Lincoln -Tomorrow will be the one hundred and first anniversary of tho birth of Abraham Lincoln. American citizens everywhere might, with great profit to themselves and. to their country, spend a few hours February-12, 1910, in reading some of the advice which this man of tho people gave to. his countrymen. "Soberly," said Abraham Lincoln in 1859, "it is now no child's play to save tho principles of Jefferson from total overthrow in this nation." In this year of 1910, fifty-one years after Abraham Lincoln made this ptatement, it is now "no child's play" to save- the principles of Jef ferson from total overthrow in this -nation. Mr. Lincoln was not a man of one idea. His thoughts wero not entirely centered upon tho slavery question. 'lie knew that, aside from tho institution of slavery, there were other deep seated problems with which tho people of a re public must grapple and his writings and speech es are full of statements which have direct bear ing upon tho great contest in which tho Amer ican people are now engaged a contest wherein it is to be determined whether a plutocracy or the people Bhall govern in this great republic. "I hold," said Mr. Lincoln, "If tho Almighty had ever made a set of men that should do all the eating and none of the work, he would havo made them with mouths only and no hands; and if he had ever made another class that ho intended should do all tho work, and none of the eating, he would have made them without mouths and with all hands. But inasmuch as he has chosen to make men in that way, if anything is proved It is that those hands and mouths are to be co-operative through life and nfat to be interfered with. That they are to go forth and improve their conditions, as I havo been trying to illustrate, Is the Inherent right given to mankind directly by the Maker." Many of the things written and said by Mr. Lincoln seem to havo been written for this very time. It would be well if every American citizen could ponder upon these utterances and profit by them. On one occasion ho said: "The resources, advantages and powers of the American people are very great, and they havo consequently succeeded to equally great respon sibilities. It seems to havo devolved upon them to test whether a government established on tho principles of human freedom can be maintained against an effort to build one upon the exclusive foundation of human bondage." No statement made by Mr. Lincoln is more ' appropriate today than his definition of liberty. He said: "The world is in want of a good definition of the word liberty. We all declare ourselves to be for liberty; but we do not all mean the same thing. Some mean that a man can do as he pleases with himself and his property. With others it means that some, men' can do as they please with other men and other men's labor. Each of these things is called liberty, although they are entirely different. To give an illustra tion: A shepherd drives a wolf from the throat of-his sheep when attacked by him, and the sheep, of course thanks the shepherd for the preservation of his life; but the wolf denounces him as despoiling the wolf of his liberty; espe cially if it be a black sheep." On another occasion ho declared: "I have never had a - feeling, politically, that did not spring from the sentiments embodied in the Declaration of Independence." On another oc casion he rebuked those who, in the discussion of public questions, gave no concern whatever to the rights .of men. He said: "Why this deliberate pressing out of view the rights of men and the authority of tho peo ple? This Is essentially a, people's contest. On the side of the union, it is a' struggle for main taining in the world that form and substance of government vhose leading object Is to elevate the condition of man; to lift artificial weights from all shoulders; to clear the paths of laudable pursuits to, all; to afford all an unfettered start and a fair chance in the race of life." He pleaded for the preservation of the con- J .feCIM.aul I JMx ivi.'to:jf...i ...liaM'fc-V-- 'MttoZfl . iNJM n'1. "gj-U aii;' -xa ',' - .xkTyku'&y&J&'ritei"'' t- . , A$" --. '