"""Cr ' ""r tWIWWf SWMMifW1 ' WP','''-HmW fi ts R -I 4 41 JlAv? ,&'' n W Mt Ifwwv'"""-' wi '"" sjsw --p- ,.. jr-7Tv'Tir''ai!,p Commoner WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR VOL. 14, NO. 10 Lincoln, Nebraska, October, 1914 Whole Number 666 STAND BY THE PRESIDENT TO THE READERS OF THE COMMONER: At the coming election one-third of the sen ate will be "chosen, and the political complexion of the third thus chosen will determine whether the senate will be friendly or unfriendly to the president. An entire house of representatives will be chosen, and the political complexion of that body will determine whether the president is to be permitted to carry out his program of reform or have his hands tied by a hostile majority. It is a critical moment; the crisis is here. In 1912 the voters selected Woodrow Wilson president, and gave him a democratic senate and house to second his efforts. He immediately called congress together and has kept these two bodies in continuous session ever since, laying before them from time to time recommendations carrying out the promises made during the cam paign. The record which he has made is without parallel in the political annals of our country. At no former period have so many problems of such size and of so varied a character confront ed a president during two years. He has met each one without hesitation, and solved them successfully by the simple process of applying democratic principles to them. His success has been phenomenal and the ap proval which he has won is well nigh universal. His time has been divided between gigantic do mestic questions, and titanic international difll culties and he has proven equal to every emer gency. The cabinet which he summoned to his coun cil table has been more than successful in meet ing public expectations, while the senate and house have won the confidence and praise of the democratic party, and of a large percentage of the members of other parties. Surely the president will not be asked to pause in his labors; surely the country will not bo guilty of the dangerous experiment of changing tho leadership of the senate and the holise. To what opposition would the nation pntrust tho govern ment? To the-Roosevelt wing of the party? That wing included more than half of the voting re publicans 'at the last election, but every election since has shown a loss in numbers and disinte gration in organization. Ex-President Roosevelt realizes this as well as anyone, and is centering his efforts upon a few of his particular friends whom ho is trying to save from defeat. There is no possibility of the progressives securing con trol of either the senate or tho house. To what opposition, then, will tho country turn? To the stand-pat republicans? What have they done to earn a return to power? They have, to be sure, drawn back some of those republicaiis who called themselves progressive; but has the leopard changed its spots? Has the republican party re formed? Has stand-pattism become less odlou to the American people? If reactionary repub licanism was a stench in the nostrils of the peo ple in 1912, is tho odor less offensive now when the whole country Is keeping jftftp with Wilson? The president lias not only' been able to suin mon the democrats of the senate and house to the support of the measures recommended by him, but in nearly every case he has had the pleasure of seeing republicans vote with the democrats. So habitual has become the tend ency of some of the republicans (not always the same ones) to join in the support of democratic bills that one of the democrats has wittily sug gested that "The republicans ought either to quit criticizing the democrats or else quit voting for democratic measures." It is only a few weeks more until election; let .every reader of The Commoner busy himself with campaign work from now until the polls are closed. He should bo sure to vote himself, and to kcop tho matter before his neighbors. It Is easier to bring a democratic voter to the polls than it is to convert a republican therefore, get tho vote out. Rut this in not enough the victory this fall ought to bo overwhelming. Let every democrat pledge himself to bring at lonst one republican to the support of the administration candidates. It is not likely that the majority in tho senate or house will turn on one voto, but it may. Take no chances. A democrat would nover forgive himself if as a result of his negligence tho ma jority In either senate or house should bo lost. The people have been relieved of the burdens of a high tariff; they have seen a part of the load lifted from the backs of the masses and placed upon large incomes; thoy have witnessed a change In the currency laws which makec Washington and not Wall Street the financial center of the country; they have seen trust leg islation enacted; they have seen tho Filipinos promised Independence, Hie promise to be lulr. filled as soon as a stable government has been, established; they have reason to b'e proud 'of the manner In which the honor of the country, lias been upheld; they have rejoiced that tho country was kept from war with Mexico and put in position to assist In restoring peace in' Europe; they have seen the government of the United States become the diplomatic clearing-house of the world, potential in every capital! Lot the approval be to emphatic that the pres ident may not only have an increased support, but be given additional inspiration to continuo the splendid program of reform which he has outlined. Let every reader of The Commoner make this light his fight, that his share of the general re joicing may be large when tin election is over. W. .T. BRYAN. The Clayton .Bill . The passage of the Clayton bill marks the com pletion of the second advance in dealing with the trust question. The trade commission law cre ates a body which will be entrusted with the work of investigating the methods of large cor porations, and with the applying of such cor rectives as can be employed by an administra tive body. The Clayton law deals with the sub ject in a legislative way, correcting abuses, de fining unjust methods, and applying criminal cor rectives. It will go a long .way toward the pro tection of the public from the evils which have followed in the wake of the trusts. The new law. also brings the long-waited for and greatly need ed relief to the laboring man from government by injunction. Nothing of Importance is accomplished with out effort; a remedy never comes until the need of it is felt, and then, if the evils to be corrected are serious ones, those who benefit by the evils make a stubborn resistance to remedial legisla tion. The president came into office pledged to leg islation which would make a private monopoly impossible. This was the third reform on his program. As soon as the questions of taxation and currency were out of tho way, he addressed bimself to this problem, and the two laws above mentioned are the results of the combined ef forts of the president and the democratic senate and' house. Tho three subjects together, taxa tion, currency and trusts, present a record in economic legislation upon which the party may well invito the judgment of the country. If the laws enacted are not in every line just what every citizen would wish, it must be remembered that ours is not a one-man government. The constitution compels co-operation between the executive and congress, and it is no easy matter to bring a majority of the more than four hun dred members of the house of representatives and of the ninety-six senators into accord on the details of a measure, even when there is abso lute agreement as to the work to be accom plished. The more carefully these anti-trust' measures are examined, tho more hearty will be tho en dorsement of the president and congress. W. J. BRYAN. CONTENTS STAND BY THE PRESIDENT THE CLAYTON BILL . ROOSEVELT ON THE PEACE TREATIES PEACE PRAYER DAY WOMAN'S SUFFRAGE THE PEACE PLAN TRIUMPHANT . THE FLAG- ADDRESS BY MR BRYAN THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION BY JOSEPH E. DA VIES ' THE PHILIPPINE BILL THE TREASURY'S ASSISTANCE TO THE COUNTRY PEACE DAY ADDRESS BY MR. BRYAN The report 'of Census Director Harris, just published, shows that of the 28 million wage earners and workers in the country, over 8 mil lions are women and children. This does not in clude the housewives, if one-fifth of the men in this country, whose industrial status is deter mined in large part by legislation, protective or .otherwise, were denied the ballot, there would be a revolution. Why should one-fifth of the .workers of the nation be refuse1 the same protection? . It may bo safely affirmed that no court In the country will interfere with the enforcement of Secretary Daniels' order that any wireless station that refuses to obey the neutrality rules laid down by 'the government shall be closed. It was a remarkable exhibition of corporate stubborn ness that led the owners of the Siasconset sta tion to insist that they could send what they pleased, regardless of whether the station was being utilized to violate national neutrality. ill 1 J. 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