r - The Commoner MAY, 1915 31 the state department, Mr. Secretary Bacon never threw up a "window. He was the soul of dignity. Besides, the building was well ventilated in those days. We had men at the head of the state department then. Things are so different now." They gather at teas and dinners and in hotel corridors and at clubs and in committee meetings and on the street, these staple and fancy de plorers, and they talk of laws and wars, of shopping and cigars, of ba bies, books and bonds. But in the end the conversation turns to the man who is at the head of or on the neck of or part way under the state de partment, according to various au thorities. The Bryan disapproval is not a mere political criticism. - It is a com TirGhensive. whole-hearted, constitu tional, fundamental, temperamental, social, religious, anatomical, gastron omic, and sartorial disagreement. It is the sort of disapproval which reaches out, like a corporation, for more things to clutch. It falls, like the mantle of charity, on all objects within its scope and automatically embraces any new feature touched or appertained to by the. secretary of state. President McKinley served water and other flat things happily and safely through his administra tion. It remained for Mr. Bryan to canonize absinth frapp e, blitzen cocktails, and extract of tarantula in Washington by serving grape juice. People who had never tasted the stuff rushed out and drank it in prder to loathe it with more vigor. If , we were to take too seriously the ' groans of Bryan dinner victims, we would think that in times past people went to state dinners for the purpose of being hauled out by the legs in a condition of alcoholic coma where as American state functions have al ways been comparatively arid affairs. It simply became borno in on the amalgamated deplorers that there must bo something blighting about sobriety because Mr. Bryan indulged in it. The Chautauqua incident was dis cussed all over the country. In Washington it becamo a brooding lorror. A lot of Washington people had never heard of chautauquas un til they found that Secretary Bryan was frequenting them. Then they tried to read up on the thing in Ga borjau's library of crimes. It wasn't the awfulness of the deed which shocked Washington. It was the lack of dignity. No secretary of state had ever chautalked before. It hadn't been done at all. It was impossible to conceive. The smallness of tho salary was no excuse. Knox and Bacon and Hay couldn't live on their salaries either, but nobody saw them rushing around the country exhibit ing in a tent. They sawed wood in the back yard and eked out their pit tance in proud silence. And, besides, anyone who spends that much money is extravagant. Nothing contributed more to the popularity of economy in Washington in 1914 than the fact that Bryan couldn't live on $12,000 a year. It was almost Impossible for some time to find a republican con gressman who would complain about his little old $7,500 and mileage to Australia. Some of them went so far as to brag that they saved money on $7,500 whereas the general line of conversation had previously con veyed the idea that when a congress man draws his trifling donation from the government he hands it over to his landlord and borrows enough from some friend to stake him to a light lunch in a lean-over restaurant. Still, Secretary Bryan could live on $2,000 a year atid serve his state dinners in a beer tunnel without com ing any nearer to suiting his Wash- f tt, ington critics. It is a hopeless case with him. Ho just naturally doesn't suit. Ho wears his hair long. No secretary of state has over worn so much hair in tho same place. HIb clothes are out of focus. His shape is obsolete and annoying. Ho is said to perspiro in hot weather. Eminent visitors from other countries have caught him using a palm-leaf fan. Ho wears slippers at home. John Hay never did this or, if he did, ho set a guard around the houso and kept his shame to himself. His trous ers bajr worse than Cleveland's. Ho wears a plug hat. Everyone in Wash ington wears a plug hat but if Bry an keeps on doing it, he will mako the custom unpopular and ruin an investment of hundreds of thousands of dollars. He is too polite. He is also heart less and unfeeling. Ho makes ora tions instead of pronouncing speech es, as a secretary of state should do, Ho has made changes in the state de partment customs. Ho walks too much and mingles shockingly. Ho Is austere and rides in automobiles to excess. He gets down to worn too early. He takes work homo with him. One would think ho was paid by the hour. Ho doesn't work at all on Sundays. No man ought to im peril the diplomacy of a government for a religious scruple. Tho state, war, and navy building is running down. The climate has been bad of late. Gas bills arc higher. If they start jitney busses, ho is likely to ride in one. Tho gypsy moth is get ting into the trees in tho district. What can you do with a man like that! These are serious indictments and not easily quashed. But they cover, it seems, only Mr. Bryan's minor pec cadillos. ine republican to discuss his large sins. When the remnants of official republicanism get busy around tit capltol on his case they criticize kfm with a whole-hearted entliusiasm which must be a great relief for eom of thoso older statesmen whose prin cipal duty haa beon to bo conserv ative and cautious about everything Bryan is a safety valvo for them. Thcro has bocH a great disposition among republicans to bo fair with tho new administration as far a comment goes. They have given the president tho benefit of tho doubt and havo been as unpartisan toward the cabinet as could be expected from a party which hopes to eject tho said administration with loud shouts in 1916. Everybody speaks a kind word for our honored president and then gives tho secretary of stato both bar rels with nails in tho charge. It is a beautiful system and keeps tho re publicans feeling broad-minded and virtuous because criticizing Bryan doesn't count. The opon season on him has lasted about twenty years now. Naturally one would expect that n gentleman who has been so unani mously deplored might show soms marks of tho fact. But Mr. Bryan seems to carry the burdens of the Stato department as comfortably as ho carried tho comatose democratic party some fifteen years ago.' That everything ho does is regarded with cold disapproval by a largo number of spectators does not seem to lessen his weight, his cheerfulness, or his activities. Undoubtedly ho fell heir to tho largest mess of international snarls since Seward's time. FIUCI3 Coin utandard IJUirilrdtcd book. Buying Prlcon, hoIIh at 1G' costs, or if preferred, dozen West potcard, orivon for thren monthn at 10 centH. col lectors' hundred-piiKo paper, ddvotcd to It takes an old-lino fight- ntampH, colnn, relic. weaponK, oiu UOOKB anil ininvriim. bniuunnni-u .'"' Philatelic Went, "Collcclorn' World Superior, Neb. I FOR SALE An Improved farm of 200 acres, under irrigation, three miles from Mission, Texas. This farm is in the Rio Grande Valley. I have not time to look after it It has a house costing $2,500.00, with barns and outbuildings to match; is fenced and in cultivation. I am willing to sell for less than the price at which unim proved land in that section is selling. I will sell the entire 200 acres for $20,000, with a liberal discount for cash. Small tracts, not including the one upon which the house stands, may be purchased as follows: lOacre tracts, $125 per acre; 20 acre tracts, $122.50 per acre; 40 acre tracts $120 per acre ; 80 acre tracts, $115 per acre. . , I have 40 acres of unimproved land near Mission, which I will sell, as a whole or in 10 or 20 acre tracts, for $75 per acre, cash. Address W. J. BRYAN, LINCOLN IMEIB. o " O" m n