PTV-,f w i"fr " The Commoner WL. 16, NO. 9 P ik i Ik, K (The Commoner j I8SUUI) MONTHLY Kn tared at thcr Postofllco at Lincoln, NobraHkuj an Hccond-cIuHK matter. WILLIAM J. BRYAN, CHARLES W. BRYAN Kriltor and Proprlotor Anwoclato Ed. and Publisher Edit. Rmn. ana Business Ofllcc, Sulto 207 Press Bldg. Oho YeHr , NlX MOHtllN In Clubs of Five- or more, per year.. S1.00 Th ico MohUim SB .no NlHKin Copy ,.;... .10 Sample Copied Free. .75 Foreign Pot, 25o Extra SUIKNOUII'TIONS can po Sent direct to Tlio Com nionaiv Thoy can also bo sont through newspapers .which have advertised a clubbing rate, or thrpugh local agontfc, whero euch agents havo been ap pointed. All remittances should bo sent by post olllco money order, express order, or by bank draft on Now York or Chicago. Do not send Individual chocks, Stamps, or currency. KKNHWAiiN Tho data on your wrapper shows tbo tluio to which your subscription 1b paid. Thus January 15 meauB that payment has boon rccoived to and including tho Issue of January, 1,010. UIIA1VGI3 OF AliUItlflSH Subscribers roquostlng a ehango of address must glvo old as woll as new address. ADVjgii'riSING RalcB will bo furnished upon application. Address all communications to TJIIfl C'OMMONEIt, LINCOLN, NKII. 9Q00 Destiny is not a mutter of chance, it is a mattor of choico; it is not a thing. to 0 S bo waited for, it is a thing to be 3 achieved. 3 300W Mr. Hughes talked to the people of Portland, Oregon, in I ho ico palace. Yet thoy say political campaign managers hayo no sense of humor. Tho Washington statisticians figure it out that Ma' cai'lta wealth the United States is now A0Q0. A man of judgment ought to be able to get two automobiles for that price. Mho republicans are trying to drag tho wet and dry issue into tho national campaign'.., At least some of thorn are saying that Hughes is a cr.ndidatowiti a, wungh. NotoVeeeniB to care for the barber vote in Ni campaign. Senator J. Hamilton Lewis 4s to follow Candidate Hughes's trail across the coun try and Mr. Fairbanks is to follow Lewis. Betting In Wall street early in September was G to 5 that Hughes would be elected. But then Wa street is always a bettor indicator of what Wal street hopes will happen than Wall street uunivs will occur. lho lion. .Robert Bacon ought to make a formidable candidate for senator in the New qrk republican primaries. Mr. Bacon has the advantage over his opponent of having once been a member of tho Morgan firm. Tho republican campaigners are making what thoy can out of the declaration of President Wilson that there are times whon a nation is too proud to fight, but what is really worrying them is whether the G. O. P. is too proud to be licked! tt Th rc?i8urcfs of Ulo national hanks of the United States Increased over two billion dollars Inst year. The bankors who believe that this is only a temporary prosperity we are onjoylne must have remarkable powers of self-deception. The Brandegoe faction in Connecticut politics Is endeavoriug to secure the consent of Former President Taft to become a candidate for the senate If Mr. Taft will consult the. 1912 elec tion returns he will find it much safer to launch his candidacy in Utah or Vermont, c W. L. Harding, tho republican candidate for govornor in Iowa, declares that he is the "mud road candidate." Whether this course is taken to defy the automobile vote or merely to make the going harder for his opponents is not made clear. f For the year ending June 30th last the depos its in jthe national hanks of the country In creased nearly 25 per cent, or over two billion dollar?. It is too bad that this "temporary prosperity" persists in interfering with the ar- anu prospects or the republican party. HHTH mmm The .Dixon -Libel ' ' ?nsssi Tho following letter has been received from a friend: ' : "Dear Col. Bryan: Thos. Dixon has produced an extravagant moving picture along the exact lines of 'The Battle Cry of Peace.' I witnessed, its scenes at a private exhibition yesterday. It will ho shown at $1.00, $150 and $2.00 prices. "It contains the most unncessary, and the m,ost cruol insult to you that Dixon'd brain could conceive. At a great 'Peaco meeting' arranged by tho 'secret enemies' of the United Slates, a man picked to resemble you, and who does resemble you greatly, is shown as the prin cipal speaker, and is .shown as delaying the mooting until he is paid his price for speaking. Ho insists on 'regular Chautauqua rates.' The man who pays him says: "Then you are not for 'Peace at any price?' " Your Impersonator -is mado ridiculous in other scenes. "Of courso your recognizing this gratuitous insult will simply play into tho fellow's hands, and ray purpose In writing you is simply to in form you (the picture will be seen by its mil lion or two) so that If your friends can do any thing about it tliey will have your opinion arid wishes to guide them." I appreciate tho generous-interest manifested by ray friend, and tho letter gives me an oppor tunity to explain to the readers of The Common er why I hayo not taken notice of the libel. A public man, who feels It his duty to attack vested wrongs, must expect abuse from those who find profit in supporting these wrongs. The king's courtiers will, of course, defend the king It is their business to feel offended by any at tack mado upon him. Mr. Dixon is a. defender of the special interests and it will doubtless net him a large sum just now when a subsidized press fs manufacturing war scares. He broke into the campaign In 1896 orf the same side and as full of venom as now. He was one of the preachers who, by concerted 'ac tion, rushed to the defense of Wall street in 'the closing days of 1896. Tho New York World, speaking of his sermon and. the crowd to which ho spoko said: "When he called Bryan 'a mouthing, slobber ing demagogue, whose patriotism was all in his jaw-bone,' tho audience howled." Just ndw the manufacturers of munitions. and tho papers subservient to them a're attempting to frighten tho nation into a change of its charac ter and policy. - "The Battle Cry of Peace" was found so profitable that Mr. Dixon couldn't withstand the temptation to gather in a share of the shekels; There are many reasons, any one of which Is sufficient, why It would be unwise to attempt-to punish him by law. ; In the first place it would give advertisement to his play, and this would be of pecuniary value to him far beyond any damages that could .15e expected. Second, a suit, if successful, wnniri mit o, ,i to a display of sordidness and malice which must, in itself, more than counteract the person al harm which the plan is intended to do. Tho attempt which is now being made to transform this nation from the world's greatest moral force into a military power, following at the tall end of the European procession, and re lying for Its hope of peace upon, its ability to terrorize the world, is supported by three pow erful groups, namely, the manufacturers of munitions, the militarists, and the big employ ers, of laborthe latter want a great standing army with which to overawe their employees If these men, and the sycophants who fawn about them, find It necessary to resort to such misren resentation as Mr. Dixon is guilty of, the public will be more quickly awakened to the real situ ation, and thoso who aro attacked can afford to endure the injustice, if it hastens tho reaction which, when it comes, will sweep these S patriots into oblivion. S0 slmm Third As an additional reason I may add that I could not take legal notice of Mr Dixon's intended insulfewithout seeming to douh n,n value of the life I have tried to lead t i.ihe been before the public for twen?-five years III in that time have passed through thrlTnresi dontlal campaigns in which there lm w lack of incentive for attack If those in n of tho republican organization have beeS nif to do me harm, I would be paying Mr Sivnn .le undeserved .compliment if I X wSi,S to accomplish. ' vu ueen unble I shall continue in the future, as I have in n. past, to advocate that which I believe tohJif and for the good of the country. I accent hr?1 the public, responsibility for what l " saanS JT I have confidence in that sense of i ,?' which God has implanted in the human heart a virtue which even Mr. Dixon and those whom he represents can neither destroy nor dull j W. J. BRYAN. THE ARCADIAN ROAD Mr. Horace G. Cupples, a civil engineer of u Louis, has published a little volumo entitini "Arcadian Highway," in which he outHnes a plan for a highway eighty rods wide from Chi cago to the gulf, with model farms and gardens on each side. His dream is first to construct a MODEL HIGHWAY; second, to furnish labor for the unemployed in huilding it, and, third to made tho land along the highway both beautiful and useful. It is an ambitious plan, and yet not impossible of realization. Why not? The good roads move ment is here, and here to stay. In time we shall have international highways running in all di rections, and it is natural that the beginning should be made with one from New York to San Francisco and from Chicago to New Orleans. Then will follow highways from New York to the southwest and from Chicago to the southeast and to the northwest, etc. The hard road will help to solve the railroad problem as well as many other problems. If governmental action is delayed the Cupples plan may serve to start the work It might even be a toll road until tho government is ready to take it over. HUGHES'S HUMILIATING CONFESSION A St. Louis Post-Dispatch correspondent quotes candidate Hughes as saying: "Some people think I should say what I shall do to stop the practices that I am attacking, I have frankly replied that I don't know. But in that respect I've got nothing .on Wilson. He doesn't know, either. I know that these prac tices exist and I know that if 1 am elected pres ident they shall not continue to exist." This is a humiliating confession. "Isn't it enough to make any American hang his head in shame"? as Mr. Hughes is in the habit of say ing. It is not necessary to give any weight to his charge against the President, for if ho does not know what ought to be done he is in no po sition to criticize, but it is certainly a 100 per cent confession against himself. SENATORIAL COURTESY The President, it is reported, will send Mr. Rublee's name to the senate again. Good. Let him keep sending until the senate drops its an tiquated doctrine called "senatorial courtesy," by means of which ..senators stand together and enforce a power entirely contrary to the spirit of the constitution. Ratification of appointments by the senate was never intended to furnish senators an op portunity for personal revenge. It was intended to make more certain the appointment of com petent and trustworthy officials. Sand-bagging is no more honorable in the senate than on the street; the President is right in insisting that appointees be judged on their merits and not be made the victims of personal resentments. NO WONDER ROOSEVELT'S MAD It is not strange that it makes Mr. Roosevelt mad to read over the President's remarkable records of reforms. Mr. Roosevelt had more than twice as long a time ia the White house as the President has had, and yet he went out with but a meager record in the way of remedial legisla tion. It must provoke him to think that he might have left as splendid a record as the President made, but for two things: First, he lacked the DESIRE FOR REFORM, and, second, a republican congress would not have joined him in the making of such a record. The President HAD the DESIRE for reform and he had a dem ocratic congress" inhearty sympathy with him. Those republicans; who are trying to base a criticism of the democratic admnistration on the fact that It has- thrown republicans out of offi cial positions arid placed democrats in their steau seem to have forgotten that just such a PjJ11 was in the voters' mind when they changed the administration. v 7 'j 1-M1T .'11 & . i&S2.