U-S&$fxi fr jqq&'tt1 t? v '; j, " "''.- The Commoner AUGUST, 1919 V j. f - a i ..? . Mr 3 x ; '$tyi I ,, j ; -v. The Angle of Repose Kcb individual can contribute a part by in--rmir his own value to his country, because ,1 taken together, constitute tho nation. In nrnnortion as each one can be strong in body he raises the average of physical strength; in nortton a8 ne can 06 stroug m wmu, no iuibbd tho intellectual standard of the nation; in pro- attitude of the church has been explained hv thrt influence exerted upon the church by larwom tZT Iieadoff corporations. The cnurch tt to make America better?. There are the aidn nf inSS?T v-l0 .. Ita ,n(Iucnco on HoWJ." m? rnnderinir assistance in this line. lS?u?Mor hl supporting tho demand for i "u"uy on aaturuay, as tho declaration In favor of a forty-four hqur week contemplates. if laboring men are able to use Saturday afternoon for amusements, it will be easier to devote Sunday to .spiritual development. Tho church should aid in securing for tho wage earners this extra time, in order that tho claims of the church may bo the stronger on Sunday. Prohibition, too, will aid tho church In its ap peal to the masses, for tho abs&nco of tho saloon not only eliminates a counter lnfluonco, but loaves thoso who were formerly inclined to drink more susceptible by religious influences. I have left for the. last, tho issue botwoon private monopoly and government ownorship, nn issue which relates directly to tho tolegraph quostion, the telephone question and tho rail way question. These three problems will require time for their solution, or rather for tho spread of information necessary to solution. A private monopoly is indefensible and intolerable. Wherever competition is impossible and a mo nopoly, therefore, necessary, it must bo a gov ernment monopoly, administered for tho benefit of all the people, and not a private monopoly, administered for tho benefit of a few. A private monopoly Is economically wrong, because it de stroys all incentives to improvement. It is pol itically dangerous, becau3o it builds up a vast financial' interest hostile to popular government. The monopolist is not willing to trust tho people with the making of laws because he knows they would protect themselves from the greed of mo nopolists. It also creatosaclass,discouraged,if not made desperate, by the injustice done by private monopoly. Victor Hugo says that "the mob Is tho human race in misery". We cannot afford to allow people to bo made miserable by being made tho victims of injustice. As the mosquito carries tho germ of yellow fever in its bite, so the" plutocrat carries tho germ of revolution in his bite. It is a3 necessary to destroy the breed ing place of private monopoly the breeding place of plutocracy, as it Is to destroy tho brood ing place of the mosquito. If the federal government can efficiently man age the Postofflce system, it ought to be ablo to -add a few telegraph lines and run them in con nection with tho Postofflce department. If a city can conduct a water system and an electric light system successfully, it ought to bo able to conduct a telephone exchange, and con nect with the outside world through long dis tance telephone lines oyned and operated by the federal government. And so with the railroad system, which partakes so much of the nature of a monopoly that it cannot much longer remain in private hands. If tho federal government will acquire and operate a system of trunk lines reaching into each state, and making each state inde pendent by giving it an outlet for its products and an inlet for its purchases, the state govern ments can acquire and operate the other rail roads within their borders, thus giving to the public the advantage of government ownership, without the dangers of centralization. I believe these questions will never reach their Angle of Repose until the principle of private monopoly is eliminated and government ownership sub stituted. We should all try to make America better, but our desire for the triumph of the truth should be greater than our desire for the triumph of that which we think to bo the truth, if we are, In fact, mistaken. If every person will study public questions, and then give to his 'country tho benefit of his judgment and con science, discussion will enable us to compare ideas and select that which is best. Tho virtue and Intelligence of the Amorican people can be trusted to decide every question right when the question is understood. W. J. BRYAN. The man who worried a great deal because he was afraid his soldier son might marry some French or German girl is now communing in the shade with the one who was fearful that the hnvB mliclit learn to love Europe so well that Ew "ouldnot want to come back. The Foolish peara club has the largest membership in the world. The man who is giving the most realistic per formance of going away back and sitting down L the one who loudly proclaimed that the end ng of the war would bring lower prices. - .nnrtion as he can be strong in mind, he raises . .1 t 'rvfl rtrtsttri 1 ltr oi! Una nnrtion as ne can ua - ovwv io hleh moral standards, he helps to raise the social and moral standards of the nation. But, na the people are especially interested in giving a nation-wide impulse toward needed changes and a more perfect brotherhood, I beg to submit the Wlien I visited the Panama Canal a few. years ago I went through tho Culebra Cut with one of the government engineers, and, noticing a recent slido, asked when the slides would cease. Ho answered, "When tho sides of the cut reach their angle of repose". It was. a new phrase, but seemed both euphonious and descriptive; the beauty and force Of the phrase have- grown upon me as the words have again and. again been recalled. Tho Anglo of Repose is tho thing that we aro all seeking. -Tho individual labors and saves, not so much from anxiety to be rich, as from a desire to provide comfort for himself and loved ones when his power to earn has ceased; he is seeking tho Angle of Repose. And, so, in public llfo we are trying to put the problems of gov ernment and society in a position where they will no longer disturb the public. We are trying to settle them, and they will be settled only when thoy reach their Angle of Repose. Just now wo are interested in the establish ment of the "League of Nations" in order to end war. Heretofore there has been no suffi cient machinery for peace, The League of Na tions provides such machinery, .arid the sup porters of the League of Nations believe that the machinery which it provides will ' be suffi cient to settle any international disputes that may hereafter arise, and, thus, make the war out of which we have come the last war to redden this old earth with blood. If by any possibility the proposed League of" Nations should not bo established, or, if established, should fail to fulfill the hopes which it has excited, the agitation will continue until some other plan is found to prevent var and then tho war question will reach its Angle of Ropose. But we have many domestic problems. The profiteer is abroad in" the land, and hi3 presence will be an irritating factor until he is driven out of the country and the door closed against him. This can be done only by providing machinery in nation, state and local community, sufficient to deal with every attempted wrong. The government, . having taken from each in dividual his club, is in duty bound to protect the disarmed citizen from every. arm uplifted for his injury. The labor question has not yet reached its Angle of Repose. " Much progress has been made during the last twenty years government by injunction has been abolished; tho eight-hour flay has been secured, and labor has been dis tinguished from things inanimate, but much re mains to be done. Wages are generally con sidered in connection with tho cost of living, least minimum wages are. There ought to be K I1?6113 of ascertaining the weekly or, at east, the monthly fluctuation in the price level oi He necessaries of life, so that wages can be justed to increased cost of living without de Si i wIth0Ut arousing antagonism-between capital and labor. winlUt'ino,purely mechanical method of dealing totVifo le abor Question can ever be entirely hon! 7;. notline ut the spirit of brother hnrL ,n brmg employer and employee into the narmoniou8 relationship that should exist, vand t on ? cxist' if e are to have the co-opera-ress SeSBar f or steady and continuous prog interoi ent1Dloyer must recognize the laborer's should i m om and family, and the laborer anxietiaa ! chance to learn something of the bears nn? employer, and the burdens he quaint e Jshould be a more intimate ac them Snd a better understanding between Wthv i Vorgive them for tbey tow not inRs in Z ' exPlaIns many misunderstand- too littip S? ?, BOmetimos accused of having ue sympathy for those who tpil, and the jt ' r Franco -American Treaty In hla moaaago transmitting tho proposed treaty with France to tho senate, July 29, Vtm Idont Wilson said: "Gontlomon of tho Senate: I take pleasure In laying boforo you a treaty with tho Itopubllc of Franco, tho object of which la to secure that republic tho immodiato aid of tho United States of America in caso of any unprovokod move ment of aggression ngainst her on tho part of Gormany. I oarnostly hopo that tho treaty will moot with your cordial approval and will rc coivo an early ratification at your hands, along with tho troaty of poaco with Gormany. Now that you havo had nn opportunity to examine tho great documont I presented to you two weeks ago, It seems opportuno to lay boforo you this treaty, which is meant to bo In ofToot a part of it. "It was signed on tho same day with the treaty of peaoo and is Intended as a temporary supplement to it. It Is believed that tho treaty of poaco witli Germany itsolf provides adoquato protection to Franco against aggression from hor rocont oncmy on the east; but tho yoara immediately ahoad of us contain many incalcul able possibilities. The covenant of tho League of Nations provides for military action for tho protection of Its members only upon advice of the council of tho leaguo advice given, it is presumed, only upon deliberation and acted upon by each of the governments of tho mombor states only if its own Judgmont Justifies such action. "Tho object of tho special treaty with Franco which I now submit to you is to provido for immediato military assistance to Franco by Mie, United Statos in case of any unprovoked move ment of aggression against her by Germany without waiting for the advice of tho council of tho League of Nations that such action will bo taken. -It is to bo an arrangement, not inde pendent of tho League of Nations, but under It. "It is therefore expressly provided that this treaty shall bo made the subject of considera tion at tho same time with the treaty of peace with Germany, that this special arrangeraont shall recoivc tho approval of the council of the league, and that this special provision for the safoty of Franco shall remain In force only un til, upon tho application of one of tho parties to it, tho council of tho league, acting, If nccos sary, by a majority vote, shall agree that the provisions of tho covenant of tho leaguo afford to her sufficient protection. "I was moved to sign this treaty by considera tions which will, I hope, seem as persuasive an'd as irresistible to you as thoy scorned to mo. We are bound to Franco by ties of friendship which we have always regarded, and shall always re gard, as peculiarly sacred. She assisted us to win our freedom as a nation. It is seriously to be doubted whether wo could have won It with out her gallant and tlmoly aid. "Wo havo recently had the privilege of assist ing In -driving enemies", who were, also enemies of the world, from her soil; but that does not pay our debt to her. Nothing can pay such a dobt. She. now desires that we should promise to lend our great force to keep her safe against tho power she has had most reason to fear. Another great nation volunteers tho same promise. "It is ono of tho fine reversals of history that that other nation should be the very power from whom Franco fought to set us free. A new clay has dawned. Old antagonisms are forgotten. The common cause of freedom and enlighten ment has created new comradeships and a new perception of what it is wise and necessary for, great nations to do to free the world of intoler able fear. Two governments who wish to be members of the League of Nations ask leave of the council of the league to be permitted tc go 'to the assistance of a friend whose situation has been found to bo one of peculiar peril, without awaiting the advice of the league to act. "It Is by taking such pledges as this that we prove ourselves faithful to the utmost to the high obligations of gratitude and tested frj(end ship. Such an act as this seeni to me one. oiL the proofs that we are a people that sees the true heart of duty and prefers honor to its own separate course of peace. "WOODHOW WILSON." - rJw ' f 'VW hi -r . . ml IP ' "" - ' km - il f I I I tv '' . '1 1 f IM !.-! v i fi j y -. m 9i ,;ti :W wj m S," w i v ft I' 1 a'' 'X ' iv. 'fc:. ; '! f rt 1 :; : I 41. X ?4 7 m w Ki .at, I-.-A tt..Aquwi'Saarto-ai,tt..- i.