ifwrvT-1 The Gommoiier , ' t 8 1219. KO. 12 Lead ues an ers 'TV Readers Discuss for l (' Iff k In response to a recent request made by The CommonoV for democrats to suggest upon what Issuoa the next national campaign should be fought and to also make suggestions as to available democratic presidents candidates, wo reproduce bolow as many of the letters received as spaco In this Issue will permit. Boycc House, Arkansas. I am taking the liberty as one who has at heart the In terests of his party and his country, to address you on ii matter of the greatest importance. Thero is a strong se-ntiment in this part of the country in favor of placing the party stand ard In the next presidential campaign in your hands. Your name has the potency and magic which it first aroused in the days of '9 6 and thoro are many Democrats who consider that you are the logical choice of the party for the presidency next year. The reasons are manifold. You are the fore most advocate In America of the prohibition cause which has been crowned with victory. You are ono of the ablest and most active pro tagonists of woman's suffrage which is on the eve of national triumph. Your stand on' the Loaguo of Nations is broad-visioned and patri otic and tho arbitration treaties wlrch you as secrotary of stato negotiated make you a leading figure in tho effort to establish -world peaco. Tho nation has not forgotten that it was you who brought about tho nomination of Woodrow Wilson in 1912 when victory for the democrats was inevitable and that it wap you who turned tho tido in his favor in 1916 by your offorts in tho middlewest. For the great achievements of tho present administration apart from those which you yourself as secretary of state accom plished your friends may rightly claim for you a largo share of .the glory. You havo always stood for the rights of all the pooplo as opposed to the selfish interests of any class and in all the long period that you havo boen a national figure there has been noth ing which the most malignant foe of the party could bring forward to assail your character. As Governor Brough characterized you in a recent address hero, you probably are the greatest moral force in the United States today. " Added to all these splendid qualifications is your ability as an orator and reasoner which would onablo you to cope with any man that the Republican party might name. B. B. Krammes, Ohio. I am glad to note that Mr. Bryan will again be himself, in that he will feel free to express himself on the great ques tions of tho day. It will be a great day when we will once more have free" speech in this country, when we will not be cowed down as we have been for tho past two or more years. 1 havo voted' for Mr. Bryan every time he was nominated, and, I would deem it a high privilege to vote for him again. Personally I would like to see him nominated. J. A Alexander, Illinois. The Commoner for October contains a good platform for the demo cratic party f6r the campaign of 1920, adding a few additional touches that can be gained from recent experiences and local elections I would particularly mention the initiative and referendum. Wo have had an election on this proposition in Illinois, whether or not it was to become a fundamental law of this state and it won out by a big margaln. Then, I think the democratic party should go on record in clear torms relative to law and order, so that both tho big monled men, the profiteering gang, and the lawless end of the labor element will both understand that the institutions of this country are not formulated for the benefit of any par ticular class. Mr. Bryan would know exactlv how to write this so that it could not be con strued as a double-header, and since party lines are broken down I want to emphasize the fact that a good democratic platform will brine a big vote from both the republican and labor parties. But it necessarily must be a positive platform. Then we should havo a plank in the platform relative to the guarantee of bank de posits. Considering all of these matters and tho forms that havo been brought about through the leadership of William Jennings Bryan I wfl go on record as indorsing his candidacy for nVo presidency of the United States on the next nf tional democratic platform formulated on purely democratic linos. Mr. Bryan is tho logical can didate, considering the great national issues at stake, including the League of Nations, which is a peaco proposition, national prohibition, equal suffrage, reduction of taxes on the masses and placing ft on the profiteering class that has milked the government and the people during tho war period. And the democratic national platform should make it clear to the people that we want stable industrial conditions. I would like to say much more, but again I mention the October Commoner and other editions of The Commoner, from which a splendid national democratic platform could be extracted. P. A. Lovelock, New York. I have been read ing and listening to public speakers for about twenty years about the trusts and corporations exploiting the people. Is it possible that the trusts and corporations are bigger than our gov ernment? You will find small grocerymen prose cuted for getting one cent a pound more than he should, but you do not find the big business man being prosecuted for stealing millions. Surely our laws read the same for all. I be lieve that trusts and corporations, through profiteering, are responsible for all the unrest there is in the country. If profiteering is stopped prices will go down and the people of the United States will find it easier to live, and by finding it easier to live," will be more satisfied. Dis satisfaction is bolshevism, and when the people of any country become dissatisfied- they rebel, especially if they find a law where the big fel low is immune and the little fellow is sent to jail. Why can not a government that can take my boy away from mo, send him 5,000 miles away and perhaps be killed, stop the trusts from doing to the people what they have been doing for twenty years? Stop the trusts and unrest and bolshevism, which means the same, will stop. I have been reading The Commoner for about fifteen years, and beyond a doubt.it has done a lot for the people. C. E. Sugg, Kentucky. I note that in dis cussion of who is to be chosen as democratic leader in the senate the names o Underwopd and Hitchcock arc the only ones mentioned. May I ask, does the democratic senate leader necessarily havo to be a wet? If so, why? I should like to see this discussed by The Com moner. When Stanley, a wet, was the democratic nominee for senator from Kentucky the most active assistance was rendered him by the presi dent, but this fall, when Black, a .dry, was a candidate for governor, there was never a sign that the president knew that an election was to be held in Kentucky. Democrats, thousands of them in Kentucky, notice these things. Is the president an ultra wet? I was an original Wil son supporter in the convention and in the elec tion of 1912, and every time there was a chance to support him to this good day, but I have always been a dry and many things have hap pened to make me wonder if I have been a fol lower of the wet leader. ?,' iC e"dnckson, Indiana. In reply to the article, "Attention, Democrats," in the October Commoner, as county chairman will say, taking all things in consideration, I believe we favor S0VSn,0nV Smith of New York as "r leader for the 1920 campaign, and I look on the labor ques tion as being the paramount issue. ul'-U Misenneimer, Texas. In spite of all that has been said and done, I still consider Mr Bryan by far the ablest and straightet statesman in America and the entire world to day and will support him for the democratic nomination in preference to any 6ther man And taking into consideration the entire mess in the middle of which we now find ourselves and looking the situation squarely in the face luat as It is, my candid opinion is that Mr Bryan is the only man in the party who hi n w of a show of leading theP party to anythlnl ex cept an ignominious defeat. ' Of course idor?t ffrrrnE him to t$z that you are today the only m wi, Plac perfectly, and who can poll Wtt ts th vote of any man in the United StlU , hr reasons. First, you have alwavfhi?' r Wod man's mend; second, you aro , p00r more rofnrmc i , i"", ar the author nr all other public men; th rd, your l?, SSCS than clean as a" sheet; fourth you Tor rccord ls bore the bnrd; . 'u, 0I. one who jeers, slurs and epUhets that could i?" Si have been heaped on a human beL PSSlbIy ing the liquor traffic, and SdVo V'gard' person to carry national prohibition' then fl "7 ly, you have the united support of' th w na ' of prohibition and woman suffrage Thn ?d' .the laboring man and his organization ' will support you, and your All d " S tlonably correct on the great interests K and combines in restraint of t?ad i c3 write all day and tell why you are the logical man and the strongest man, but let this sufflc for the present More than all, your inteS is supremely above all question. y ' T.'E. .Elgin, M. A., Alabama. My prayer is that you may be our next president. It seem to me that this should be tho prayer of all pray. ng people; I truly believe that this would be the world's greatest blessing at this time. For years, as a .Baptist nreacher and school worker I have followed your career and learned to love you, considering you tho greatest champion of human rights that the world has known for years. I trust and pray that you have many years in which to carry out your noble ideals, and that, strength may .ever be yours in your fight for humanity and for God on earth. M. G. Oakley, Oregon. If ever this country and the world needed a big, broad-minded and unselfish leader it needs' one today. We should have w a man, who is 'absolutely free from "en tangling alliances" with any political party. He should bo as far above "party loyalty" as a mountain is above a mole hill. Not that I would in any way condemn President Wilson or his administration, I believe him the greatest man in the world today, the greatest and best presi dent since Lincoln, and that he will be spoken of in history as the first great world leader of modern jLim.es. No one will deny that he has made mistakes. We need a man who will profit by his mistakes without trying to destroy the great good he has done. In my opinion, we have such a man in Herbert Hoover. Before half the world knew that there was such a man as Mr. Hoover he was neck-deep in the work of succoring humanity and helping to win the war. Although a republican in politics, he supported the president in every way he could. He sup ported the president in his request for a demo cratic congress. This request was a mistake on the part of the president; he should have asked for a congress that would work in harmony with tho administration. Mr, Hoover doubtless saw this mistake, but did what ho could to rectify it instead of all he could to magnify it like many of the party politicians did. Let us have Hoover nominated on an independent ticket; and if the" democrats show good sense they will indorse him. W. E. Moodjr, California. In answer to vonr - nTi7nS t0 Ch0iCQ, for PWsWent, Til say I am of the same opinion I was in 1896 onlv more confirmed in my judgment and opinion H. G. Hill, Texas. I havo never taken any real active part in political campaigns, but have always been a follower of William Jennings Bryan and expect to see him elected president next year. I am certain that there is no man in public life who could get as many votes as he, and none who could serve the people more faithfully. I am for Brother Bryan against the field, first, last, and all the time. May Goa bles3 him and continue to give him health ana strength to fight , the. people's battles in tne future as he has in the past. L. F. Weidenbacher, Illinois. There are J great many good democrats, but I believe iw one that should be nominated in 1920 is a wan that has expounded democracy, manhood anu Christianity one year after another since nw boyhood days, and the fifteen million women voters which will be the deciding factor in u ( I say, and sevoral millions will think that w. " Bryan is the logical candidate. John M. O'Brien, Iowa. In the approaching national campaign the issue should be Jci J People rule." All our officials should be eieu .. yfevfrjaiLfaitoiUiflifaiftfc