" V" ?.'""WJT "Hw4 -ijs Jj7""!p- The Commoner VOL. 22, NO. & . fc f 3.-. 1 K as much nid to progressive Republicanism as Senator Hitchcock cah. PROGRESSIVE RE PUBLICANS ARE COMPELLED TO JOIN WITH THE REACTIONARIES IN THE. ORGAN IZATION OF THE SENATE. THEY DID SO IN THE PRESENT SENATE, THEY MUST DO SO IN THE NEXT. The reactionary Republicans are in the majority and the low Republican pro gressives, if the Republicans control the Senate, will aid in putting all tho machinery of the Sen ate in tho hands of the reactionary leaders. AFTER PROGRESSIVE REPUBLICANS HAVE SECURELY TIED-THEIR OWN HANDS BY INSTALLING A ' 'REACTIONARY MACHINE theycari'lnakc OCCASIONAL (protests against tho pdlicy'of tho Republican party as the re actionaries outline it: But the progressives can liot do anything EXCEPT WHEN THEY ACT WITH THE DEMOCRATS, The -Progressive Re publicans would bo hopeless and helpless in the Senate but for the largo Democratic minority which furnishes the bulk of the vote whenever tho plans of the reactionaries arc thwarted. If Nebraska wants progressive legislation, Senator Hitchcock can do more to secure it than a Re publican senator could possibly do. Republican papers profess to be shocked at a reunion in the Democratic ranks, but they have novcr been interested enough to aid the Demo crats in the past when they were initiating re forms that tho country afterwards addptedN. They 'applaud division In the Domdcfatic party and be moan cooperation among Democrats, but they never aided the Democratic party or Democratic loaders when the fight was on and when their ' 'aid might have shortened the period of agita tion and hastened reforms. They will not de ceivo the public now any more than they have in the past. The reaction against the Republi can administration WHICH ALL THESE PAP ERS SUPPORTED proves anew that the Ddmocratid party is the only party to which the podple can look for relief from tho PREDATORY INTERESTS THAT WORK THROUGH THE REPUBLICAN ORGANIZATION. 1 W. J. BRYAN. ' THE NEBRASKA DEMOCRATIC TICKET The Democrats of Nebraska have placed in nomination one of tho strongest tickets In its history. Mr. Mullin, the nominee for lieutenant governor, is a successful farmer in Boone county whoso standing In tho state is indicated by his victory over several very excellent men. Mr. Pool, for secretary of state, had four years of experi ence in that office. Mr. Hall, for state treasurer, was in charge of the state's finances for a simi lar period and was responsible for many Of the reforms in that office. Mr. Ayres, railroad com missioner, had four years' experience as a deputy under Auditor Smith, an outstanding member o the state administration. Grant L. Shumway, for auditor, was for two years land commission er, and like Mr. Pool and Mr. Hall, gave very efficient service. Mr. Warrington, for land com missioner, is a successful editor in Custer coun ty and a man of business training. "Mr. Mc Donald, for attorney general, is one of the bril liant young lawyers of western Nebraska, a sec- tion seldom represented on Republican tickets. The Democrats offer trained men with records of public service in the interest of the common people. NEWBERRYISM IN NEBRASKA Two rich men competed for the Republican nomination for governor of Nebraska. Their advertising appeared in practically every paper in the state, and of the large dailies they werO very liberal patrons. On thousands of telephone poles their pictures and advertising matter ap peared. They had men in various parts of the state doing "political work" in their interest, and thousands of letters were sent out by mail! Tho winner was a north Nebraska banker, and so liberal were the spcndings of both of them that he" pulled in ahead by only a few hundred votes He will undoubtedly be as liberal in his expendi tures for the election. Will Nebraskans stand for Newberryism in their state? - It looks now as if tho three-mile limit would he moved back for a distance of eighteen miles That is all right. Any move in that direction fa good; ljut why fix any limit and permit rum run ners to lay at anchor beyond? Wo should have a law authorizing tho sinking of any liquor laden vessel anywhere, on the high seas if it is sailing toward- our shores engaged in conspiracies against our Constitution and our laws. The wnt claim, all the open seas for their outlaw busing but tup claim will not be conceded by anv oMi ized nation. J w,,y Clv11 .v Seniority Among Employes Seniority seems to be the bone of contention a very large bone for the employe and a very small cue for the employers, unless the real purpose of the latter fs to destroy organiza tion among laborers. Seniority means a good deal to the working man if he has a right to use it .but it is worse than worthless to him if it measures the power of the employer tov coerce him into submission to any terms that tho em ployer may see fit to impose. Seniority brings with it the opportunity for a man to have a home on no other basis can he be sure of a prema. nent dwelling place and an environment such as a family man has a right to enjoy. Seniority means the right to be the last man -discharged and the first one reinstated when employment fluctuates. The employer determines how many men he will discharge a"nd how many men he will employ. If the rule of seniority is destroyed the employe is helpless and must do whatever the employer says. Without the rule of seniority his right to strike becomes an empty thing. If leaving work (as the only means of onforcing what the employe believes to be right) forfeits his relative position his senior ity rights when he goes back, his home may have to be sacrificed and all local friendship severed unless he accepts a position of serfdom and enters into involuntary servitude. The fact that the employers have refused to accept the President's proposition, rejecting all terms be cause they want to destroy seniority rights of the strikers, strongly suggests that their real purpose is not to conserve the interests of the railroads but to destroy the labor organizations the wage-earners only security against cor porate oppression. When a railroad company employs tens of thousands and can lay off any person at will, it is not attending a business really its own it is fixing the. conditions under which thousands live. Civilization is impossible if the multitude must each day look up to a few employers and peti tion; .Give us this day our daily bread, with the alternative of starvation unless the employe surrenders all rights. The answer of the railroad heads gave Presi dent Harding an opportunity to call the public attention to the arrogance of big business. If he had given them a definite time in which to manifest their interest in the public's welfare with the alternative of temporary public opera tion of such roads as continued to ignore the public's interests in this strike, the obstinate railroad managers would have soon learned the quasi public character of the railroads a char acter which railroad magnates always under stand when the railroad wants to exercise the government's right of eminent domain but sel dom recognize tft any other time. W. J. BRYAN. THE REED VICTORY Senator Reed's renomination in Missouri makes the election of a Democratic senator doubtful m that state. Regardless of the merits of the contest between him and Ex-Secretary Long the fight became so bitter and so nersonii that neither was able to unite tne Democrat forces against the Republican party. The sit uation may have been such that no other solu tion was possible, but it is unfortunate in an! tional crisis like this that the personal element should crowd out larger considerations The primary vote shows that neither candidate reprS sented much more than half the party, whill the minority Just less than a majority was vio lently opposed .to the majority. ThT par ty as a whole, is much more interested in nroteo? ing the country from the predatory interesL th use the Republican party for SoiaJion nur A (GREAT MACHINIST DEAD The death of AlexanderGraham Bell will ion i to a survey of tho service he has rendered to tl world as the inventor of the telephone Ho in so to speak, converted the world into a' whisnl ing gallery. His invention was one of the croS" est that has been made and illustrates the nn" sibilities of service. If fcne tells an audience tint it is possible for a human being to earn five h n dred million dollars supposed to be the laref sum that any American has yet collected-Ah audience looks skeptical: But: when one conahl ers the .measureless service, rendered by a mult tude who have brought the forces of nature-l steam, electricity, water, and, air within the con ' trol of man, o,r unloosed and organized the moril forces of 'soc,iety(, it becomes evident that no fie ures with which man is acquainted can fully measure the value of the- service rendered But those who render the greatest service never collect the full-amount earned. Those who earn fabulous sums are so busy earning that thev have not time to collect; while those who col lect fabulous sums are so busy collecting that they have not time to earn what they draw from society. If enormous service was always linked to enormous incomes there would be no com plaint of injustice, for injustice is simply a sys tem under which a few are permitted to collect from society more than they earn and, when a few collect more than they earn, that which re mains in the common store is not sufficient to en able all the rest to collect all that they earn, Bell's service, like the service of other great benefactors, is incalculable a new estimate will have to be made each year for countless years to come. "An epoch in history begins," it has been said, "when God lets loose a thinker in the world." That id true, whether it is a thought that stirs others to action or a thought expressed in a machine. All the forces of nature and in society have been here from the beginning but machinery is needed to enable man to utilize these forces. The wind has swept the earth from time immemorial but it was only known as a destructive force till man invented machinery to utilize its strength; the water tumbled down the mountain side use less in its fall till man invented the water wheel; and so electricity flashed from the skies, feared as a destroying power until man invented ma chines for its use. Now, like a beast of burden, it brings light and heat from the sun and carries our messages around the earth. Great is the machine, and great are those whom God has made His ambassadors to reveal the secrets of His universe and devise the machines by which the unseen forces can be utilized. ' Government is but a machine for the utiliza tion of patriotism, just as the church is but a machine for collecting and expressing the reli gious sentiment that controls the hearts of men. Alexander Graham Bell was one of God's ambas sadors he devised a great machine which elimi nates distance and makes each man the neighbor oi every other man. W. J. BRYAN. On another page will bo found a report of th German American National Conference, In which they denounce prohibition as hypocrisy and da mand wine and beer. Their resolution is not so important as their endorsement of candM They pledged their support to Beveridgo in inS?' ana, Brookhart in Iowa, Frazier n NorJh S koto, La Follette in Wisconsin, Prance in Marvl land, and Reed in Missouri. Before the cnZ paign is over these men will be Paying- GoT save me from ray friends. e b0(I? RELIEF IN SIGHT On another page will be found a London dis patch which will give encouragement to the drys. Our government has laid before the government of Great Britain a complaint against smuggling that has the Bahamas and the Bermudas for a base. Cooperation of the British government is asked for the prevention of the use of the British flag for the protection of rum-runners. The reply cannot be otherwise than favorable. No nation can afford to lend its flag to conspiracies against the laws of a friendly nation. This is the beginning of the end of smuggling. Mexico and Cuba will also be asked to cooperate. The requests ought to have been made long ago, but the government was probably waiting until it secured enough evidence to silence 'any opposi tion that might be made by the wets., THE TARIFF QUESTION Even the most sanguine Democrats are sur prised at the revolt among Republican senators against the boldness of the exploitation that is being attempted. It will not be necessary for Democrats to frame an indictment of the Re publican tariff bill, they can malce up the indict ment from the speeches made by the Republi cans. No group of highwaymen ever robbed more shamelessly than the tariff barons are at tempting to rob now. If you dpubt it, read the speeches that Republicans are making, fiomo against one schedule, and some against another. They plunderbund know that the night is shori and it WAnts to get all the. .public has before daylight .which is scheduled to appear on tne twenty-second of November. &i .r-nS j.ifcxMiuM&i&tfi'L