v fyyFrlwra - U $$IIBf-'Fi-fft-?" "" '-7' -W wriymt-ft r g sj- ' i. "F-er7Tyi3r!cVTrT'( 4 The Commoner MrDnm,,. WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR ,'"'' 5TE7 Vol, 6, N(frfffiT(jfaj( , tvyirTfa'ncoln Nebraska March 2, 1906 Whole Number 267 i i ui CONTENTS t Mr. Bryjln's Letter A Delightful Joke Limitations on Justice "We Must !Forgii.t It" some telling blows fetching Easy to Believe "What About the. Merger? Washington City Letter Comment on Current Topics Home Department Wiietuer Common or Not News 01 the Week NOW THE "FACT" The London Daily Mail, in its issue of De cember 23, 1905, printed an editorial addressed to Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman, in which edi torial the "Mail said: "We would further point out that any reduction orxurtailment of the gold pEBSttBt sslypon 'trade, causing "a fall in prices and general depression.?' At .London reader .of The Commoner, direct ing attention to this statement, says: "The Mail is evidently a believer in the quantitative fact in money." That is very well put. A few years ago it was the "quantitative theory' but now the theory which republican papers in America and . if we mistake not, the London Mail vigorously denied, is so generally admitted that it is recog nized as a fact rather than a theory; and we must not forget that what wo call me quantitative theory or fact in money is in truth the founda tion of all arguments made in Dehalf of bimet allism. JJJ FETCHING Representative Sibley of Pennsylvania who voted against the railroad rate Dill declared the measure to be "socialistic and anarchistic, and highly endorsed 'by Bryan and Hearst." In that speech Mr. Sibley admitted that there are abuses to be corrected, but he demanded to know how men could be held to stricter accountability than under the Elkins law against rebates. In the same speech he said that if they were not held accountable it was because of aerilictlon of offi cials or because the law was not drastic enough. Commenting upon- those remarkable statements the Pittsburg Dispatch says: "There's reason and logic for you!" It was a rather fetching argument, coming from one whose intelligence revolts at the proposi tion that corporations, the creatures of law, shall bo regulated by thoir creator. JJJ TOM JOHNSON DRAFTED HIM - When last elected, Mayor Tom Johnson, of Cloveland, Ohio, defeated William H. Boyd, a well known Cleveland lawyer. Mr. Boyd en deavored to make the voters believe that he was a greater reformer than the mayor. He was de feated. Now Mayor Johnson has appointed Mr. Boyd to a place in the city solicitor's office where' he will have a chance to fight ror .the reforms he was so insistent in demanding while he was merely a candidate. Mr. Boyd has said he will accept the place. If Mr. Boyd makes good the city will benefit thereby. Viewed from any point " Mayor Johnson"s selection was a good one, jggP71 . J' - V Collecting the Mail of the Departments, Washington, D. C. x Japanfler Government, Polities And Problems MR. BRYAN'S SEVENTH LETTER The government of Japan is a constitutional monarchy in which the emperor not only claims to rule by divino right but by right of divine birth. He is described as Heaven born, and ac cording to the accepted history there has been no break in the family line for twenty-five hun dred years. Among no people on earth has there ever been more universal respect shown, or implicit obedience yielded, to the reigning family. There never has been a revolt of any consequence against the emperor, although there have been numerous conflicts between the shoguns. For about twelve hundred years, from 670 to 1868, the shoguns were, however, the actual rulers, and while they never questioned the sovereignty of the emperor, Jthey did not allow him to retain much more than the empty title. The shoguns were military rulers and a num ber of them were men of great force and execu tive ability. First, the Fujiwara family controlled the country through the shogunate for nearly four hundred years; then for a' century the Taira and Minamoto families alternated in the exercise of power; then came the Hojo family and others of less importance until finally the Tokugawa family' became supreme in the shogunate and continued in power for something like three hundred years. The emperor lived at Nara until about 1600, when the capital was moved to Kyoto where it remained until less than forty years ago. Tokyo, on the other hand, was .the seat of the shogun power, and there is a . very noticeable difference between the two cities. The shoguns fortified their castles and required the feudal lords to keep headquarters in Tokyo. One can not go through the palace in which the emperor lived permanently without noticing how plain It is as compared with the castle (both at Kyoto) in which iWe shogun resided for a few days dur ing his annual call upon the emperor. While it may seem strange that the real rulers never at tempted to become emperors in name, it only shows their Intelligence, for by insisting upon the recognition of the royal family, they were prob ably more successful In maintaining the real authority than they would have been had they questioned the divine right of the Immemorial rulers. During the early part of the last- century there began to be a reaction against the shogun, and when ho agreed to the treaties opening the country to foreign intercourse, his action was taken advantage of by the friends of the em peror. When the feudal lords of Choshu attacked the foreign ships at Shimonoseki Strait, the sho gun was compelled to pay an indemnity of three million dollars and attempted to chastize the Choshu leaders. His forces were defeated and he died soon afterward. The emperor siezed upon this event and the influential lords of Choshu and Satsuma encouraged him to abolish the. sho gunate, which he did In 1868. The new shogun accepted the situation without a .struggle and those of his followers who attempted a resistance were.soon routed. .Everything in modern Japan dateB from 1868, which -Is called the restoration. While In the restoration the emperor was -acknowledged as the sole and absolute ruler in whom all authority was vested, still it was really the beginning of con-