The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, May 29, 1908, Page 14, Image 14

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The Commoner.
14
VOLUME 8, NUMBER 20
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DEMOCRATIC OLUIJS
Tho Dolla County Bryan Club at
Ouray, Colo., rocontly hold a moot
ing which wus attended by COO mom-
Jefferson's Bible
The Life and Morals of
JESUS OF NAZARETH
Extracted Textual! from the Goipclf, together vrith
compnriion of hit doctrines vtltli tlioio of otliort.
By THOMAS JEPFBRSON
Jcflcrton'i mluion wi leaderildp. Without
o effort on hit part exprenioni from liti Ilpi
that from other incn'a would icarcely have at
tracted notice, became thenceforth ailoini,
creedi, and (JatlicrintJ-crici of great mataci of hit
countrymen. Hcnru S. Randall.
Jeffenon'i Dible it a book of 108 pagct, rell
printed and lubttanti&lly bound in cloth. It vraa
pakliahed originally to be lold for $1.00 per
copy. By purchasing the book in large numbcra
vre are able to offer Commoner readers an ex
ceptlonal price of 75c per copy; tent by mail,
poitage prepaid.
ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO
THE COMMONER, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
bors. John T. Bamott addressed
tho club. , . .
Tho Topoka, Kan., Bryan Club of
ficers expect to havo a membership
of 1,000 before tho Denver conven-
Following aro some Illinois clubs
with tho names of tholr ofllcors:
Hamilton County Bryan Club, W. H.
Stollo, president, McLeansboro, Illi
nois; Montgomery County Bryan
Club, Michael Bray, president, Litch
fiold, Guy Lain, secretary, Litchfield,
111.; 31st Ward Bryan Club, Chicago,
Terronco F. Moran, president, An
drow Schubert, secretary.
A democratic club has been organ
ized at Kalisnoll, Mont. I, D. Itogn-
llon Is prosidont; Thomas A. Busey,
secretary.
L. J. Cook Is corresponding secre
tary of a democratic club organized
at Silver Creek, N. Y.
An Essex County democratic club
has been organized at Newark, N. J.
Tho officers of tho club aro: Presi
dent. John L. Armitage, of Newark;
first vice-president, Frank O'Connor,
of West Orange; second vice-president,
John A. Furman, of Newark;
secretary, Julian A. Gregory, of East
Orange; treasurer, George A. Miller,
of East Orange; sergeant-at-arms,
Felix McGeo, of Mlllburn; executive
committee, John L. Armitage, John
A. O'Connor, John A. Furman, Ju
lian A. Gregory, George A. Miller,
Felix I.IcGeo, Herbert C. Rorick, Si
mon P. Northrup, Redmond P. Con
Ion, William E. Gormloy and R. A.
Hamilton.
lrrig3i:ocl Lands
Twin Falls North Side Canal System
Snaks River Valley
Sunny Southern Idaho
GO.00O ACRES CHOICE IiAND STILL OJEN FOR
ENTRY.
100,000 ACRES filed on slnco tho opening of tho ,
Twin Pulls North Sido Lands, October 1, 1907.
THE LAST LAND under tho gravity system of tho , ,
Great Twin Falls Canal Systom tho largest
Irrigation project JLn tho United StateB, em-
bracing a total of 420,000 acres.
Ideal Climate
Richest Soil
The Coming
Finest Watertight
I
FVuil: Belt of" Idaho
TOWNS on tho North Sldo aro Mllnor, .Toromo, and
Wendell, each of which offors Inducements for
tho home-builder, investor, and business man.
ELECTRIC POWER A magnificent power plant
costing over $100,000 Is now in oporatlon at
Shoshono Falls. Moro than 100,000 horso power
Is. available In Snako river adjoining this tract.
HOMES If you want a homo, a buslnoss, an Irrl
' gated farm, a suro lnvestmont, sunshlno and
health; If you want to make money, come to
tho Twin Falls North Sldo Lands whoro you.
will find rich soil, lino climate, abundanco of
wa'tor, good wells, electric powor, electric rail
roads under construction, good nolghbors and
ovorythlng to make a happy and prosperous
commonwealth.
FREE TEAMS aro furnished by tho company from
either tho Mllnor or Joromo ofllco to show
homosookei's tho lands. Drlvors who aro fa
miliar with tho lands accompany ovory team.
TERMS Perpetual wator right, $35 per acre, and
tho land 50c per aoro: nrst payment on wator
right and land at tlmo of llllng, $3.25 per aero:
balanco In ton annual payments. Short rosl
donco only roqulrod.
For Descriptive Literature and full Information write to the Secretary
Twin Falls North Side Investment Co., Ltd.,
Jerome, Idaho.
Or to T nJU Mw.i.L c:jl i j vr-....o.
i s i wiui aiiaiwiuiuiue l-anaci water vx).
CHICAGO, ILL.
A democratic club has been organ
ized at Blunt, S. D. W. R. Phillips
is secretary.
Dr. William Rose, president; Ed.
Collins, secretary; and John Rice,
treasurer, of the democratic club of
Lake County, organized at Madison,
S. D.
A democratic club has been organ
ized at Portland, Maine, with moro
than one hundred rnd fifty names
enrolled as a starter.
R. Rilling is president; Arthur
Langdell, secretary and W. M. Lang
doll, treasuror of a democratic club
organized at East Sound, Washing
ton.
There are one hundred and fifty
members in a democratic club organ
ized at Lexington, Va. C. I. Carey
is president and W. E. Dameron,
secretary.
Tho ofllcors of Ihe Thirteenth
Ward club at Kansas City are as fol
lows; E. V. Iwuverks, president; H.
J. Sheridan, vice president; L. B. Ar
buckle, secretary; F. H. Major, cor
responding secretary; E. D. Luce,
treasurer.
A. J. Haskell Is president and
Robert A. Barlow, secretary of a
democratic club organized at Sydney,
Nebr.
A Day County democratic club has
been organized at Webster, S. D.
It has a membership of more than
one hundred, a number -f whom are
republicans.
The democratic club of Brown
county has been organized at Ains
worth, Neb. Clem Langloy, presi
dent; J. H. Hart, vice president; E.
E. Humphries, secretary; and T. W.
DeLong, treasurer.
The officers of the democratic club
organized at Portland, Me., are as
follows: President, Hon. Darius H.
Tngraham; vice president, Samuel L.
Bates, Col. George F. McQuillan,
William Lyons, Westbrook, Frank L.
Clark; secretary, Thomas H. Gately,
Jr.; treasurer, William H. Sargent;
executive committee, Samuel Rosen
borg, 1 dmund J. Young, Michael T.
O'Brien, Antony A. Frates, Edgar S.
Fossett, George S. Murphy, Eugene
W. Hunt, Jerome C. Leighton, Albert
H. Blake, Frank P. Scaramon, South
Portland; membership- committee,
Llewellyn Barton, J. E. F. Connolly,
Dr. W. H. MacVane, H. R. Water-
house, and E. C. Verrill.
The democratic club organized at
the University at Champaign is offi
cered as follows: President, J. L.
McLaughlin; secretary, W. H. Hick
man; vice president, L. E. Griffith;
treasurer, John Baird; executive
committee, Messrs. Thompson, Duel
her and Bush.
The democratic club organized at
Manhattan, Kan., elected officers as
follows: President, A. W. Long;
vice president, F. R. Moore; secre
tary, M. F. Spencer; treasurer, C. A.
Limbocker; honorary, c. A. Hanlen
beck, Jr.
A Bryan democratic club .has been
organized at Radford, Va. The
membership of the club has grown
until It now numbers about 220 mem
bers. Tho Radford democratic vote
or tne city is about 250. Judge
Seldon Longley is president and H.
C. Tyler, secretary.
At Mount Sterling, 111., a demo
cratic club was organized with C. W.
Sellars as secretary.
A democratic club at Longmont,
Colo., is officered as follows: John
A. Donovan, president; J. F. Doyle,
vice president; L. W. Newby, secre
tary; and Guy Johnson, treasurer.
RAYMOND ROBINS AND THE
CAMPAIGN ISSUE
In his dramatic and convincing
speech before the Federation of
Labor at Chicago on the 19th Ray
mond Robins sounded what is not
unlikely to be tho keynote of the ap
proaching presidential and congres
sional campaign. Tho analogy he
drew between the Dred Scott slave
decision of fifty years ago and tho
Danbury labor decision of the pres
ent year, was impressively exact; and
his quotations from Lincoln's criti
cisms of that decision were almost
as if they had been framed especially
for criticising this one.
If it was necessary to convince
that audience, representing hundreds
of thousands of Chicago worklngmen,
that the Danbury decision is the fore
runner of supreme court decisions
which" will condemn all effective
labor unionism as conspiracies under
the Sherman anti-trust law, just as
Lincoln saw in the Dred Scott de
cision the forerunner of supreme
court decisions making slavery a na
tional institution, Mr. Robins did it.
If It was necessary to convince them
that nothing will stop this tendency'
to strangle labor unionism, short of
an emphatic labor demonstration at
the polls next fall, Mr. Robins did
that also. His speech, both in form
and substance, was one of the kind
that become historical landmarks of
political revolution. And his audi
ence rose to the supreme importance
of" the situation.
It will not take many such speech
es before labor audiences or indeed
before audiences of any other class
of fair-minded men to change tho
face of the political situation. Let
it once be generally felt, as Mr. Rob
ins argued, and as the fact seems to
be, that the supreme court of today
is to our plutocracy what the su
preme court of fifty years ago was
to the slavocracy, and startling
events would occur. A vote of de
cisive magnitude from all parties
would come over to those presiden
tial and congressional candidates,
and only to those who, being within
the possibilities of election, are of
such character personally and stand '
upon such platforms politically, as to
leave no room for distrust. It be
gins to look as if organized working? .
men had been forced into a realiza- .
tion of their danger from plutocracy;'
nor of their own danger alone, but
of the danger to all whose prosperity
aepenas upon a fair distribution of.
the products of labor. From Tho '
Public.
Subscribers' flqwrtisiitfl Dettt.
This department Is for tho exclusive
use of Commoner subscribers, and u
special rate of six cents a word per in
sertion tho lowest rate has been
made for them. Address all communi
cations to Tho Commoner, Lincoln, Nob.
C OR SALE AN IRRIGATED .FARM
with sixty thousand acres, grazimr
land, containing timber, sotol, guavulp
and water power facilities. Situated in
tho state of Coahulla, Mexico, twelve
miles from railroad station. For f nil
particulars, apply to owner. P. Floyd
Laredo, Texas. x loya'
Y ANTED BY A LEADING LIFE IN
VV suranco Company, District Super
intendent, headquarters in this city.
Excellent opportunity for energetic" re
liable ex-county ofllcer, school teacher,
capitalist or salesman having extended
acquaintance. Liberal compensation
Increasing annually. Address, with re? I
orences, National Commercial Agencv
P. O. Box 1035, Omaha, Nebr Affency'
PORT WORTH AND DALLAS. TEXAS.
A combined population 180,000. both
growing fast, aro 30 miles apart. Ar
tngton, population 4.000, also growing
s between them. A few tracts rlrh
lands may yet be had hero to? $2C to
$50 per acre, these Increasing in valuo
20 per cent annually. Fertile fine
healthful, Froo schools. Good roidS'
Full, free Information furnlshod a
W.- 6olller, Arlington, Texas. '
77 ANTED AGENTS TO SELL ORIGI
vv nal hand finished photo post cards
with copy of autograph of W. J. Bryan.
Sample 10c. Indiana Studio, Pasco
POR SALE 40 ACRES NEAR ARD
moro. Price $2,500. Terms. Titlo
perfect. Address A. D. Chase, Sr.. P o
Box 441, Ardmoro, Okla. ' ' ' U'
DEMOCRATIC PAPER IN HUSTLING
,i county seat. Exceptional opportu
nity. Plant invoices $7,500. Sell with
paper for $6,000. Largo job business.
Address Printer, caro Commoner.
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