jims.;" rf DfRyaryt'ipy sttwij'.. Tf'W f j The Commoner. LNUARY 29, 1909 Ik. HAT OF DEMOCRACY'S FUTURE? Timely Editorials By Commoner Readers '- ' "PWVUPT v"1 w'twt-jw j;pwtt ypf-Trw' yip"1" P Joseph V. Starke, Gnadenhutten, O. My son forks in Columbus, Ohio. Some old man askeu Lim who he would vote for. He told him Bryan. hiA nlH man sairl it would make hard times Ind then said the Holy Father had told them all vote for Taft. Any man can figure out how ?aft carried Ohio. S. T. Caleb, Danville, Va. The people did not inderstand the issues. Most of the common fceople in our state, as well as other sections f the country, look at and glance over the )latforms of each party, and a great number of them never read them at all, but listen to com- lents on the issues by their neighbors, who laever saw or read a platform of either party Iln their lives, but simply repeat what some one ielse has said. So to stifle the real point those twho do not want any reforms get right down to business and start their paid representatives Ito work in dead earnest to spread these false (reports to the common people, through bank- Kers, manufacturers, railways, and other proml- ; nent men. Secretly and in this way they get the I neonio confused and indmerent and tney aon't care who is elected or what they stand for. So it appears people will not think nor vote for any real reforms to better their condition until they have seen many disasters in business and endured much and long suffering. & s. jv. Troworidtre. MinooKa. m. xne reiorms i' the democrats asked for in their platform were f good and they will stand threshing over a num E ber of times. There is one thing that I will speak of, for your consideration and that Is the & payment of our national debt, the war debt I f. have reference to, as fast as it becomes due for this reason the people pf this country are well off and if they vote to build ship canals or if congress passes a law to build ship canals let them see to it that some provision is made to Fr pay for the improvements. as they are made or k soon after. The money managers of this country F and some of the foreign countries would like to see us get in debt one hundred times more than we are and they would be willing to finance the business of the country like they have been It doing for years. To try to overcome the money power and the trusts would be a' good thing for the common people. The money power now controls this country and if we get in debt more the greater will be their opportunity to bleed the people. ft. n. xj. vvttiLi, uuumuuiu, in, -iuu aiu mj Moses to lead the children of toil out of bon dage through the single tax remedy. I want to ask a few questions? I assume that God made the earth and gave it to man, that all material wealth is the product of labor applied to land. Labor applied to this God given land feeds, clothes and keeps alive the world of humanity. Said Henry George: "He who owns n the land rrom wnicn 1 muse nve is my master l!J ... i t - xi ili i and 1 nis siave. uau tiiese positions ue suc cessfully disputed. I am sure they can not. T l a TsAvft 4-.. 14 i pf n vrrntf 4 TJtiv Wrr 4-...4-Trt t JL UUVU UCUU stuujriug a. yyoj tu uimf, tucoc tiuiuo to the comprehension or, laborers and believe It can be done. Since coming to that conclusion I have thanked God for your defeat. You have the confidence of more people than any other man alive. Your magnetic presence and un- I rlvnlprl nrjit.orio.al nowera nf. vou as trio nno above all others to champion this cause. The time and state of feeling over your defeat and the means by which it was accomplished is op portune for enlightening the masses. In order to do so it Is necessary to get them to compre hend certain facts. A knowledge of these facts will place them beyond purchase. To illustrate: Jonesboro has, say, 2,000 population with an nvarnoro train a nf 2flfl on Mi hnnnn ronf 47 nop HA UVl'At'-' .M..V.V V. -ymm-y V14.W, UVTMfelW , V montn. xnow let ,uuu laDorers witn an aver age capital of $100 each come to this town and establish a needed industry. This addition, doubling the population will double the price of lots, adding to the value of lots $240,000. Now if all but one are renters from necessity they pay in rent say six par cent on the site value of these lots, half of which they created by establishing the needed industry. As popu lation increases the toiler is forced into closer and cheaper quarters until pauperized and joins the submerged hundreds of thousands. Oh, yes, a little charity is doled out by the robbery of labor but not any justice. Mr. Bryan to these toilers who are indispensable in mine and fac tory, the numberless Industries of our country, the single tax is the only way out except social ism which goes too far, I think. 111 risk it If there is no promising movement in the dlrec ton of single tax. A great deal of charity is due these men who sell their votes. Think for a moment of children sent to school breakfast less, of mothers who go to bed supperless that their children may have something on the mor row and all the result of our Infernal system of taxation. H. B. Bracewell, Allerton, la. I do not feel discouraged as to the cause of reform. While the last election shows that there is u large number in each party who are swayed by the threat of hunger, still there is In the great body of the middle classes, plenty who do study economic conditions, and are ready to vote them. The triumph of the progressives in Iowa and the rule of LaFollette in Wisconsin show that an appeal may be heard among republicans. There is no path open to us either as a matter of honor or a matter of policy but to go on as a party of reform. Let Taft depend on his own party alone. Sooner will the leopard change his spots than will the republican party become a party for reform. The present congress, will show that their policy Is "stand pat" and in the end we shall receive recruits from their best citizens who will aid In carrying out our work. They have won one election by promises which they do not expect to fulfill. They can win but one; henceforth the American people are to face the alternative of reaction or reform. Dr. Robert B. Layton, Washington, D. C. How easy it is to deceive a man who does not do much reading and is not familiar with our politics. The people were misled and many democrats were prejudiced against you. May your Commoner reach many more voters, and present the facts to the American people. Right must win. Lewis Eltel, Vernon, Ind. There will have to come a great revolution of sentiment against the republican party in the United States and in favor of the democratic party to enable it to dislodge the republican party from power. That revolution will come in time, if the demo cratic party is to be a progressive reform party, and continue to stand for honest government In the Interest of all .the people. To say the democratic party can not hope to ever gain con trol of the federal government, to my mind, is against intelligence and reason. Wisdom, man liness and courage will grow in this country, and I have an abiding faith and hope that the American electorate will in the course of time wake up to see it their duty to vote the demo cratic party into power. Then manhood will rule in the United States government as against Mammonism that rules now. P. E. Kenney, Salina, O. The democratic party can hope to gain control of the federal government. The Influences operating on the great army of Bryan Volunteers in the cam paign just closed shows a tremendous moral awakening. For twelve years Bryan has been constantly vilified by a powerful subsidized press, and antagonized by every tariff baron and favored special interest in the land; and yet, not only opposed, but maligned and cul minated by these forces, and opposed by the national administration and all that federal patronage implies, together with the prestige of the president's high office, Mr. Bryan's vol untary supporters constituted such a tremendous force, morally and numerically, that they struck terror to the hearts of republican leaders. Their after election boasts do not harmonize with their pre-election herculean efforts and expres sions of doubt as to results. It must be borne in mind that the millions who supported Bryan were neither coerced nor purchased by promise ot political preferment or special privilege. They were men who thought for themselves and voted according to their honest convictions. If we could set apart in a class by themselves those of Taft's supporters who were not prompted by selfish' motives, and who voted with the trusts and kindred favored interests, honestly believing it was for the public welfare, I imagine the crowd would be very small. Republicans boast of Taft's hold upon his followers, but some one has aptly said that Taft and the ad ministration dragged their followers along by the purse strings, whilo Bryan's hold was upon the hearts and convictions of his supporters. Rembrandt Morgan, Winfleld, W. Va. "Givo them rope enough and they will hang them selves," is an old saying. Live In hope that the scales will finally fall from the people's eyes. John S. Beesy, Almo, Mich. In my judg ment, the Ignorant voter Is greatly to be feared. For the future I would say put a temperance plank In the democratic platform and bo not too radical on tariff questions. With a temper ance plank the democratic party will surely win. F. K. BIrdwell, Bedford, Ind. Give us Mr. Bryan and the Denver platform In 1912. S. M. Gracy, Lowry City, Mo. Wo must bo gin at once to enllghton the pooplo by sending out more reform literature and have our con gressmen keep tab on every act of the republi can party in congress and publish It to the world. George L. Roby, Fowlor, Ind. I believe that the democratic party was defeated because the people no longer care for the individual that It has been Mr. Bryan's dream to protect. Hope of individual supremacy has been killed In most breasts, and among the masses there raises the doubt whether they want the individual back in power, they find the hired man of the trust easier to do business with than the avaricious old despot who drove them harder for his per sonal profit. I think that the republican party won in spite of its weak candidate becauso it has become tho tool of a socialistic movement extending from tho wealthy downward through the organization of joint stock companies. M. M. Warmoth, ago eighty-five years, George town, Ind. Tho majority o people In this na tion are now very poor and have to do days work for bread. Tho laborers are mostly under the control of the moneyed Interests and the bread scare is effective. The democratic party now is a prepense; it is a beggar in politics; It has no force in business. What good for Gom pers to advise poor people to vote for Bryan when they must vote for bread, The man who is hungry knows best what to do. The demo cratic defeat is only' natural. Tho party has no ability in business as well as no voto for a majority. This is a government by force. For myself I will say I votod for Bryan because ho is a good and able man and deserved the presi dency. If I was an able man like Bryan I would not dabble with democratic politics. D. Bachrach, Baltimore, Md. Tho issue must be sharply drawn and the Denver platform made the basis of the reform movement as well as the other principles advocated by Mr. Bryan, In particular, direct legislation, tariff reform and the curbing of trusts and monopoly. Isaac Busby, Lucedalo, Miss. I' beg demo crats not to give up. Keep on trying. C. E. Carnahan, Mount Pleasant, la. The democratic party is tho laughing stock of the people. I have been a democrat and constant supporter of Mr. Bryan since 1896, and had higher hopes of success this year than In any other campaign, but it was hoping without rea son. We have no papers, no money. Officials and Influence are against us, so that nothing less than martyrdom can possibly wrench our government permanently from the hands of tho republican party. Thomas Delaney, North Troy, N. Y. As a reader of your worthy paper I am not at all surprised to havo democracy go down to an honorable defeat as far as your candidacy and others on the ticket with you, but it is an ever lasting disgrace to find men who call themselves democrats always supporting the pernicious re publican press. It seems to mo that In a great city like New York, controlled generally by democrats, If they were really sincere in true democracy there would be some good demo cratic papers of repute there. The same can be said of nearly all of the large cities of tho eastern states. What wo need in all the cities is one or two fearless, upright and honest -democratic papers to espouse the cause. Without it all other efforts are In vain, C. J. Holman, New Marion, Ind. We will "win if the party will continue to stand by the people against all encroachments on their rights. The ignorance of the masses is deplorable. Educate them. V j4av , i ft. tWlliwW ukarim-.T, -- &&U . JttJL t t , sr ft-dA.. j MkXm , j- ,.ai. .j ' r r tfu fcT J&Mf ,