'. The Commoner. volume 13, Dumber 10 4 The Commoner. One of the Saddest Stones Ever Told ISSUED WEEKLY IDntorcd at tho PoHtofUco at Lincoln, Nebraska, nn nocond-clap.'j inattor. William .1. Hiiyan Killtornml Proprietor JtieriAitn L. Mktc'ai.vb AwoclaU' Killlor One Your If 1.00 HlX itlmilliN ro In Cluba of Flvo or moro, per year.. .75 CHAM.KS W. llllVAN Publisher IMimrfnl noomn nnrt UunlncM Onico, .TM-3K) South 12Ui Street .25 .05 Three Monllm ilntrtn f!nnV ...... Saniplo Copies Free. Foreign Post, G2c Kxtra. NlJIl.Ht'iiiPTlONH can bo Bent direct to Tho Com moner. They can iiIho bo Bent through newspapers which have advertised a clubbing rate, or througli local agents, whero sub-agents bavo been ap pointed. All remittances should bo sent by post ofllco money order, express order, or by banic ll on New York or Chicago. Do not send Individual checks, stamps or money. UKNKWAl.S-Tho date on your wrapper shows tho time to which your subscription Is paid. Thus January 31, '13 means that payment has been re ceived to and Including tho last Issue of January, 1913. Two weeks are required after money has been received before tho date on wrapper can bo changed. OIIANOR OK A I1DIII3SS Subscribers requesting a change of address must glvo old as well as new address. AnvnilTlSIN'G Rates will be furnished upon application. Address all communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb, IlIVAIi CLAIMS TO A POEM Edward-J. IIool, G winner, N. D. I nra pleased to bo nblo to furnish tho poem asked for by Mrs. B. L. 13., Minnesota, in your issue of tho 7th inst. Tho great similarity of tho poom by Ella Wheeler Wilcox, published in 1883, under tho title "Suiitudo," by Bolford, Clarke & Co., Chicago, will bring one to think of thorn as ono and tho same poom. The copy 1 have follows: LOVE AND LAUGHTER (Dedicated to Georgo D. Prentice, 18G3.) Laugh and tho world laughs .with you; Weop and you weep alone; This grand old earth must borrow its mirth. It lias troubles onough of its own. Sing, and tho hills will answer; Sigh, it is lost in tho air; Tho echoes bound to a joyful sound, But shrink from voicing care. Be glad and your friends are many; Bo sad and you loso them all; ' Thoro aTo nono to docjino your nectared wine, But alone you must drink lifo's gall. Thoro is room tin the halls of pleasure For a long, and lordly train, But ono by ono ve must all filo on tThrough the narrow aisles of pain. Feast and your "halls are crowded; Fast and tho world goes by; Succeed and glvo 'twill help you live; But no ono can help you die. Rejoico and men will seek you; Griovo and thoy turn to go Thoy want full measure of all your pleasure, But they do not want your woe. From "Peculiar Poems," by John A. Joyce, published 1885 by Thomas Knox & Co. Now York. THE TWENTY-SEVENTII PRESIDENT How an error once started persists! Tho newspapers doscribo Woodrow Wilson aa tho 28th president of tho United States. Ho Is really tho 27th. Tho orror aroso from tho affectation of somebody who started tho prac tice of designating Grover Cleveland as tho 22nd and 24th president of tho United States, Just as if he had been two different men because his administration happened to bo not consecu tive. Just 26 other men havo been presidents besides Woodrow Wilson. This surely makes him tho 27th. Ho is entering on tho 32nd presi dential term. Boston Herald. WORDS OP ENCOURAGEMENT Alfred Graham, Pa. Enclosed plcaso find list of eleven new subscribers, together with mv renewal. I certainly will do all in my power for tho now administration. I will help in tho efforts to carry out tho pledges in the democratic platform which you so strongly advocated One of tho saddest stories ever written is that generally told in newspaper dispatches of March 3rd, and particularly in tho following special dispatch to tho Washington (D. C.) Post: New York, March 3. Thousands of persons in all stages of consumption, some of them barely able to walk and supported by friends and relatives, some so ill that they should have been in tho care of nurses and physicians in stead of exposed to wintry blasts, ell seeking tho reputed marvelous serum discovered by Dr. Friedrich Franz Friedmann, made such a spec tacle of human misery, deferred hope, disap pointment, and tears in Fifth avenue near Thirty-third street today as is seldom witnessed in tho streets of New York city. Unaware of the fact that Dr. Friedmann's lease of offices in the building at No. 329 Fifth avenue had been canceled after he had an nounced that he would treat the poor and the rich alike there, the sufferers, buoyed by the hope that a deliverer had come to save them, thronged about the doors and on the sidewalk and refused to believe that t,he much advertised cure was to be denied them. Policemen, some of them dealing roughly with the sufferers, ordered them away, but as fast as they went others arrived. Driven from tho sidewalk in front of tho building, they crossed to tho other side and looked wistfully up at the windows of the big office building. Cries of "Shame! Shame! Let that man alone," wero caused by tho action. of one police man toward a tottering invalid, barely able to walk, supported on one side by liis mother and on the other by his sister, who pleaded that he was a dying man and begged that he be per mitted to see the discoverer of tho famous serum held out as a last hope to dying men. The policeman seized the sufferer by the arms as he stood amid a little group of sympathizers, and led him along tho sidewalk with his mother and sister holding him up, to the corner of Thirty-third street, at tho same time orderirig him to "move along." Mother, son, and daughter, weeping, stood at tho corner, while a sympathizing group gathered about them, until other policemen camo and forced them all to leave. Tho Invalid, Peter Chioppani, of East New York, was about twenty three years old, and appeared to weigh less than 100 pounds, although he is a fairly tall man. "I walked all the way from EJast New York," he said, "I am a dying man. I have only a few weeks to live. Why do they do this to me? Why don't Dr. Friedmann come? Why did he promise to come if he couldn't? I had such confidence that ho would help me." His mother and sister, who had vainly tried to explain the disappointment of the son and brother to tho big policeman and then tried to beat the policeman off when he seized the ill man, could offer him no comfort and they went away. b Women carrying little children in their arms, their faces illumined with the hope instilled by the reports of the great cure, arrived In numbers only to be turned away with bitter disappoint ment written upon their face. Men, scantily clothed, clustered about the door and read with tear-dimmed eyes the sign hastily placed at the door reading: "Dr. Friedmann not in this building," and signed "Superintendent" Forced from the sidewalks, half a hundred of tho applicants went to the Waldorf-Astoria hotel, where Dr. Friedmann was staying and some of them sent up their cards to him, but ho sent down word that ho could do nothing for atseeJ110 " f e r" While excited groups of spectators and appli cants for tho serum gathered in Fifth avenue. 25 t? c1tS th,B moraIn& until late this after! noon, Dr. Friedmann was in a quandrv Ha -had applied to Dr. John Van Doren YonTg sec! retary of the Medical Society of New York county, for information as to his standing and ? ?rh0thf 1 w2uld b0 Pouted to treat tho thousands of sufferers. He was invited to meet other physicians at the Academy of Medi- iDr;Jp,fi!:dmann,' !t was Earned, was not cer tain that ho would go to the Academy of Medi cine, but was considering whether to send a statement to that body. It is understood that unless tho Now York physicians Intercede for him, he would be required to pass an examina tion by state medical authorities before he could bo permitted to treat the ill. His secretary said the physician, is receiving 400 letters a day from the sufferers, some of whom beg him merely to write to them a word of hope, which, they say, would give them con fidence. Following is an Associated Press dispatch: New York, March 7. Further demonstrations of his treatment, which he claims is a cure for tuberculosis, are promised tomorrow by Dr. Frederick F. Friedmann. The Berlin physician treated only three patients yesterday, when his discovery was demonstrated for the first time in this country before an assemblage of phy sicians, but tomorrow Dr. Friedmann said he purposed treating a large number of sufferers, possibly as many as fifty. He would not name the place where the tuberculosis victims are to be treated, as he said this would cause it to be overrun with anxious applicants, many of whom must be disappointed. "I have no fears as to the showing which will be made by the patients I treated yester day," Dr. Friedmann added. "They will speak for themselves very soon. My patients im proved under treatment in Germany and I feel sure they will here." ROBERT G. INGJERSOMS VISION A vision of the future rises: I see our country filled with happy homes, "with firesides of content the foremost land of all the earth. I see a world where thrones have crumbled and where kings are dust. The aristocracy of idleness has perished from the eaTth. I see a world without a slave. Man at last is free. Nature's forces have by science been enslaved. Lightning and light, wind and wave, frost and flame, and all the secret, subtle powers of earth and air are the tireless' toilers for tho human race. I see a world at peace, adorned with every form of art, with music's myriad voices thrilled, while lips are rich, with words of love and truth a world in which no exile sighs, no prisoner mourns; a world on which the gibbet's shadow does not fall; a world where labor reaps its full reward; where work and worth go hand in hand; where the poor girl trying to win bread with the needle the needle that has been called "the asp for the breast of the poor" is not driven to the desperate choice of crime or death, of suicide or shame. I see a world without the beggar's outstretched palm, the miser's heart less, stony stare; tho piteous wail of want, the livid lips of lies, the cruel eyes of scorn. I see a race without disease .of flesh or brain 1 shapely and fair, tho married harmony of form and function and, as I look, life length ens, joy deepens, love crfhopies the earth; and over all, in the great dome, shines the eternal star of human hope. A DESERVED TRIBUTE The Louisville (Ky.) Times pays a deserved tribute to the vice president, when it says: In a day when the door is opened to a famished democracy it is pleasant to note tho admirable example set by the, new vice presi- I'j was to navo Deen reimbursed a matter of 54,800 spent for house rent and the like during his four1 years as governor of Indiana. Mr. Marshall Is a man of modest means; he is admittedly poorer by his service to the state; his patriotism has been a tax on his pocket, cut he could see no good reason for accepting what would have been in the nature of a gift, and he lost no time In blocking a little scheme designed, no doubt, with the best of intentions. And what he said went we are very sure he will pardon us this laps into the vernacular. With precisely the same right sense of what be seems his position and his means Mr. Marshall 31L ?ke no ttempt to emulate the style to which former vice presidents Fairbanks, Sher SSSbart for examplehave accustomed 7 SSingt0?: A, thousand dollars a month is ft VSZ "S?? Balary until you com to spend it after the lavishly hospitable mode of Wash ington, where many find that it barely meets ??? vMr- Marall will occupy a suite in Sin? t1? n.e may be cert,n h be S?S entertainments t a new mark for. extravagance, novelty and how." . A, ,tu .A. j-tdmnkiii