B5WPw7Wf83 Sf ' - --.- Rl , WE7J The Commoner. Mr. Bryan Before the Union League of Chicago At tho annual mooting of tho Union Leaguo rb of Chicago, Judgo William II. McSurloy, tho ncoming president, introducing Mr. Bryan, j .... . - .... j "I am about to Introduce to you tno oest Introduced man in America. Of course I am lot roforrlng to this particular occasion (laugh- ijtr); but ho is tho hest introduced man in t America bocauso ho introduced himsoii to every J" it.tn .. n-rwl Imifniililn t r HOnl4V linttllflt villago and plain, mountainside, valloy, river, tl sross-roads " 'I I Colonol Bryan: "Swamp." , Presidont McSurely: "And swamp. (Laugh ter.) And, sometimes ho has taken to tho joods, also. (Renewed laughter.) I beliovo . within the last twolvo months our distinguished fjuest took it upon himself to introduce to tho . peoplo of America a now president; (applause) find whon ho undertook to do that ho succeeded )' ftbis timo. (Laughter and applause.) And , zentlomen, I spoak only what you all know, that , In Introducing tho man that now sits in tho twimo iiouso no mirouuccu ono 01 mo mosc winning, attractive and scholarly personalities that has evor sat in that IiIkIi and honored nosi- "tion. (Applnuso.) i "uur nonorou guest lias not only Introduced mon, but porhaps of moro lmporanco, ho has Introduced ideas. Some of thorn wo did not. llkn (or at loast thoy disturhed our complacency, and we commoncod to oxamino tho reasons for tho faith that was in us. and I nm not. so sum lint. .ftvliftt whon wo commoncod to oxamino thoso iwuouhd ru vyuiu Btlll IUUIU U I H I. U IUUU . 1 KnOW that it is a truo and plain historical fact that this "Wonderful rovollltlonarv chancrn In fhn Iflnns :nd thought of American citizens has been orougnt nnout iargoly by our distinguished uest or tno ovonmg. (Applauso.) "That man will speak to us tonight on 'Tho MKPtens of thn Times.' Gontlomon, I have tho jnonor to present to you tho distinguished secre tary or stato ana tno groat Amorican citizen, JWilliam Jonnlngs Bryan." I Tho members and guests roso and cheered Colonel Bryan. J Hon. William .Tnnnlncra Prvnn "Tvr.. n-.,i idont, and Gontlomon of tho Club: I appreciate jboth tho invitation and porsistonco of thoso who .ihoauuiiuuu mo mvuauon. i am not sure that I WtnVA tmrt lln.l n -nnn ,. i i . ... . !;,, vfvn nu u. inuiu ijursjaiont crowd inviting mo than thoso who form your invitation coin- .limittOQ. I COtllfl not enmn nt Mio Hi ...l, t Bflwaa first invited, but I am crind timt ni,.nm itancc8 were such that I could bo horo tonight. it "t1V"lw uiuotouu yours ago. i inquired at tho tablo if nnv worn nronnnf Innlirtif i, Jwere present then and T fmimi im ni , fflmy right wero horo, and ono of thorn suggested lii: H,uueul UU11 Lo persons nere tonight bad boon horo then. I thought that that showed that thoy wore willing to tako great risks after iiRviug uearu me once, and that it showed also a very ataoio membership in this club. . "I certainlv atmrnnlntn nm lmnnt. p ki.. nere at thlB timo. I am not surprised to find that your election wont along so smoothly here. I attended a convention in this city last Juno (laughter), and I found how an orderly body ould proooed (laughter). I don't know "Whether tho opposition to theso mombors, theso en elected, was absent or Bimply put out of tho hall, but certainly it was a very unanimous affair here tonight. I was interested, too, in witnessing this transfer of authority. Why, you pass from ono administration to another as calmly an thoy did at Washington tho other day. I was very much Impressed by tho manner in which ninety millions of people changed their xecutive offlcor, and I think it must have been a lesson to all who had tho privilege of witness ing it. I annreclato too thn lHnri wnia n,nf have been spoken in presenting mo to you. I am not willing to admit as much credit as has been given to mo. When I am introduced as ono who introduced a nreslclmit tn thio i,,,,.,. I I think I owo it to history to say that tho TopuDiicanrfparty, by dividing, exerted moro in fluence than I did. fLa-ueht.nr.1 T n,i rx,,n r J could to secure a change of the administration, I uui uoiuess inyHou ot very little importance 1 compared with tho other forces which were i operating at tno time. 1 have tried in politics to kivo creuit to my political opponents, and where I have had personal opponents or whore I have been norsonallv nnnnnnH na n nim,ii.i..- t'to republicans, I have been very glad to ho soiu to ujsuiy to tue nigu character of tho mou who defeated mo. Possibly I am not unselfish In that. It is bad enough to bo defeated by a good man (laugnter.j auu i navu, unpuuianjr in tho last few months, been anxious to improve evory opportunity to testify to my appreciation of the deep convictions of tho republican candi dates in tho last election. I admire thorn for tho depth of their conviction, and I hope I may live to seo many occasions yet where republi cans with convictions as deep will have the courage to make them known. (Laughter.) "Insofar as I have had any part in the election of a democratic president I am very proud of that part, and I am very well pleased with the manner in which that president has commenced his administration. (Applause.) I can say that with ono exception his cabinet is made up of splendid men (laughter). In making that ono exception I do it without any feeling that I am reflecting upon the cabinet, because even the sacred gold dollar has ten per cent of alloy why then should they expect a cabinet to bo pure gold? (Laughter.) "I have been given credit, too, for having had n larger part than I would attempt to claim in procuring tho conditions that wo now all recog nize. I admit that I did what I could to sup port reforms that are now moro popular than they were, and If I am pressed to it I will admit that nobody is having a better time just now than I am. (Laughter.) "Sometimes I have had over-sanguine friends express regret that I did not reach the presi dency. I havo had them say that they were sorry that after being connected with these re forms I should not havo been given the highest place in tho nation. But I have had an answer ready for them. I have told them that they need not weep for me; that I am not an object of sympathy; that two or three hundred years ago they hung mon like me; now, they just defeat them for ofilce. (Laughter.) And, looking back over the past I am not prepared to say that ray defeats were not good for the country. Not that I want to take back anything I have said, or any position that I have taken, but the people were not ready then for the reforms that are now accomplished, and had I been elected at any of tho numerous times that I gave the people an opportunity to elect me (laughter) bad I been elected I would have had a very difficult task. I would havo had people who were honestly and sincerely afraid of the things I stood for. Especially would that have been true in 189 G. Had I been elected in 1896 I could not havo hoped to have had both the sonate and tho house with me, and if I had been elected in 1900 I could hardly have hoped to have had tho senate and house with me and even if I had beai elected In 1908, many people who today are heartily in favor of the reforms that tho peoplo are securing, were then timid and timorous about thoso questions. "Today we havo the people ripe for reform allid l am not sure that our president may not be able to do what I might not have been able to do had I been elected instead of him. But It is not a question that we need discuss, and one that does not concern mo, for I havo , ?, s mucn moro interested in the securing of the things for which we have been fightinS than I have been in the name of tho man who hold tho office, that I am happy, in the thought that this government, through these reforms will be madoso good that a citizen will not miss a little thing like tho presidency. (Ap plause.) ' K y In "iZ Sf1 TaTm SUre that wo could not hve in the White House a man more consecrated to tho people's cause than the one who is now SICn neXSUt!V0 (Applause.) And I ha been at his sldo long enough to feel sure that if I had been allowed to select I could not have selected a man with whom I could work with more real enjoyment, with moro sympathy or moro hearty co-operation. -yimtuy or 'n mJdne as my BUbJect tonight tho 'Siena of tho Times I thought that I might bring ?o your attention tho general progress of the world and not only point out the things that ShbJB accomplished, but the direction ?n which the people are going. And I feel that if I do attempt to speak of the futures will have moro willing hearers now than I had some two decades ago for the things accomplished have enabled us to measure the tendencies of the times And this subject has been selected and the line of thought has been adopted for a double purpose. It is to encourage those who have been laboring in behalf of reforms, and VOLUME 13, NUMBER 14 to excite to activity those who have not been active. "And when I oay reforms, let no one think that I havo any thought of confining my re marks to political reforms. Some people are prejudiced against the word 'reform,' and against the term 'reform.' I would define re form as change for the better; and I would de fine a reformer as one who is trying to improve conditions. And when I thus define the terms reform and reformer I think I can assume that you are all reformers. "But for fear there may be some who yet are disinclined to be classed with the reformers, let me tell you who are not reformers, that events will yet drive you into the ranks of the reformers by tho process of elimination. "I only know of three kinds of people who are not reformers. In the first class you will find those who lack'intelligence. Those who do not know that things can be better than they are. If you have any in this community who do not know that there are wrongs to be righted and abuses to be remedied, they belong to this first class and are not reformers; because one can not be a reformer until he has come to understand that there is a possibility of improvement. But you can not have many of these in a club like this, and if you have any they would not bo here tonight. "In the second class you will find -those who know reform is possible but who are so hard hearted and indifferent to the welfare of their fellows that they do not care to have those re forms secured. You can not have any of this class in a club like this; and if. you had any they would not be here tonight. "There is only one other class, and in that you find those who profit by abuses that ought to be reformed and who, therefore, have a pecuniary interest not only in not supporting reforms, but in preventing reforms. Those who have their hands in other people's pockets and do not want to be disturbed. But you can not have very many of this class even in this city, and if you have aiiy it is only polite to assume that they are not here tonight. "I shall begin, therefore, with the assumption that all of you are interested in some reforms, if not in many, and feel a certain degree of enthusiasm in regard to their accomplishment. "But the reformer has many difficulties to encounter. I shall not attempt to enumerate them. I shall only mention two. The first is the difference in the degree of enthusiasm among reformers. Reformers vary all the way from just above freezing up to boiling point. (Laughter.) If a reformer is just above freez ing you have to handle him very tenderly for a, little creep in the temperature and he is' out of the-class. But when he is at boiling point he is at work, and one of the chief objects in discussing reform is to raise the temperature. It is much easier to increase the zeal of one who favors a reform than it is to convert to a re form one who is really against it. f?Utie SCOnd difliculty is even greater. It is the difficulty in getting reformers to act to gether. Because a reformer is honest he is apt hi ,af,S infate; and because he is conscious that i.i nterester he is not prone to compro mise. No one who has ever tried to get re formers together and keep them together will S nw PCiat1 a 8t0ry tnaC J nave heard in Li Vltration given by a Kansas congressman SS2.I n?n y?fpf ueo' Ho 8aid at upon the that ran wmf211 QV? WeFe some "ttle bnpros that ran wild, and when they were attacked by SSttoaSlW ithT WUld PUt tir heads thf enomv their heels out in a circle and kick r Swin i he sald unfortunately reform daughter ? Thff aCt TIith that diligence, augnter.) That sometimes in the nrpspncft of danger they would put their 1 eads to Se enemy and kick each other. ( Renewed laugh ter.) It is a very apt illustration. S ho1 we're oTteedin tV mGIt00' rTOTPS? bnrinnbou0tnenoreofthremr men too who k?,Wn 8ome' and hnest tliey calfed0 mUr S Eft? whai desire that conditions mieM J WUld eveIJ worse and worse; even hSln thpm WOI?e and in tho hono tw m, ? tnem to Set worse desPe?a ion b? LV? ?eopl would at Jast, in thTnow Veotod W t0 aCCGPt somethiS that I alTotnwilHnLinfot0 i,nd0rse this PMlosoph wop?e.nomSterhnhelp make any edition of that woSS Sn Jul SUre J may feel that out I am re2?22eS 2 V-?n S00d may flnallv come. am restrained by the fear that if I helped to rmwt tm?m -rftoyLifcii