vr - tfii)ratv- s'fwy'J'rJ The Commoner. VOLUME 13, NUMBER 16 V' The Commoner. ISSUED WEEKLY - Entorod nt tho Postofllco at Lincoln, Nebraska, n flocontl-clain matter. Wim.iah .1. UnVAM Kdltornml Proprlolor JtlCIIAIlt) L. Mctcamb Aw-oclntn IMItor CiiAni.iifl W. IJnvAK Publisher Kdtlnrlnl Rooms and HubIhpss Onico. 3IM-330 South 12th Street One Ynr 51.00 Hlx Month no In GIiibH of Fivo or moro, per year. . .75 Three Monthn .25 KIiikIc Copy 05 Samplo Cop I co Free. Foreign Post. 52c Extra. iSlJn.SCltii'TlONM can bo Bent direct to Tho Com moner. They can u!ho bo sent through newspapers which have advortlHed a clubbing rate, or through local agcntH, where sub-agents have been ap pointed. All remittances should bo sent by post olllfo money order, express order, or by bank draft on New York or Chicago. Do not send Individual checks, stamps or money. KIOiVI'JWAIjS Tho dato on your wrapper shows the time to which your subscription Is paid. Thus lonuary 31, '13 means that payment has been re ceived to and Including the last Issue of January, 3 013. Two weeks are required after money has been received before tho duto on wrapper can bo changed. CIMNfSK OH" A nniMCSS Subscribers requesting a change of address must give old as veil as new address. ADVFntTlSlNG Hates will bo furnished upon application. Address all communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Nob. Till: SHC'HKTAItY'S STOVEPIPE HAT Colonel Bryan has equipped himself with the crowning glory of au ofliceholder, a stovepipe hat. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Don't you hear the nows a-humming up and clown the mighty land, From tho prairies of Nebraska to the far Floridian sand? Don you sense the modern wonder booming up liko Thoric thunder? Common People, stand from under since you can not understand. For it's William Jennings Bryan in a halt what's that? Yes, it's William Jennings Bryan In a stove pipe hat! I have seen a plague of places and observed a lot of things In a thirty year meander 'mong tho cabbages and Icings; ; I have witnessed cataclysms, been a party unto schisms, Known a many mad surprises such as ardent living brings; But I novor yet imagined such a shock as that io' haU JenninB3 Bryan in a etove- Is tho mild and meek Caucasian now eternally playod out? Is there nothing more to marvel at and nothing loft to doubt? Have the stars begun to tumble in a universal juinble? HaS inaSronueSUn l rUmbl' wIth tho PlanetB WOlllikethatn " aT crosswIse for !t Beems ""stopih1 jenniusa Bryan If toTo g0t t0 heaven' wnIch own J hpo I shall not lay out a beelino for tho Cheru blmlc crew; eiu Nr my Sing 6 l0kinS Sn aS X have had Nor for Shakespeare, nor for Shelloy, nor for you, Dear Reader, you. Nay, I'll mosey round tho Throno Room in tho seventh heaven flat Till I greet the angel Bryan in a stovepipe hat! St. ISS'ff" NW Y0rk Su- Mr. Bryan's Selected Speeches. Revised and arranged n a convenient two-volume edition These books present Mr. Bryan's most notable addresses and orations, and cover the chief important phases and features of hio career as an orator and advocate. A familiarly intimate and interesting biographical introduction , Mary Baird Bryan, his wife, opens Volume I The two volumes, bound in cloth, sent to anv address prepaid on receipt of price, $2.00 The half eather edition, 2 vols., sent for $3 0 o prepaid. Address The Commoner, Lincoln Neb Amid Tears and Cheers Dr. Friedmann Treat! White Plague Victims 0 9 HIS MESSAGE OF HOPE 1 am happy to have had an opportunity to treat suffering Washingtonians. The cases brought before me were sufft- clently advanced to need immediate and effective treatment. It is my fervent hope that all of those upon whom I operated will recover, and I might say that I am reasonably confident of splen- did results. Dr. Friedmann. The following is from the Washington (D. C.) Post of Thursday, April 15: "Suffer little children to come unto me; for of such is tho kingdom of heaven." Nearly 1,900 years ago this admonition was pronounced by Christ, the Healer. Yesterday, Frledrich Franz Friedmann, tho distinguished Berlin savant, who has dedicated his life to tho eradication of the "great white plague" the most devastating scourge ever visited upon the human race gathered into a clinic at the George Washington University hospital, before an audience of world-famed men, several of these tots who hobbled on crutches, or wero brought prostrate upon stretchers in tho arms of grief-stricken parents. They came to be saved that they might enter the "kingdom of heaven" in the flesh and spirit of the healthy born. The great amphitheater was a scene of pathos and tragedy. The cry of the doomed mingled with the ejaculation of the hopeful. Mothers and fathers wept and children gave up their bodies to science that it might be heralded to the world, perhaps in the very near future, that a new conqueror of disease has come to the sal vation of mankind. Aged women, their cheeks hollow and pallid, their bodies emaciated, pleaded with tears in their liisterless eyes for a drop of the new 'elixir of life." Many knelt before the stern faced German, while others plucked at his clothing and mumbled in gutteral tones their belief In his cure. They seemed to think that their lives would be spared if he injected but a tiny bit of the famous turtle serum into their diseased limbs And when, man after man and woman after ZT? turned away to a' living death, their cries of anguish brought home even to the trained, emotionless physician the terrible curse of the malady that has baffled the ages But the German scientist did not profess to lift the dying from the shadow of the grave- he could and would save only those whom it kerned pos sible to save. He selected his cases from the .scores who applied, and several of Ce he treated already are near death, say those nhv BiCiaRnSt7h(: J"??"8 the monstraC P Y wifh rinldUv ?hndS f thG Pian worked il a p ?iy their evory movement was fol 'cSunt w6 CyeS0f Secrtary of State Bryan. Count J. H. von Bernstorff, tho official remS sentative of the German emperor? whose sub ject Dr. Friedmann is; Dr. Paul SSS ? minister from BwteerliidT heafls 0f? the medical branches of the federal government' Lea, of Tennessee, and William Hughes of Nw eon. He asked if he might attend IS iii and when assured of The Pleasure which & to h s hZl foar ar?f?mpa?ied Dr ledmann practice in the District o7 ColnmSi? lm .to would proceed to achieve StaeSd ?W h added that if the proper procedure appeared to be by the introduction of a resolution in tha senate he would take that course. "I have received so many appeals from nor sons who desire to be treated by Dr PHp," mann," he said, "that I determined to see if it would not be possible for him to receivo tho privilege to practice here in the district This would have nothing to do with the investtea. tion which is now being carried on by Surgeon General Rupert Blue and his assistants t simply aim to give the hundreds of people who wish to take the treatment an opportunity to avail themselves of it." Dr. Friedmann went to tho hospital directly from the White House, where he had gono to bo presented by Secretary of the Interior Lane to President Wilson. The president received the physician graciously, and, after having sub scribed his name in the autograph book in which Dr. Friedmann has secured the names of many of the most distinguished scientists and public men in this and other countries, wished the German visitor the best of. success. Dr. Friedmann was greatly pleased by his cordial treatment at the hands of the head of the nation, and was struck by President Wil son's democratic manner, evidenced, he said, by the fact that he preferred to subscribe his name amid those of a number of other persons of less distinguished position. The book was also signed by Secretary to the President Tumulty and Senator Hughes. When, at 1:30 o'clock, Dr. Friedmann, accom panied by Charles DeV. Hundt, his secretary and confidential advisers, as well as his assistants at his clinics, entered the hospital he found a motley throng. The hallway at the dispensary was already crowded. Here were assembled emaciated children, whose bright eyes contrasted uncannily with their pallid faces. Many, of them bent their slight forms upon crutches and dragged after them their crooked legs with lifeless muscles. Sunken-cheeked women, whose bodies shook with their hacking cough, waited patiently to be called before the man who held out hope of health. Men whose flesh had shriveled, leaving m mu skeletons of skin and bone, sat sad-eyed. The announcement that Dr. Friedmann would remain in the city and administer his remedy had only been made yesterday morning, but the brief interval before the calling of the clinic had proved sufficient to rally the sufferers from distant points. Consequently, when he and Drs. William Cllne Borden, dean of the George Washington medical school and Charles Stanley White, the distinguished surgeon, began tho diagnoses which were to help Dr. Friedmann de termine the selection of patients for the clinic, more than one hundred strength-sapped men, women and children were present to plead for preference. Sentiment gave way to science. Dr. Fried mann had come to demonstrate his cure; his time would not permit him to treat all. A dis covery, which if efficacious, is to be epoch-making, was to be demonstrated and the discoverer was determined to select such cases as would be typical of the disease in its every form. ., -roughout the morning, from the hour that I im3tiJutIn opened its doors, appeals in per son, Dy letter, and telephone had come to the heads of the hospital for a chance to appear nerore Dr. Friedmann and receive treatment ii om his hands. Physicians throughout the city appeared with cases in every stage of tho disease. Parents had brought their crippled oirsprmg and made pathetic appeals that they bo given treatment. ,5rIFriedmalln' however, could not heed the pathetic stories which were told. His heart mastered his mind only to the extent that he 2fi 1? ?rst tor tno children sufferers prin Si? y,?om tuDerculosis of the bone and joints. eso. "Jf1 Patients struggled gamely into the examination room alone where their physical strength would permit, assisted by anxious Sn whero excruciating pain would not suiter shrunken limbs to support wasted bodies. wext came the call for the adults. Men and women struggled to pour their plaints into tho ear of the German. His aim was to make his demonstration general. Ho wished to embrace in his clinic every form of tuberculosis. Ho neard- generally the reports of the various cases irom the attending 'physicians. When two hours had been consumed, during A