'Trw"""" HWW " wryv-mrjiWD!B'flr, V1 JPPflWUfljpJi ? .'- - hi p 14 The Commoner. VOLUME 13, NUMBER 2, Washington's Testimonial to Ambassador Bryce Washington Post: A letter which was presontod to Ambassador Bryce of England, on tho eve of his trip to Japan, as the sentiment of 64 of the capital's most representative citizens has boon mado public. Tho letter, which was presented by former Dis trict Commissioner II. B. P. Macfar land, expressing tho "appreciation and affection" of tho capital's resi dents, and Ambassador Bryco's reply, praising Washington, havo been pre pared In pamphlet form for distribu tion. Tho missive from tho committee of citizens reads: "His Excellency tho Rt. Hon. James Bryce, O. M.t Ambassador of ureat Britain: acknowledgement of your sympa thetic Interest in tho progress of tho national capital, and its helpful ex pression in public and private. Ever since you camo as ambassador of Great Britain you havo taken time, after the execution of your important duties, to study and to serve tho capital with appreciation and affec tion. While your great services to your government and your country men as their asmassador have bene fited, not only them, but our country and the world as well, your unofficial labors have particularly benefited the District of Columbia, the seat of the government of tho Unitjed States, dear to tho heart of every intelligent American. "Having revealed us, as a people, "Wo Cttll HOt tinrmlh vmi fn lonvn I tr nnranlvna in ,rPVi Amnrlnon flnm Washington without our grateful monwealth" as no American has over Let Me Pay You $300 Monthly for one Lour of your lime dnlly. I'll uliow you Iiow to earn thin amount co-oper-atlnc with me, In uddltlon to whnt you can nmke In the mail order bunlaeas. If You Stay BOSSED You'll Be LOST IN 18 MONTHS I TOOIC IN $OKO,000.00 IN THIS MAIIj OIIDISH HUSINHSS, STARTING WITH ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS. NOW I HAVE ENORMOUS ENTERPRISES, OVER 100,000 CUSTOMERS, AND AM KNOWN EVERY WHERE AS THE MAIL ORDER WIZARD OP AMERICA. IF YOU WORK OVER A SET OF BOOKS, OR BEHIND THE COUNTER, OR OVER A TYPEWRITER, OR BE HIND A TEAM, OR BESIDE A BARBER CHAIR, OR ON rT,S.TJ,."?.T OAr,l OR IN A BOILER FACTORY, OR WHEREVER YOU WORK, I CAN SHOW YOU THE llEAIi, RAPID, RELIABLE ROUTE TO SOMETHING A THOUSAND TIMES BETTER! I SHOW YOU HOW TO MAKE MONEY IN A BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN. YOU. WllO road tills, rtn mnttnK ivUn nm. o ,., I,-. vn.. n. .lt. T " ' ri " ,.vr ".""'"" .. "'-' Ul WHUfc j w. iwu uvuibi iu jnuiiur now iow your Biliary, or how poor your prospects; no mat ter how discontented, discouraged, you aro; no matter how Incapablo of achievement your friends or your family may think you aro -you can at once becomo tho partner of Tho Mall Order Wizard of America you can "w iui uiu men. tiiiio in your ,, ,Perl,aps, to aoo tho monoy roll In to you at ovory visit of tho postman, without grinding out your heart and soul and body for evory dollar of It. I, Walt G. Cunningham, right now offor you tho money-making chance of your ltfo, without asking you to mortgage your llfo to mo, without driving a grim, cold-blooded, Shylock's baroraln with vnn t ,., -..! Perhaps with a wholo lot moro than you will mmtm I In fi fir am WMmmm BEa WALT C. CUNNINGHAM America's Mall nrrfm. W1....1 President ofths Mailorder School a book you n qt7nt h ;f, J-'UUM. I'vo fresiaent of the Mailorder School AchcVMulin ?. -at once. It Is called. "How to and got It soaked Into your system from Tn,itn i,i , l' Read it over. Are. ambition and burning dotorminn h ? h,ooli1and Set full of now hone way, and under tho guhffico of TnwhS na8bf?ihl?h2BLht In brand nSw It hands dowrv I'll tako rlcht hniii nt "J?,, , fought tho same fight and won nlnng to ond'cA work wfth vm, fy,and,sUow you tho way from boSn wlth Monoy-MulttplylnS Ideas nAt 0U' holp you' advise you-sunVy vnt Methods you canJSaVto qBWClay CoLn nto o'SiigJtiSS pK,eys2f CMV?rth0 Entire Making. Is onnn.tn nvnrv mn,, lLrii "9a -rrinciples of Mall Ordor T up out of the wago-weary crowd &rrBnanVho, ,llMsod ambition to step In lonir.dlRtn.nnn mnVnUniioiJ!-0, 1.1A0y. .ar0 S0 COmploto. my Wonflrfl f"? Ihi 111ILL mPV rcitlrlrx ... ! I guaranty" r'eating - r"" "'" xuuiiuioill AanUTUTrmSn(4r V,iod"c.,J!KBy-Ways AND SAFE DIRECTIONS, AND BEGIN IMMEDIATBIT IJF,?j!E' SDRB w.ua auriCH ABSOLUTELY ASSURE EVERY MAN OR womam mrV?V? PLEDGE AND TAKE HOLD OP THIS BUSINESS AT ONCF ivvf tt JIE OR SHE CAN AND SAFE DIRECTIONS. ANnwiTMTiSSPM'0?S: ITS SIMPLE. STIRTO of success plans. any outlay for omco equlnmonfc ' ur wn nomo- without an ooico T f!AN RT.T VfTT WDrami t .... liberate you from tho treadmill of tho tlmecT BIm RTln shackles of wage-slavery from vn,,r ,oAm SlJ0L.1 5an to.ar the w boss-brow-beatlng from your forehead! I can do V,Lcaini 1Ift t10 thorns of sisters, because I was fixed Just exactly aS voS rll0Sth,nTfirs' brothers and business and mado all of thi n 7. ro wheJ I wont int ?? 'ou now. advertlsem ??e:ohcy?up,olS or iiDorato you rrom tho treadmill of tho tlmo-clock! ! I o b FJlnai I can shackles of wmtb-s nvni-v frnm . .V" "'C'ti 1 can tear th waii. boss-brow-beatrng froSour foVoho&l I X SoettLLcW. "" thornVS pjaiuia, uecuuso x was uxoa just exactlv tin vnn !. u "vB' urotnors and business and mado all of this monoy iimthi towhe.n x Wc"t into this mongrel fears-I, too, was once TaSflcnifedVi "jKTinfSSi0 do-ub& n! 1SS with hnsn-ffln-Tit TrA.Ann.j .! ":" JOD ana gajrcrod nnrl w Those woro And ho von. .. . " ' --' w, jw n m iiiuilh iin vniin mini wnto to mo boforo this day's sun falls behind the horn oeovo in me and x win nay no moro tno opportunity Is hem with it .. today, right now, Dame Fortune raps : on yoS? dbo? and thlrSLo0utstr0tched; to toll you about It has cost mo thousands of dollars t5 MnS ifnits?iafir? of Ino across tho country to all tho ambitious mon and wom5i nWL,s flashed today walks of life there Is oceans of r66m for all of yJu in th? A,mrlca, ,n a thj "Whatever you do. ret that letter or rtnitni ntr Mriwr - "1 fn,s business I "How To Achlovollall Oritl SuceeS?" Adre wCi?f "r111 BOOK Resident, The Mall Order SColTsmlmVoi irDegJb fiS. D,Pa ?3KS . . . " uiu done, you havo encouraged us in the development of our national capital as only a man of vision from beyond our borders could havo done. "You havo mado us understand better the beauty of tho capital; and the possibilities of its future as a model for American cities, as the natural object of the solicitude of tho American people, the symbol of their sovereignty, the capital of their capitals. "We can not close without re ferring to the share which Mrs. Bryce has taken in all of your kindly efforts for the betterment of this capital which also we highly appreciate. Wo trust that both of you may do Wash ington tho honor of frecniently re visiting it, and thus add to the pleasure of a host of friends. "With high recrard and resneot. very sincerely yours, Charles C. Glover, Charles J. Bell, William Cor coran Eustis, James Brown Scott, Edward J. Stellwagen, William D. Hoover, Georgo E. Hamilton, Cuno H. Rudolph, Theodore W. Noyes, A. S. Worthington, Job Barnard, Wil liam Phelps Eno. John M. Wilnnn. W- J. Boardman, Corcoran Thorn, Wil liam T. Russell, John Joy Edson, i-ierDert Putnam, Abram Simon, Henry B. P. Macfarland, Alexander Graham Bell, John W. Foster, Hen nen Jennings, Thomas Nelson Page, Henry Cleveland Perkins,. George Dewey, Wendell P. Stafford, R. Ross Perry, J. J. Darlington, Alfred Hard ing, Willard H. Brownson, Charles Wood, Charles Henry Butler, Gifford Pinchot, S. W. Woodward, John Van Schaick, jr., Henry White, John Bar rett, Henry B. Brown, Leonard Wood, Glenn Brown, H. K. Bush Brown, Robert S. Woodward, Arthur J. Parsons, Nathanel Wilson, W. H. Wilmer, George Truesdell, Edward H. Droop, Charles D. Walcott, Henry Ganett, Earl Cranston, Charles W. Richardson, Charles H. Stockton, Archibald Hopkins, W. V. Cox, T. L. Macdonald, John B. Henderson, Thomas H. Anderson, D. J. Callahan, Charles Munroe. Simnn Wnir tt tvt Parker, Gilbert H. Grosvenor, Charles Noble-Gregory." Mr. Bryco's Reply Prom San Francisco, on the eve of sailing for Japan, on May 3, 1913, Mr. Bryce sent the following re sponse: ioHOwral0 .Henry B' F' Macfar nd,Wsh,ington' D- C. Mr. Dear Mr. Macfarland: Will you bo good enough to convey my sincere thanks to the gentlemen who have signed the letter which you have handed to me, many of them my personal friends and all of them men whose good opinion I value highly. "I am deeply touched by the kind feeling which prompted it, and by tho warm terms in which it is couched, and I am especially gratified by the reference to the interest which my wife has taken in all that contri butes to the welfaro of Washington. Whoever lives in your city can not but feel the charm of its umbrageous streets, and bo struck by the splen did possibilities which it offers in re- ?tPeK, ?Lthe dIgnity and harmony of its buildincs. and nf th t,q,. "l . wVlV1? t0 "s surroundings What I havo been able to do towards ;MhBin5rinte5BBt In th0 adornment of the city and preservation for pub lic enjoyment of the beautiful woods and valleys that environ it has beon little enough; I wiah it could hale been more. But it has been willing ly done, and I am glad to tMni V?8! an Englishman, who loves thUnUel States and its people, is not dehlrwS by a? official position fSm tKX in all your projects for tha 3 development of Jtho naUonal capifal an interest as keen na unv m own citizens could tSany that y0u i-AS2SK.a! what in our regret at leaving m . ington, where you have io" feel so thoroughly at homo0 Ua I join heartily in your wish th wo may be able to visit from ? that time a city where We havo rp(Sf l? such unbounded kindness SS i !TSd friends of whom we , Bhall always tain an affectionate memory "Believe me, with renewed thani to you and our other friends Ve sincerely yours, JAMES BRYCE;' THE NEXT HAGUE CONFERENCE In I1?7,,01 the ereat interest aroused by Mr. Bryan's proposal f0 a world's peace and the drawing near of the next Hague conference? it is well to recall tho fact that the last conference adopted certain recora mendations for the purpose of mak ing provision for the work of the an proaching session. Unless steps are taken speedily to give effect to these recommendations, tho work of tho conference may be so imperilled by reason of unpreparedness that its as sembly may be postponed indefi nitely. The final resolution of thnt .. ference, as set forth in the Blue" Book (miscellaneous 1, 1908) was as follows: "Tho conference recommends to tho powers -the assembly of a third peace conference, which might be held within a period corresponding to that which has elapsed since the preceding conference, at a date to be fixed by common agreement between tho powers, and it calls their atten tion to the necessity of preparing the programme of this third conferenco a sufficient time in advance to insure its deliberations being conducted with the necessary authority and ex pedition. In order to attain this object the conference considers that it would be very desirable that, some two years before the probable date of the meeting, a preparatory com mittee should be charged by the governments with the task of col lecting the various proposals to be submitted to the conference, of as certaining what subjects are ripe for emooaiment in an international regu lation, and of preparing a programmo which the governments should de cide upon in sufficient time to enable it to be carefully examined by the countries Interested. This committee should further bo Intrusted with tho task of proposing a system of organi zation and procedure for tho con ference itself." Wo know from the official report Subscribers' flcfoMising Dept. This department Is for tho benefit o( Commoner subscribers, and a special rate of six cents a word per Insertion tho lowest rate has been made for them. Address all communications to Tho Commoner, Lincoln, Nebraska. AGENTS WANTED Fire extlngulsh- ers. chemical engines, hook ana ladder trucks, flro hose and reels. C. H. Sutphcn. Columbus, Ohio. letter consoles us somo- ALFALiFA, $6; swoot clover, $11; cane, millet, timothy. $1.50; plsV $11; cholera serum, 2 cents. Farms for Balo and rent on crop payments. John Mulhall, Sioux City, la. TEXAS SCHOOL LANDS $1.50 t $5.00 an aero; one-fortieth down, balanco forty years. Information and Texas mop free. Journal Pub. Co, Houston,3 Texas. , SACRIFICING! Seven sections drained, black, Florida, prairie land, $17 per acre, cash. Owner, W. Root, Nevada, Missouri. FOR SALE An Ideal dairy or stock ranch near Nampa, Idaho. 200 acres all in cultivation; well equipped; fine build in grs. For particulars, address, xv. juj. uroen, iiampa, xuune. nnnMA i waahtnAn t n? nrlvntc f home; exclusive: $l'po'r day. Ad dress, 1531 O St, N. W. m i ii ; MEN wantlnif to learn practical auctioneering, address Auctlonew hong, Molfort, Bask, Canada, l ""'fTtftflffl M