'W'f i The Commoner VOL. 15, NO. 10, -.' V 7 VIW! WP;, y B' tt &" L" R,, rt .' & R7' 2"" s - ft- V" : The Commoner ISSUED MONTHLY Entered at tho Fostofllco at Lincoln, Nebraska, as second-class matter. WILLIAM J. BRYAN CHARLES W. BRYAN Editor and Proprietor Associate Ed. and Publisher Edit. Rms. and Business Offlco, Sulto 207 Press Bldff. Oho YcHr 91.00 SLx Month CO In Clubs of FIvo or more, per year. . .75 Three Monthn .... Mi SIhkIc Cony 10 Samp Jo Copies Free. Foreign Post, 25o Extra SUllSCKIi'TIONS can bo sent direct to Tho Com moner. They can also bo sont through newspapers which have advertised a clubbing rate, or through local agents, whoro such agents havo been ap pointed. All remittances should bo sent by post oftlco money order, express order, or by bank draft on Now York or Chicago. Do not send individual checka. stamps, or currency. ItENBWALS Tho dato on your wrapper shows tho time to which your subscription is paid. Thus January 15 means that payment has been received to and including tho issue of January, 1915. CHANGE OF ADDRESS Subscribers requesting A chango of uddress must givo old as well as now address. A DVEims ING- Rates will bo furnished upon application. Address all communications to THE COMMONER, LINCOLN. NED. Query: If a national bank charges a washer woman, twenty-four hundred per cent, what would it charge a man? 13 per cent of the national banks of the nation charging usury. Why did republican comptrollers fail to And this out? Answer: A soft campaign contribution turneth away repub lican wrath. Merely to prove that the world does not move, the New York Sun declares that the direct pri mary is "ineffective, cumbersome, unsatisfactory; expensive and complicated." Similar testimony can be secured from the ex-bosses in every direct primary state. As showing how widespread and how deep is the belief that the next year is going to be a fine year for standpat republicans who want to bo president, here comes the information that the Hon. Charles Warren Fairbanks expects to en ter the national convention with the solid dele gation from Indiana. Tho gentlemen who formerly gave vehement voice to the belief that the way to make wars impossible w.as to make them more frightful through the use of new means of wholesale slaughter have not been heard from since the European holocaust began. The danger that comes ty men who refuse to read any newspaper but a. republican organ is readily apparent when one contemplates tho num ber of republicans who have been misled into be lieving that the party grave is about to be vio lated next year by the voters and who have en tered the lists as candidates. PRESIDENT FOR EQUAL SUFFRAGE The president has given out the following statement in favor of woman's suffrage: "I intend to vote for woman suffrago in New Jersey because I believe that the time has come to extend that privilege and responsibility to the women of the state, but I shall vote, not as tho leader of my party in the nation, but only upon my private conviction as a citizen of New Jersey, called upon by the legislature of the state, to express his conviction at the polls. I think that New Jersey will be greatly benefited by the change. "My position with regard to the way in which this great question should be handled is well known. I believe that it should be settled by the statesand not by the national government, and that in no circumstances should it be made a party question, and my view has grown stronger at every turn of the agitation." This is very gratifying and will help the cause in New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Massachusetts, where the subject will be voted upon this fall. Secretaries McAdoo and Red field, who vote in New York, have declared for suffrage, as have also Secretary Garrison, who votes in New Jersey, and Secretary Wilson who votes in Pennsylvania. So the movement grows next! The Shylock bankers who are charging usuri ous interest are somewhat hampered by the law limiting loans to ninety dr.. s. If they were per mitted to loan for one year they could, by charg ing only one hundred per cent and taking the in terest out in advance, avoid the necessity of giving the borrower any part of tho loan. Over the entrance gates to tho steel mills at Gary, Indiana, are Jarge electric signs reading "Did booze ever do you any good? Did booze ever get you a better job? Did booze ever con tribute anything to the happiness of your fam ily?" Tho great temperance lessons of today are being taught by the great industrial plants in terms of efficiency. In a commercial ago it is a most potent argument to put the question of drink upon an economic basis. Can you imagine an American government bond bearing a 6 per cent interest rate selling at a discount? How would you like to see that quotation in your stock market reports? Yet it is just as inevitable that the value of our gov ernment uonas wm depreciate u we put a strain upon our credit by adding many millions to our annual expenditure for giant military arma ments as that the value of the European govern ment bonds have fallen under the pressure of their vast expenditures. If wo dance tho pay ment oft the piper will be exacted. THE DOLLAR ABOVE THE MAN A correspondent asks: "What effect would follow, as regards a trend towards peace, if property were placed on an equality with life and service? The nations en gaged in this war, except England, conscript ser vices and life. If they should decide to conscript property and refuse to pay the war debts would or would not such a course make peace advo cates of every banker and every holder of secur ities? "What is the ethical argument against plac ing property on a par with human life and hu man service? Is the average service compen sated by the average pay of the soldier?" Yes, it might havo a good effect if man was raised to the level of the dollar, but when that time comes there will be no war. Governments DRAFT men, but NEGOTIATE for dollars; men are secured if necessary by COERCION, loans by CONSENT. The loans are scrupulously re turned with interest, but the men do not always come back. Franklin declared that trade bought with blood was not worth what It cost then why purchase it? Because the influential get tho trade and the obscure furnish, the blood. The spectacle of three great nations like Eng land, France and Russia, after having raised bil lions at home for paying the expenses of the war, coming to the United States and seeking to bor row a billion, ought to be a striking object lesson of the folly of war to the people of the United States, and halt the mad rush of the militarists who would put us on the same costly war footing as those nations. For if we follow in their foot steps in getting ready for war, we follow still further and actually engage in war and then after draining ourselves of our own fluid cap ital, we must hunt elsewhere for more. The fact that it is not to be found elsewhere would snell bankruptcy for us, and defeat. Some of the journalists who are spreading the propaganda for greater preparedness for war in the United States are very frank. Here comes Richard Washburn Child to say: "To your cZ! mon sense is submitted the proposition that pre paredness for war must not be considered as preparedness for fighting, but as preparedness for victory." In other words, we must create and maintain a fighting force that would enable us to defeat any nation or combination of J tions that might attack us. In its essence that is what the program of the militarists in this country is. It Is well to know how wide the chasm is before we try to leap it. The ready-to-fight-the-world groun thnf f tempting to force the United BtSStato the old competition of greater preparedness for war has SoLm Ura?? t0. tel1 coness what iT realty desires this nation to do in the way of increasiJ Z et &onT8 sJEZ r Referendum on War If governments derive their just powers . the consent of the governed, there wTui I IT to be no valid objection to making6 sure 0f sent by submitting important questions for tE decision; and what more important question than Congress, under the constitution, is the omv body that can declare war. The president with the consent of two-thirds of the senate? can 3 gotlate a treaty of peace, but the house of rZ resentativea the body nearest the neonS must be consulted about a declaration of L and about every appropriation necessary to carry on a war. At the time the constitution wa written that was the nearest approach to con suiting the people, but since that dato the ini tiatlve and referendum have been devised to popularize government, and In many of the states the people can not only veto laws passed by the legislature, but can also initiate legisla tion. Why not apply the principle of the ref erendum to tho question of war, and let the peo ple decide at an election whether the matter in dispute justifies a declaration of war? It 'would not be difficult to arrange the neces sary machinery, and as for the cost, it would be inconsiderable compared to the cost of a week of war. France is now spending more than ten millions a day on the war, and Great Britain more than fifteen millions. A referendum gives us the only way of ascertaining with certainty the wishes of the people. The representative does vwhat he THINKS his constituents want done, but tho constituents know better than their representatives what they really want. But just. suggest a referendum on war, and see how the jingoes will fight it, and, by so doing, prove the value of the referendum. It will not only go far toward ensuring peace for this coun try, but it will set an example to other countries where tho people need tho referendum even more than here. W. J. BRYAN. THE GRAND REVIEW The recent G. A R. encampment brought forc ibly to mind the ravages made in the ranks of the old soldiers by the passing of the years. It is related in the press dispatches, that President Wilson, while witnessing the annual review, was moved to tears at the sight of an old soldier on crutches, holding his place in the line of march with difficulty. Commenting on the probability that the old soldiers have made their last an annual march, the Milwaukee Journal pays this fine tribute: "Once again they marched up Pennsylvania avenue. One more time, and this probably the last, they repeat that grand review of fifty years ago when 2GG,00G strong, the Grand Army of the Republic that was to remain one nation marched by in triumph. Now there are only a fraction of those who marched. And they are. not strong, now. There are bent shoulders and many wearied ones fall out of step. "Yet these men march' to remind us, not of their own triumph over their brothers, for since those days they have met again, and some of them have marched side by side in defense of the nation that was saved. But they march to remind us that when the nation called, there was one spirit in her sons. They march to re mind us that home and wife and kindred were left behind and they counted not their own lives dear unto themselves. They march to remind us that a nation that had been thought divided and weak could marshal In that day 1,000,000 seasoned veterans of one mind, beside those who had already made their last great sacrifice, while on the seas the strongest navy the world had ever seen flung out the Stars and Stripes. 'They march to remind us after fifty years that we are a nation, that we are such a nation as the world never knew, that we did not know our own strength until the testing came. "We shall do well to think of them, these vet erans. We shall do well to ponder how we guara the trust they handed on to us. For if tow we have the spirit that drove them forth to dot tie and to die, we need fear nothing. For tney remind us that when need or peril threaten, there has been one mind in the republic. Morevfthan one thousand national banks eraglng over ten per cent possibly these Dan ers are the ones- who insisted so strenuously hayingthe banks select the directors of tne - tral reserve board. 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