'V- OCTOBER, 1916 il The Commoner The Liquor Issue in ; Nebraska In Nebraska, as elsewhere, party lines disap pear when the liquor question enters the arena of politics. The defender of the saloon knows neither party allegiance nor party loyalty. It is a matter of BUSINESS with him. and he boasts of his political independence. The opponent of the saloon can ;not afford to be less independent. There will be but one im portant task hefore the coming session of the Nebraska legislature, namely, the enactment of laws putting into effect the prohibition amend ment which will be adopted on November 7th. . At the April primary the dry candidates for governor in the two leading parties received twenty-four thousand more votes than. the wet candidates. As only two-thirds of the vote was polled in April -the majority ought to be thirty bx thousand when the full vote is polled in November. It ought to be more than thirty six thousand for three reasons: First, because the wots came nearer polling their full vote at the primaries; second, because the wet voters drew the lino on the liquor question more strict ly than the drys and, third, because the drys have had all the time since April to gain re cruits. ' The liquor interests. have their candidates for the senate and house in every district where they have any chance to win, and their aim is to inaugurate an era of lawlessness the con dition which is sure to follow if the liquor in terests can control either house. Wet demo crats and wet republicans are working side by side in their conspiracy against the home and humanity. DRY DEMOCRATS AND DRY RE PUBLICANS CAN NOT AFFORD TO BE LESS EARNEST IN DEFENSE OF THE HOME AND ALL THAT IS HIGH AND HOLY. THEY SHOULD UNITE AND VOTE FOR THE DRY LEGISLATIVE CANDIDATES WITHOUT RE GARD TO PARTY DIFFERENCES ON OTHER SUBJECTS "The opposition is united; there must he, no" division among the friends' of the amendment. If in any district two drys are running against one wet, one of the drys should withdraw. No man who has the interests of the state at heart will allow his personal ambition to jeopardize the cause, and he should not be permitted to do so even if he attempts it. If the enemies of the saloon are only half as active and zealous as the representatives of the breweries, the distilleries and the saloons, the amendment will be adopted by an overwhelm ing majority, both houses will be controlled by the friends of the amendment and Nebraska will be saloonless forevermore. W. J. BRYAN. Any argument seems to go In a political cam paign. Candidate Hughes declares the demo cratic party is a sectional party because most of the house committee chairmanships are held by southerners. During the republican regime most of the committee chairmanships were held by northerners, thus proving, of course, that the republican is also a sectional party.' When one recallB, however, that the rule of seniority prevails and that the south has been electing the same democrats longer than the north has been doing, the mystery disappears, just as it evapor ates in the case of the republicans when we re call the south doesn't elect republicans to congress. The beef barons have raised th6 price of meat to such altitudes that the average man is lucky if he can indulge more than three times a week. The next thing we know the barons will be pos ing as public benefactors, claiming that we eat too much meat for our own good anyway. AN EXCEPTION When Mr. Bryan urges the election of a dem ocratic senate and house to support the Pres ident's economic program, his language must not be construed as an endorsement .of any rep resentative of Wall street. If the money trust, the shipping trust or any other predatory Inter est must have an agent in the senate or house it is better that he should.be a republican. His sins will then be charged up to the republican Party and he will not hold committee positions that should go to better democrats. - I'TIIE REMORSE OP DEtfVER" From the Denver R,ocky Mountain News. In the campaign againBt prohibition In Kan sas City, Mo., Denver is being held up as tho horrlbltf example." Tho former city is being warned to beware tho fate that has befallen this city since it put the lid on at the first of the year. A pamphlet, entitled "The Remorse of Denver," is being circulated by tho "Breweries and Brewery Agencies of Kansas City." It con tains a list of the saloons that were closed and the rents paid and what had happened to the building up to Juno 1. Naturally a good many of them were for rent and naturally thOBe that were rented did not always bring as much monthly rent as they did for tho other purpose. The appeal is to the cupidity of tho individual property owner. Prohibition, it sets forth, means confiscation to the owner of property as well as to the saloonkeeper. It is claimed -that Denver is losing ?95,000 a month in rents as a result of tho change decreed at the polls two years ago. -Denver is engaged taking up the slack from the first of the year's revolution. It has suc ceeded very much better than the most optim istic predicted. This season has been tho best this city has had in its existence. More people have come this way than in any other summer and they have pro longed their visits in Colorado by an average of thirty days. They came here to enjoy them selves and they did so without the "booze" an cilliary. It is safe to state-that the saloon was not missed by one-quarter of 1 per cent of the visitors, . . . ,... Business done this year by merchants has shown an average increase of 20 per cent over a year ago this from their own books." Manu facturing his Improved and, if it be claimed that this was due to extraneous conditions, it can be stated on the other side that prohibition cer tainly put no obstacle in the way. Returns from retail merchants' credit associa tions and the like all are to the effect that col lections have imprqved very materially, that there are muqh smaller losses and currents debts have been reduced by 50 per cent since prohibi tion went into effect. The people are satisfied to continue as they began the year. They are practical economists. They know that so many millions were spdnt up on liquor every year, that the manufacturer and dealer made exceptionally large profits there from, that the saloonkeeper made money and that, taken altogether, the liquor business had grown into an exceptionally close corporation, the latter owning wherever possible its own sa loon buildings and conducting them on the per centage basis so as to keep all possible profits within the ring. The people know that tho sa loon was not for tho benefit of tho community morally economically or politically arid that it was a1 good thing to get rid of the evil. There is less crime of high and low decree. The'patrolman has grown fat and lazy; the courts can take the half day off to play golf, and in time there will come -to the taxpayer a ma terial reduction in cost of municipal and state upkeep, with the knowledge that a large amount of the money saved in tho saloon bill will go to more profitable enterprises. , There is before the voters at the coming elec tion a proposition to undo by indirection the pro hibition amendment to the constitution. If any one really desires to know officially what Denver and Colorado think about the question of no sa loons in this American city and tho state, all he has to do is to wait and read the election returns. Some folks who pose- as political prophets claim that the major part of the progressive vote will be cast for Hughes. The progressive party platform of four years ago complained that the republican party had failed to. pass prosperity around. Well, the republican party lost its job at the prosperity table and if the democrats' who succeeded to it haven't passed It around to the satisfaction of the progressives they must be very hard to suit. Mr. Hughes is proud to proclaim the fact that when he was a judge he was a 100 per cent judge, and now that he is a candidate he is a 100 rer cent candidate. After reading his speeches, which are devoted largely to destruc tive criticism, no one will find cause to dispute his assertion. Locatedt Last Mr. Hughes has been located nUlast. He statea his position when he rflpiMfTatea tho doctrine of tho administration, as "stated by Dr. Eliot, namely, "No intervention by force of arms to protect on foreign soil American commercial and manufacturing adventurers, who, of their own free will, have invested their money or risked their lives in foreign parts under nlleu jurisdiction." In denouncing this doctrine Mr. Hughes com mits himself to tho opposite doctrlno that Justi fies wars for the extension of trade. As ho took the side of tho railroads against tho patrons when ho vetoed tho two-cent fare bill in Now York; as ho took tho side of tho tax dodgers on the income tax; as ho has taken tho sldo of tho shipping trust against the people and as ho took the side of tho railroad managers against tho ompolyees on tho eight-hour day law, so ho an nounces that he would take the sldo of specu lators in foreign lands as against tho people at' home, oven to tho use of armed force. Well, this ought to give him the votes of the specu lators, but it ought to lose him the votes of those who would have to bear tho burden. W. J. BRYAN. In Nebraska the Prosperity league, which Is the official title of the organization under which the brewers fight, Is spending thousands of dol lars In newspaper advertising trying to show that the states which have, prohibition havo more criminals, more Insane, more pauperism and less prosperity than iirthose where saloons are licensed. The vote on prohibition in No vember will really determine whether Nebraska has as high a percentage of illiteracy as the cen sus reports indicate, for it requires no great amount of learning to know that a business that sells only stuff that Incites" persons to crime, that causes people to lose their minds, their money and their jobs isn't Increasing their pros--perity, their morals or their health. " In an effort td rob tho democratic administra tion of the credit for revising tho banking sys tem so as to make it panic proof, It is now as serted that the banking bill Is but the Aldrich bill slightly modified. If these critics would havo the honesty to say what those slight modi fications are they would be compelled to admit that they meant the Aldrich bill with roverso English on. Much mental anguish is being displayed by certain gentlemen because they have discovered that imports are not much more than under the late high tariff law andtttc" revenue is much less, while at tho same timV?tho cost of living hasn't decreased. ThelrcYrurbation might bo greatly lessened if they Would just recall that they once firmly believed 'the foreigner paid tho duty. PARKS WITH(U'i! COST The securing of parks is one of the scrio'us problems confronting a city, the expense increas ing with the need. This situation can be easily remedied without injustice to anyone. The man who subdivides acre property into city lots usu ally does so at considerable pecuniary advant age, and this advantage is, as a rule, an un earned increment. Ho profits by the growth of the city and gathers to himself a value due to the labor of others. Why not require the dedi cation of a certain percentage of every new ad dition to park purposes? If, for instance, a forty-acre addition containing sixteen blocks was,ff so platted that two blocks would be set aparfiK for park purposes, the people purchasing in the addition would havo a commonplay ground a democratic dooryard andtrieparty platting the land would realize an additional sum for the land around the parks that would almost equal ; their value. But if the parks added nothing to 0 ' the price of the lots adjoining, he could afford to give the two blocks to the public in return for the valuo which the public has added to his property by creating the demand for city lots. This reform is offered for the consideration of v those readers of The Commoner who, as mem bers of state legislatures, may be in a position to embody the idea in legislation. W. J. BRYAN. '4 a 'A d i 4 4 It.!"' 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