.iJU1LA.ll ! JM, K. 7rf The Commoner V0Ii.317, NO. 12 fcftr- ;t W h : Jf u ?yr Bfcr,i The Commoner IStfUICD MONTHLY , Entered at the Poatoflloo at Lincoln, Nebraska, as uocond-class matter. WILX.IAM J. BRYAN, ClIAllLES W. BRYAN, lOuitor and Proprietor ABHoclutc Ed. and Publisher Edit. lima, and Buslncos Office, Sulto 207 Press Bldff. Onf 'cnr 91.00 Three Month 25 RkS- MoHtlin CO Kindle Copy .10 In Clubfi of FIvo or Sample Copies Free. ore, per yiar.. .73 Foreign Post, 2Gc Extra SUnscitll'TIONS can be sent direct to The Com moner. They can also bo sent through newspapers which have advertised a clubbing rate, or through local agents, where such agents have been ap pointed. All remittances should be sent by po&t offlco money order, express order, or by bank draft on Now York or Chicago. Do not send Individual checks, stamps, or currency. HKNI3VAIiS The date on your wrapper shows the time to which your subscription is paid. Thus January 18 moans that payment has been received to and including tho issue of January, 1918. CHANGE OV ADD1113SS Subscribers requesting a chungo of uddressmust give old as well as now address. ADVERTISING Rates will bo furnished upon, application. Address all communications to Till: COMMONER, LINCOLN, NED. (S?0?5 RENEWALS s The subscriptions of those who became subscribers with the first issue of The Commoner, and have renewed at the close of each year, expire with the January (1918) issue. In order to facilitate the work of changing and re-entering the ad dresses upon our subscription books and mailing lists and obviate the expense of sending out personal statements an nouncing that renewals are due, sub scribers are urgently requested to renew with as little delay as possible. The work of correcting the stencils entails an enormous amount of labor and the publisher asks subscribers to assist as much as possible by making their renew als promptly. C After reading what the President had to tell congress we suspect that the kaiser won't even admit that Mr. Wilson is of an agreeable address. With ham at fifty conts a pound and bacon keeping close company, it scarcely needs the government adjuration to go without meat one day a week, for the average family. It isn't the shortage of fuel that is bolherlng coal consumers so much as the shortage in ban accounts left after they have contributed their levy for the benefit of this industry. After raising what it thought was a perfectly good and big corn crop the west discovers that a great deal of tho yield is of the soft variety. In fact it is feared tli. a lot of it won't amount to shucks. A number of internal ditturbances in the United States was reported during the closing days of November, but an investigation discloses that they were confined to those who had visited the old homo for a Thanksgiving dinner. There is one danger confronting Fuel Admin istrator Garfield. It is that he will find out through his present job what a lucrative busi ness coal mining is that he will be disinclined to go back to his old job. Colonel Roosevelt might be able to secure better consideration for his comments upon the war if he could forget, during their composition, that Woodrow Wilson is the man to be credited with the fact that the colonel has been a private citizen for a considerable number of years Now that their newly-found friends of the v bolshevik! are giving the German a look at tho secret treaties of Russia with her allies, the kaiser ought to ho willing to reciprocate and show them tho secret treaties ho has with Aus tria, Bulgaria and Turkey with respect to what they intend to do with Russian possessions. i " i - The United States Brewers1, association, start ed on a campaign to educate the people to the beliof that beer is harmless, overlooked one ex cellent argument. It m ght have pointed to the fact that the greatest gain yet recorded on the western front has been made by tanks. Some confusion of mind seems to exist as to what is meant by the railroad pool that the gov ernment has permitted to be organized. At least some persons have wondered If it was formed by the government wringing some more water out of their securities.. The American people subscribed fifteen million dollars more for the war work of the Y, M. C. A. than the nat'onal organization asked for. The American people are learning to give with a thoroughness and an enthusiasm that is the best indication of whether they are with Woodrow Wilson or not. ' With millions of bushels of potatoes and apples and millions of dozens of eggs in the cold storage warehouses of the country, and prices on these products as high .as they are, it will bo a little difficult to convince the buying public that the man who invented this system was a public benefactor. Apparently the only way to make sure of a dry majority in Oho is to have the vote of Cin c'nnatl taken first or at least counted before the result is known in the remainder of that com monwealth. The political bosses on the river won't know then how many more are needed to beat prohibition. Loyalty is not a matter of location but of the head and. heart. If any of the soldiers in the trenches or elsewhere w.uld talk about striking while the country is facing the danger of war, there would be no dissenting voice to the judg ment of guilty of treason. A strike behind the lines, in the factory or on the railroad, is not so spectacular, but vital injury there is just as pos s'ble. Loyalty demands of workers that they stay on the job and of the rest of us that we see the government does the right thing by them. Less than a decade ago when Mr. Bryan tent atively brought forward the necessity at some tf me in the future of the government taking over the railroads because they were unwilling or unable to fulfill their functions as carriers he was greeted as an impractical vis'onary. For more than six months now the nation has wit nesspd the control of the railroads through a war board appointed by the President, and the prediction is now freely made that through the failure of the railroads to keep enough equip ment on hand for the demands of trade the gov ernment will take them over completely. Patriotism is often a matter of pneketbnok. This fact is proved bv the larere number of Pnes of business in which high nrlces are maintained in spjte of government pcIMr and the fact that war profits arf not comnat'ble with loyaltv to the- government. The automobile men have just entered a vigorous protest because the govern ment, needing alloy strcl for munitions, has in dicated its intention of stopping motor produc tion. Thev say it will injure the'r business. The millions that automobile makers have made in past years do not annarentlv satisfy them even when the nation needs the steel they must use. Large half-page advertisements of the United States Brewers association have made their an pearance recently in a number of newspapers the country over. These plead that beer has been given a bad name through its association, iti sales with whisky, and that as a matter of fact it is true temperance to drink th's bnvor acre. Presumntlvelv th's is a calculated effort to save beer from the destruction thb a nation bent upon prohibition threatens. There are a number of false statements in th's advertise ment but these need not bo noticed. The fact that it has been the brewer who is rPimSnS? for the mutipl'catlon of saloon in this coUnlrv and that it has been tho brewer who hnl sistently meddled In politics where he nldo" inpfnCrnmad0 the peonl determined to SSto condemnation oAho Woman's Suffrage krUin- Ohio It 13 some-consolation to know that the real majority against woman suffrage in Ohio is not ag large as it' appeared to be on tho face of tho returns. The vote cast against prohibition was 523,720, the vote against woman suffrage 564, 972, or only about 41,000 more, although tho majority against woman suffrage was over 140,000 greater than against prohibition. The reason is to be found in the fact that only 420, 166 votes were cast for suffrage while 522,950-1 or over 100,000 more were cast for prohibi tion. The suffrage issue was submitted juBt before the election, too late to( bring the matter to the attention of all the voters. Then, too, there was some confusion as to liow to vote for suffrage. Some voted "no" thinking that they were voting against a referendum on the law giving suffrage to women. When all the facts are known the result is not so discouraging to the friendr of suffrage but, making all allowances, it is hard to understand how any one at this late date can oppose the ex tension of suffrage to womar on equal terms with man. This reform is needed to insure na tional prohibition in this country, and when the war is, over suffrage will be needed throughout the world to prevent future wars. W. J. BRYAN. , FORESEES PROHIBITION AND WOMAN SUFFRAGE From The Lewiston, Me., Evening Journal. "Is the subject of prohibition too trite?" a representative of the Lewiston Journal asked Hon. William J. Bryan at the DeWitt hotel this noon. A smiie touched for a moment thecorners of the great Commoner's mouth. "The subject of prohbition," he responded, "is never trite. It was never more vital than the present day. It is worth discussing always." He sat upon a wicker divan in a little recep tion room opening from the office a command ing figure, made a bit p'cturesque by the serai military cape that fell below his knees. Even were he not William J. Bryan, one would pick him for 'attontion and admiration in any throng. . n "I see by the morning papers," said he, ' that the judiciary committers in favor of both the suffrage and prohib!tory amendments; and Kltch'n, the democratic houae leader, is quoted as saying that both will be voted upon before Christmas. I believe that both will pass al though the vote will not be the same. The south and west are solidly for prolrbltion; and I th4nk we will have sufficient votes in the Mississippi vajley, and farther east to make the necessary two-thirds. The entire west Is for woman suf frage; and New York having declared itself, it will have a tremendous influence 1n strengthen ing the cause in the north and northeast. There fore, while the support of the two amendments w'll' differ, both will have a'two-thrds vote. I believe both will be ratified; and thus, in the near 'future, we may expect the triumph of the two reforms which, in their far-reaching eff-cts, are the greatest in recent years." It is interesting to note that in the Iowa const'tutional prohibition amendment election the majority for prohibition outs'de of Dubuque county was 5,129 votes. Dubuque county gave a majority of 6,061 against prohibition. Du buque county has been one of the menacing centers of agitation against the prosecut'on of the war, D'sloyalty to the governments in terests seems to run tr-ue. Some one asks if Iowa, having, by a popular vote, rejected constitutional amendment, win now re-enact a liquor l'cense law. It will not. Anyone who examines the returns will discover that- the majorities for tho saloon were rolieu up by a small group of counties where Germans predominate, To repeal statutory prohibition it-will bo necessary . that a majority in eacn house be secured. With the great majority oj. the legislative districts voting dry, it is impos sible to conce've of any such misrepresentatiou of local legislative district sentiment. r ( it iM'.tri.-M,