rwf The Commoner IiKag i i r i 5 The Commoner ISSUED MONTHLY KIntoreil attlio PoBtofflco,at Lincoln, Ncbraslcu, riH aouojul-clans inn t tor. WILLIAM J. BRYAN. CHARLES W. BRYAN, Editor and Proprietor Associate Ed. and PubllHnor Kiflt. nms. nnd BimlnesS Omco, Sultd 207 Prosa Bld. One Year ?i.Ot Six Month SO In Clubs of FIvo or inoro por your.., Three MontliN. ..... .2S Single Copy .10 Sample Copies Free. Foreign Post, 2Cc Extra. SUBSCRIPTION'S can bo Bpnt direct to Tho Com moner. They can also bo sent through newspapers which havo advertised a clubbing rate, or through local agonts. where such agents havo been ap pointed. All remittances should bo sent by post olllce money order, oxpress order, or by bank draft on Now York or Chicago. Do not send Individual cheeks, stamps, or currency. llHNKWAl.S Tho dato on your wrapper shows tl o timo to which your subscription Is paid. Thus January 19 means that payment lias been received to and including tho ipsuo of January, 1910. CIIANttia OF ADDItKSS Subscribers requesting a change of address must givo old as well as new address. ADVKUTISIxa Rates will bo furnished upon application. AddreBH all communications to TUB COMMONER, LINCOLN, NEIl. That phrnso, "further argument is unneces sary" waB never coinod by a member of the United States senate. Some of tho republicans soem to think that a reservation in the hand is worth -two resolu tions in tho bush. Tho merchants can go into court and collect a debt from the citizen. Why not a local trade commission before which the citizen can Call the morchant on the charge of profiteering? The darkest blot on the war was that while our, soldiers were, bleeding on- the -battlefields1 - abroad their parents were boing bled by the1 profiteers at home, and the bleeding at home increases cftor the bleeding in Europe stops. Tho objection is raised by those officials who lmvo no particular desire to get aftcr-the money grabbing business men that it is impossible to define, to tell what a profiteer is. Wo suggest that the job be turned over to any workingman with a good, vigorous command of language. Ml I I .. Ml I I H We saw somewhere not long ago tho state ment that there is one spot in tho ocean where tho water has a depth of over seven miles. Our guess, however, is that it will take a longer pole than that to measure the deep wator that cer tain republican senators have got their party into over the League of nations. A fifty thousand dollar farm has been voted by tho. state of Tennessee to Sergeant York, who hold tho hero record of the war. That's mpre substantial as a reward than offering him a republican nomination for congress in that state and oven if he did get a public office ho would got more out of the farm than the office. Mr. -Bryan was criticised because he- advocated tho acceptance by the senate of the treaty with Spain in 189 8 notwithstanding the fact that it committed the nation to a colonial policy en tirely, out of harmony with her genesis and her professions, but he successfully defended him self on tho ground that the "first duty was to soouro peace, and policies could afterwards be determined by tho people themselves. The same logic applies to tho present situation. INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUM The world is chaotic just now, but it will set tlo down in a' little while with tho people in more complete control of the government of the world than Qver before. Democracy is spread IncJ This country is now ready for the initiative and referendum, the last step necessary to in sure the rule of the people. ,. UNITED STATES STANDS ALONE v The lonesomeness of our nation becomes mo and more apparent as the secrets of the Parte conference are revealed. No alliances please The Mistakes of Watterson jVlr. Wattson dr Henry Watterson as he Is gonerally known is writing a series of articles which purport to be history as ho views it. The seventeenth article of tho series contains the following misrepresentation: "Through Mr. Cleveland tho party of Jeffer son, Jackson and Tilden was converted from a democratic into a populist, falling into the arma of Mr. Bryan, whose domination proved as bale ful in one way as Mr. Cleveland's had been in another, the Unal result shipwreck, with tho extinguishment of all but tho label. "Mr. Bryan was a young man of notable gifts of speech and boundless self-assertion. When he found himself well in the saddle he began to rule despotically and to rido furiously. A party leader more short-sighted could hardly be imagined. None of his judgments came true. As a .consequence the republicans for a long time had everything their own way, and save for the Taft-Rooseyelt quarrel might have held their power indefinitely. All histcry tells us that the personal equation must be reckoned with in public life, Assuredly it cuts no mean figure in human affairs. And, when politicians fall out well the other side comes in." Mr. Watterson's assertion that the democratic party was converted into a populist party illus trates the loss of vision one suffers when he looks at a question through himself. Because Mr. Watterson left the democratic party in 1896 (following the leadership of President Cleve land) he endeavors to put the blame on the democratic party instead of accepting it him self. He joined with the gold democrats in an effort to foi'm a separate party and only after a ludicrous failure returned to the democratic party, but -he has never quite forgiven us for refusing to follow him into, the wilderness What ho called "shipwrecked"' was really the rescue . of ,the party from the forces .that threatened to annihilate it. .In 189 G the democratic party, polled a million more votes than it ever polled before, and it did this in spite of the desertion of Mr. Watterson, President Cleveland and his cabinet, and all of the democratic office holders whom- tho President could influence, and in spite of the opposition of all of the railroad mag nates, .all tho trust magnates, all of the Wall street financiers and all of the big newspapers that Wall street could control. The democratic party polled more Votes in 1896 than it ever polled afterwards, until 1916. Mr. Bryan's vote in 1900 and in 1908 was a little below the vote' in 1896. Even President Wilson's vote in 1912 did not quite reach the democratic vote in 1896 1900 and 1908, while Mr. Parker's vote In 1904 fell a million and a quarter below the demo cratic vote in 1900 and 1908, in spite of the fact that Mr. Parker had the benefit of Mr' Watterson's enthusiastic support The charge that Mr. Bryan "began to rule despotically and to ride furiously" is fully an swered by the fact that he had the democratic party with him all the time, except foi -the few months covered by the Parker campaign Then under. leadership of Wall street, the demo cratic organization tried the fatal experiment of following the guide of such discredited leaders S r' rs0n- Durine tlle time referred to by Mr Watterson,. the democratic party con tinued its fight for democratic principles and laid the foundation for the great economio nd VaiT "A00 place tween 1912 anume Mr Watterson says, "A p.rty . leader more shortsighted could hardly be imagined Noe of his judgments came true." This charge is suffi ciently answered by the fact that Mr. Bryan has been actively connected with every reform tha? has been accomplished, while Mr. Watterson las contented himself with snarling when i?n ?? not bite. He has stood by the ZS i ,?id Picturesque epithets, wlZ Se dem SticTr has marched by, too intent on its great wnXI humanity to heed the discordant voTcesr t hll who could find fault, but coi id 1m6' worth considering. Slve no advice During the time when Mr. Watto i, throwing stones and decayed : vogSSSoS Sfb.?Sn passing throng, the democratic paHv las SS in securing a change in the eleotnn L ?t ,!e States senators, m that thov Tvi 5 f U,ulted directly by the people an ZoZl ?W cllosen ment that P-m&tlT'SS the burdens of government. Q --". which even a war coujd not ahnir y ?ni legislation, the 'abolition of govern a?U'trt junction, the promise of ultimate f??nt by ,n 0 to' the 'Filipinos and an eighSr dP? leading in these reforms, and Mr a "" heartily supported all of them th"?ryan has party has aided in the submi'ss on i?m suffrage, and in the submission and ?Lm of prohibition a majority of th?lWt,flcatt the senate and house voting for Mr?1' has supported- suffrage and prohil iw r,m Mr. Watterson ha been hissing m hiIe at tho motheis and wives, wl o Isk for?""?" in the shaping of the enVironmSta ha 25 surround their children and emptying i,bal wrath upon those who stop the maVufac u 8 saS8 and th CrrUPt,0n $? Mr. Watterson charges up the rennhHM . to Mr. Bryan; it would be a reflectioj ul ! intelligence to assume that lie does not kn t hat it was the desertion of the democra ic I X in 1896, by men, who like himself, prefiSdi republican Victory to the triumph of an anil Wall street democratic party, that inaugurated sixteen years of republican rule. He begins ib reckon democratic defeat from 1896, and yet he is old enough to know that the congress elected in 1894 two years before Mr. Bryan's leadership began had a larger republican majority than any subsequent con "gress has had. Democratic defeat began when men like Mr. Watterson joined President Cleve - lan( in tho attempt to carry tho democratic party over to the John Sherman idea of finance Tho fight which began within the democratic ' party after the defeat in 1894, was made neces sary by .the apostacy of democratic leaders, who sought to make the party the subservient tool of Wall -street. The fight was won, and tho party was stronger in 1896 than it was in 1894, but it took time to educate the people. It was, however, time well spent and made possible the reforms that have followed. The fight of 1896, while it did not restorer silver, vindicated the quantity theory of money. Silver's restoration failed only 'because- an unexpected increaso in the gold supply raised prices and gave the world a chjeapor.dpllaivr'v,:.- W. J. BRYAN, , COULDN'T BE WORSE The-rcapitalists profess to be afraid that the federal government would, under 'public owner ship, use. the railroads in politics. No danger from that source. The railroads have been in politics for-, a generation. They have elected governors, legislatures; senators, congressman, and judges, -and they plan to bo in politics next year and in the years to come. The government cannot possibly do worse than the railroad mag nates have. The meropolitan newspapers appear to be holding their own very sturdily. All of them were opposed to wartime prohibition being con tinued, and wartime prohibition was continued by an pvenyhelming vote. THE OFTIMISTSEES THE DOUGHNUT, TUB ' . ' PESSIMIST THE llOLia it- " W i 3fc3 DotMltNS," h: 4 VkgUrf i v mH-J "i&fcrcW