The Commoner VOL. 20, NO. I 4 The Commoner ISSUHD MONTHLY Entered nt tho Postofllco at Lincoln, Nebraska, as flocond-olar.a matter. 3 i William .t. btiyan, cziarles w. biiyan, . JOditor and Proprjotor Asnoclato Ed. and Publisher Edit. Jims, and Business Ofllce, Sulto 207 Press Bid jr. OnoYonr..., .fl.00 Three Month 23 SIX Mnntlift BO tiltiRle Copyv .10 In Clubs of Vivo or Samplo Copies Free, moro por year... .75 Foreign Post, 2Bc Extra. Hq HVliHCniVTWTiH can bo sont direct to Tho Com moner. Thoy 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 ofllce money order, express order, or by bank draff. n New York or Chicago. Do hot send individual jhoolcR, stamps, or currency. IlENEWALS Tho dato on your wrapper shows tl o tlmo to which1 your subscription Is paid. Thus January 19 means that payment has boon received to and including tho Issue of January, 1910. OIIANGI3 OF AIlOHESS -Subscribers requesting n chango of address must give old as well aa now address. ADVERTISING Rates will bo furnished upon application. . . . , ' Address nil communications to THE COMMONER, LINCOLN, NED. Tho address Mr. Bryan delivered before tho Nebraska constitutional convention, January 12, will bo published in a later issue. Tho farm pnpors malco noto of tho fact that pure-brbdr hogs arov Belling at a higher price than over. Well, there aro some ill-bred one's down In tho business districts, called profiteers, that aro doing exactly tho same thing. l$ott boing by nature cruel and vindictive, wo nroglad that, wo wpro not present" when Sena tor. Lodgo ,road in tho newspapers tho .other., day that tho allies had invited President Wil son to call tho first mooting of the loaguo of nations. With Mexico, tho yellow peril, tho rods and tho Russian bolshovists to use as scarocrows to make tho American people bolleye that their salvation lies in adopting universal 'military training for their young men, tho militarists of tho country ought to bo happy while tho hap piness Is good. Atittlo whllo ago tho ropubllcan newspapers wore demanding to know what President Wil son meant by an industrial democracy, but if wo aro to judgo from recent editorials therein thoy seem to fool that thoy misread it and that now that the political campaign is opening it must havo boon an industrious'domocracy. Forward-looking democrats with a good rec ord for progrosslvonoss in tho past aro tho kind of mon tho party must put to the front this year in tho state and nation. Tho sudden dis covery on tho part of some eminent and somo not so eminent gentlemen? how popular suffrago and prohibition is with thorn would havo done1 them more good, pplitically speaking, if it fiad boon mado before it got so popular with the people. T - ' I ,, RENEWALS The subscriptions of thoso who bocamo subscribers with tho first issue of Tho Commoner, and have renewed at the close 'of each year, expire with the January (1920) issue. -In order to facilitate tho work of changing and re-entering tho ad drosses upon our subscription books and mailing liBts and obviate tho expense of Bonding, out personal statements an nouncing that renowals are duo, sub scribers aro urgently requested to renew TitU as llttlo delay as possible. Tho work of correcting the Btoncils entails an enormous amount of labor and the 'publisher asks subscribers to assist as much as possible by making their renew als promptly. A Word to the Rich May I spoak a word to thoso of the rich who rogard tho Biblo -as authority? In tho' 12th chapter of Luke, beginning with tho ICth verso, tho Master presents a .thought that deserves consideration at this tlmo. And ho spake a parablo unto, them, say ing, Tho grQund of a certain rich man brought forth plentifully. And he thought within himself, saying, 'What shall I do, because I havo no room whero to bestow my fruits? ' And ho said, This will I do; I will pull down my barns, and build greater; and there will 1 bestow all my fruits and my goods. And I will say to my soul, Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years take thlno ease, eat, drink, and bo merry- But God said unto him, Thou fool, this . night thy soul shall be required of thee; then whose shall thoso things be, which , thou hast provided? So is ho that layoth up treasure for him self, and is not rich toward God. There are many whose ground has brought forth plentifully during tho past generation. Most of tho crop has been gathered without any violations of the divine law of rewards. When God gave us the .world with Its fortile'soil, tho sun with its warmth, tho rains with its mois ture His voice proclaimed as clearly as, if it had Issued from the clouds; Go Work, and in proportion to your industry and intelligence, so shall be your reward. There is no other meas ure of rewards that can be defended before tho bar of judgment, and this law prevails except where force suspends it, or cunning evades it. Tho legitimate wealth of tho country Is accum ulated in accordance with this law and thoso who accumulate legitimately are not afraid to trust their property to tho protection of laws .made by tho people, because thoy know that tho people desiro to do justice and will not in tentionally wrotag any man, no matter how -much ho has, if his accumulation represents equivalent service rendered to society in return. , But, unfortunately, every fortune does not measure equivalent service rendered to society. Some fortunes represent methods which can not be defended in morals and somo aro due to methods which can not bo defended in our courts of law. We aro continually devising laws for tho protection of tho people from fraud and injustice. During the last few years nearly all tho state legislatures have enacted what' aro known as "Blue-sky laws" to protect the un wary from tho frauds that promoters attempt and tho post-office authorities are kept busy trying to keep tho Wils from being employed for the promotion of swindling schemes. But these deal with tho frauds that aro attempted on a small scale; tho larger acts of injustice are perpetrated through law or in spito of law Un just taxation is robbery under the forms of law nlfmbInatIons of faPItal IlaVG on able to prevent the passago of laws needed, and have prevented the enforcement of laws passed. We havo an Anti-Trust law; it was put upon the statute books more than a quarter of a century ago and additional provisions haye from, time to time been added, and yet wo not only have SSnVViaVG open defenders of the prin ciple of private monopoly. Wo havo just emerged from a war thof miio, for-incalculable sacrifices.Morethai se"ol m lliions of human life w,ore offered upon th altar of Mars; hundreds of billions of propert? were burned up and debts, grievous to be bS wo piled high upon backs already bowed unto unue? Sffi' Fi?aUClal SyStems ke down under the strain and each nation engaged in thn war put forth supreme effort. But while tiiis was the common lot and while the misses mi? uncomplainingly tho unprecedented demands giving of their blood and of their means afi reaped a rich harvesfrom the Tat?ons ,X fortunes If wo may judge from the income" tax returns, the nation uever know such a riot of excess profits. Millionaires spramr un in rapidity and numbers never equaled in the n tion's most prosperous days, and now vheS the' war is over and people are trying, to re-adjust themselves to newN conditions, wo find niutor racy more insolent and more' arrogant than S has oyer been beforq, It seizes upon every Pre text to gain a firmer hold upon government it resorts to every form of misreprosentettonto further its ends; and it seeks to condemn aa Un patriotic, every protest against its most excoa. sive demands. at oxces- The number of plutocrats in tho countrv relatively insignifieant-as small as the nunfb of anarchists, but in influence they are nnwr Jul because their interests aro interwoven wkh tho interests of groat financiers, and these control many of the great newspapers of tho laud Al tho public ownership has ago and rcanonq bility on tits side, these' beneficiaries of nrivnn monopoly seek to disgrace public ownership by discriblng it as socialistic. One of the railronrt presidents. Impudently answered the demand for government ownership of railroads by asking whether our nation was to be Russianized 'ihia intolerance is brooding discontent and furnishes material to tho few who preach revolution as i .remedy for plutocracy. It was the plutocrat who led the fight against popular election of senators; it was tho pluto crat who fought to the last against currency re form; it was the plutocrat who tried to prevent the collection of an income tax. The pluto crat has led in profiteering. It is the plutocrat who is today seeking to turn the government over to predatory woalth and whoso scheme em braces a-consolidation of capitalistic interest among the railroads and private monopolies wherever it can bo established. ' It is time that the PATRIOTIC rich should come out from among those who plunder the public and join in the making of laws which will re-establish competition where competition is possible and put the government in charge of all monopolies wherever monopoly is necessary. More than 90 per cent of tho people have no pe cuniary interests in favoritism, private monoply or special privilege in government. If they will only join with the masses, they can right every wrong, they can remove every abuse and re store equality before the law. They can put the people in controi-of the government and the people, in power, will destroy. the breeding places of pjutocracy. There is no real danger of revolution, be cause tho American people aro too intelligent .to permit abuses to develop to the point whero revolution will bo accepted as tho only remedy. But th0.soo.ner remedies are 'applied, the milder will thoso remedies be. The flow of justice can -no more bo damned than a running stream, and, as in the case of a stream, the higher the dam, the greater tho danger below when the obstruc tion is swept away. Let tho patriotism that enabled us to mobil ize our resources for war now mobilize the resources of the nation for peace. Trea son was not permitted when our nation was meeting an enemy upon the battlefields; no moro should the nation tolerate the attacks that aro now being: made upon its strength in time of peacer , Our government is the best government in the world; our people aro the best people in the world; lot the people uso tho government to protect the rights of each and to advance tho welfare of all. The legitimately rich those who earned what they have should ally them selves at- once with thd masses, and tako counsel with them. Our government should be mado so good that every citizen will be. willing to die if necessary to preserve it for his children .and his children's children. . W. J. BRYAN. "DRINKING "Jig; THE AIR" Lieutenant Maynard (speaking generally and 2 with any particular reference to recent flights) thus condemns the use of intoxicants by those who travel in the air. "I said and I still say. that many accidents in aviation aro caused, by overuse of intoxi cants. Aviation, Is a game whero a false move ' means disaster and in any such vocation the participant needs the full uso of-an active brain not deadened atid weakened by the ' effect of liquor. - - "Such an effected brain and the cor responding reaction on tho nervous system add an unnecessary fatal hazard to the al- ready natural and necessary hazard of fly ing itself" - .- It would seem like a self-evident truth, but oven self-evident truths .have no weight with some of the wets. - . Somo mathematically-inclined gent- has it fig ured out that since the automobile has come into general use four thousand persons aro yearly killed In an effort to ascertain whether they can beat tho fast passenger trains over the crossings Yet some people complain be cause the public takes no interest in important railroad questions. ' fc Ft- '1 t'iijkk&tttfbrSjL ? -