RVfff' -fTT- ?. The Commoner 'APJHL, M20 Senator Ol Reply 9 II . j i rs ok Tft r4 ' p v L K!i Tho World-Herald, after two days of reflec tion makes a reply which virtually cofesfes gVery charge made in Mr. Bryan's indictment' of Senator Hitchcock. - First It is silent on tho, charge that in 1912 Senator Hitchcock championed Wall street's can didate for the Democratic nomination for presi dent The senator is not sorry and makes no pretense of change in his sympathies. Second It does not deny that the senator vroto the Republican minority report against the Currency bill and stood with Wall street against the material features of the bill. It simply claims for him that he proposed some amendments and voted for it on its final passage (when he found that he could,, not kill the bill and his vote was not needed for its passage) . Third It claims that prohibition is a DEAD issue and that Mr. Hitchcock's advocacy of wine and beer does not raise "a major issue." He does not deny that the senator tried to prevent prohibition and refused to give expression to the known wjshes of his constituents on the ques tion. It does not give Senator Hitchcock's defini tion of HARMLESS beverages alcoholic con tent is not mentioned or explain why the sena tor dignified the wine and beer issue by making it tho ONLY one mentioned in his telegram to those in charge of his Omaha coming-out ban quet. THE NATION CAN NOT INTRUST THE THE ENFORCEMENT OP PROHIBITION TO ONE WHO DOES NOT BELIEVE IN IT. His nomination would be an insult to the forty-five states that ratified prohibition, and a handicap to the Democratic candidates in the thirty-four states that have adopted prohibition and in the dry districts of the states that have not adopted prohibition by state action. Fourth The World-Herald waves the suf frage question aside as a SETTLED question, but does not explain why the party should of fend all tho women voters of the country by nominating a man who insolently insisted upon putting the most depraved men al)ove women as citizens, and c7;d this after his own state had conferred suffrage by statute and after the leg islature had by unanimous vote requested him to vote for submission of the national amendment. Fifth- It misrepresents Mr. Bryan's position on the treaty. He commended Mr. Hitchcock's fight for ratification without reservations while that seemed possible, but Mr. Bryan insisted on ratification WITH reservations when a ma jority agreed upon reservations and he condemns Senator Hitchcock for opposing majority rule in he Senate and for trying to make the treaty an issue in' the coming campaign. After ignoring the charges against Mr. Hitch cock, the World-Herald attonmts to belittle the differences between Senator Hitchcock and Mr. Bryan. It is sufficient to say in reply that these differences. WHEN MUCH LESS IMPORTANT THAN THEY ARE NOW, were sufficient to make Mr. Hitchcock feel justified in opposing Mr. Bryan as delegate to two national conventions. JF. IN SPITE OP PAST AGREEMENTS. THE DIFFERENCES WERE SUCH AS TO FORFEIT rSLCLA of MR, BRYAN, THRICE A DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT, i?MR HITCHCOCK'S SUPPORT FOR DELE ll E!NlDl2 AND 1916 (AND IN 1920 ALSO). til i fc conaistency can the senator deny that SJf H?.r dlfferences of today are sufficient to Si x,s claim t0 Mr- Bryan's support for a prntial nomination? DPunn?BAL' QUESTION BEFORE THE IT n?RACY 0F NEBRASKA IS WHETHER RAN BEST AID THE CAUSE OF DEMOC Uvl 51 SENDING MR. BRYAN AS A DELE BY ?, THB NATIONAL CONVENTION OR Sfpr?vG SENATOR HITCHCOCK AN fllPTY COMPLIMENT. W. J. BRYAN. The Women in Action Every woman should read the following let ter which is signed by the leading women of tte ItS w dTr 8U BDlenclidTork in . ate w; ? T. U.f tho State Suffrage As sociation, and the Woman's Federation of Clubs. These women know the important issuo in Ne oraska and have suggested the only way that the women dan use the ballot to uphold tho moral standard that they are so vitally interested in. The letter follows: m ., T , Omaha, Nebr., April 10 1920. To the Independent Women Voters of Nebraska: The women of Nebraska are entitled to voto in the coming primary election for their choico of presidential candidates and for dologates to the national convention, also for national com mitteeman. The women have acquired tho bal lot at a most opportune time.. The combined liquor interests of the country are making a most determined and insidious attempt to modi fy, nullify or repeal tho grandest moral and eco nomic reform prohibition. The liquor powCr has undertaken to concen trate its forces in the Democratic primary for tho purpose of electing wet delegates to tho national convention so as to write a wet platform and nominate a wet candidate. They believe that they could carry the solid south and wet east and elect their wet president, and ho would bo expected to use his powerful influence to re store the manufacture and sale of beer and wine with all the debauching, degrading and demoral izing, effect. Women are not Democrats and Republicans because their husbands or fathers are. If they were, equal suffrage would be a farce. Women are yet independent first voters, and as such we lay before you the situation and urge you to ineet your worst enemy liquor on the battlefield selected by the liquor interests the Democratic primary. If the liquor interests can be prevented from capturing the Democratic party in this primary, the liquor business is down and out for all time. If they win in the Democratic primary, they may undo all the good work that tho temperance and moral element of the country has accom plished in the past twenty years. The women have it in their power to deal the liquor interest its death blow. There is no "wet and dry" is sue in the Republican party this year. The wo men have the same privilege as the men; they can register in cities, giving the party affiliation of the party they desire to vote in, in the prim ary, and they have the same privilege as the men of selecting whatever candidates from any of tho party tickets and vote for them in the fall elections. A MISSTATEMENT CORRECTED EWorld-Herald:, toornT30. cn-ect mistatement contained in this port World-Herald. The Omaha News re said twCmyou quote is incorrect in figures. I latifi;:?,1 TWENTY-THREE Democrats favored era , n, twenty-ono voted' for it, and two "emocrnta i:r: U.7""7"""V .'.::. Voted a? i i,1,U8ea ratification, twenty-mree Button lt and onewas paired against, it. l0r of the twenty-four were against ratifi cation on any terms. Senator Hitchcock led on ly nineteen Democrats besides himself. Twenty seven Democrats were against him twenty three favoring ratification with the reservations agreed upon and four opposing any ratification. Senator Hitchcock now wants to run for presi dent with his treaty record as an issue. I am opposed to making the treaty a campaign Issue. It ouKht to be ratified at once with the reserva tion favored by eighteen majority. If democracy means anything, it means the right of a majority X sneak for the people. If domocracy is worth flghftas fw to flSroJe it is worth trying in tho UnABfMpwh"5ltlon issue, Senator Hitch cock "brings it into the campaign in Nebraska V declaring for wine and beer. Ho re-opens a declaring iui .. known sentiment of closed Jlsthelltlon of his party fthetatiol. WILLUM JENNINGS BRYAN. NEBRASKA WOMEN nn nmnloved by the Republican na Tlib men em, Jloyeo 7 o Nfl. tional commit ee to i hem i yory braska into tuXr"sti0n of Mr. Bryan in indignant over m su Bgesua a Uis Linco n a ipee fJfi fwlth they consider what party f t jjbe of more value to the whether or not they can inciuding tb causes closest to , tftei ' on nIbItIon m Holding of the giouna g the Republican In cities of less than ten-thousand population and in the country voting precincts woman tho samo as men do not have to register but can oall for whatever political party ticket they want to. voto. National platforms are writton by tho dele gates to tho convention from tho several states, and the delegates also select tho presidential candidate. Tho Important thing, therofora, Is to elect dry dologates in this state to tho Demo cratic national convention. ' Mr. W. J. Bryan is a candidate for dologato to tho Democratic national convention. Mr. Bryan docllnod to stand as a candidate for presi dent in order to go as a dologato and make tho fight on tho convention floor to prevent tho liquor Interests from capturing tho Democratic party. Tho moral dry forces of tho country, and especially tho women, aro looking to Mr. Bryan to fight their battles for prohibition and sutfrngo. Tho combined wet, antl-siiffrago elomont, under tho leadership of Hitchcock and Mullen, a;o try ing to dofeat Mr. Bryan and tho other dry candi dates for delegates and national committeeman.- Tho names of tho Bryan dclogatoH-at-largo aro W. J. Bryan, Lincoln; Dan V. Stephens, Fremont; Georgo W. Bergo, Llncojn, and J. J, Thomas, Soward. National committeeman, W. H. Thompson. District Delegates for First Dis trict: Charles A. Lord, Joseph H. Miles, Sec cond District: Mrs. E. B. Toul, Llout. Albort 13. May. Third District: Seymour S. Sidner, Mrs, Mario Weokes. Fourth District: Georgo Land gren, V. E. Stahl. Fifth District: Geo. E. Hall, W. M. Somervllle. Sixth District: Frank J. Taylor, Charles W. Coal. You aro entitled to voto for four dolegatos-at-largo, one national committeeman, and for two district delegate from the congressional district in which you live. Independent Women Voters The undorslgnod committee appeal to you to go to tho polls on April 20, call for a Democratic ballot, and put a cross mark opposite the names of each of the names given above as the Bryan candidates and help hold the moral ground that wo have con quered. Yours truly Mrs. Dr. Jennie Callfas, Omaha, Pres. Netf. Women's Dry Foderation; Mrs. Lela Dyar, Boono, Mrs. Mamie Claflin, University Place, Mrs. Edna M. Barkloy, Lincoln, Mrs. W. E. Hardy, Lincoln, Mrs. P. T. McGeer, Falls City, . Mrs. Chas, Roberts, Omaha, Mrs. Frank T. Ransom, Omaha, , Mrs. W. T. Graham, Omaha, Mrs. Geo. W. Covel, Omaha. ning for president on a platform, the chief plank of which is nullification of tho prohibition amendment. Yet the fact remains that if Ne braska women, who desire to preserve prohibi tion from the knifing that Senator Hitchcock and his followers openly pledge themselves, wish to make their votes effective on that issue there is but ono primary in which it can be done, viz., the Democratic primary. VOTE FOR THOMPSON Arthur F. Mullen, at present national com mitteeman from Nebraska, is asking the Demo crats to re-elect him. Mr. Mullen has been na tional committeeman for four years. As a man in active charge of the making of the platform in 1918 and of the campaign that followed, Mr . Mullen was responsible for the fact that Democratic majorities ranging from 7,000 to 55,000 in 191C were changed into Republican majorities ranging as high as 30,000 in 1918, that every Democratic state officer was turned out and six Republican congressmen elected for the first time in years. Mr. Mullen's record on this score certainly does not entitle him to a re-election as titular head of tho Democratic organization in Nebraska. Mr. Bryan is ask ing that the Democrats substitute for national committeeman Hon. W. H. Thompson of Grand Island, and presents him as a real Democrat with real ability for leadership. Mr, Mullen has made the issue very plain. He says that he is against everything that Mr. Bryan ia for. This simplifies things. It avoids any necessity T4 "Si "Jl :-?.. . m w mm m -Al.--:- - .,.. ,W IIW.WWWI ")yfllH'lO-J"