V V The Coniindrier - SI,'.: , ..." - , . y ft:; ZV,WV.Z ., . ' r am ""if r & '6 -'1"' The Common . liSUKO MONTHLY "", Why All This Abuse i of Bryan? Bntred at the Postoflleo at Lincoln, Wobraaka, a 4Msconl-cin.8a matter. WILLIAM 3t BltYAfc, CHARLES W. BRYAN, -Haitor and Proprietor A&eoejato TSd, and Publisher Edit, Rm and Business Offlco, gulte 307 Press Bldgf. -Ow ldir. ,.,,. ,aiae In Clubs t? livo or more per yea.,, .75 Thrift 3Kk..,.' .28 Mingle Ciy ....... 1 Btttnplo Copies Free. Foreign Post 2vc Extra. StT9CRBlTlONS can ho sopt direct xp Tho Com moner. They can also bo sent through newspapers which have advertised a cl-nbblnjr rate, or .hrough local agents, where &uch agrents have been ap pointed, All remittances should bo sent by post office money order, expre&g order, or by bank draft on New York or Chlcngo. JDo not send Individual checks; stamps, or currency... m5NWAlS.Tho date on your wrapper ahow. the time- to which your subscription, is paid Thus January 20 means that pnynu i has been received to and including the issuo of January, 1,920. CHANGE OF ADDRESS Subscribers, 'rcaueatlrig a change of address must give old a? welt as new ti0ri4 ' ADVRTISlK(ftRatos will- bo furnished upon application. Address all communications to ThM COJHMONBIt, lOtNCOLN, NEB. It the mayor ot Chicago is really sincere in his declaration that ho proposes to clean up that city we might suggest that ha enlist, the ser vice of the men who managed the Republican, campaign. Almot any Democrat will be wilting to certify ai to tha thoroughneas ot their methods. . The farmers are a very nreaaoable lot. They re declining, even mader great preseure, to aell their products at ike txed hy the gamblers 'n the hoard of trade im order to give the hanks tram which they have borrowed- money a chance to, loan it to the grain men to gamble in the farmers wheat. The president-elect lets it he known (that he Had no promi80B of offices tb anyone during the campaign, and leaves us to infer that true merit ' will govern all his selections. When he gets hack to Washington, we suspect, he will find n lot of promises made in his name that he will be called upon to redeem. ' , "' m One of the chief officials in charge- of the en forcement ot national prohibition in Nebraska is a Democrat who as a member of the state sen 'ate Va one of a group of senators thai, tried to hamstring the state prohibition amendment. Remember this when you read that it is impos sible to enforce the dry law. We suspect that the chaps who were kept so' busy tor a time explaining that because ot the scarcity of supplies and the overwhelming de mand the prices ot sugar, leather, automobiles and other articles that have lately taken a tre mendous price slump no reduction could be ex pected tor a year in those commodities have gone hack to the other Held of fiction -writing ,. Ml, III' ..I I I A great deal of praise and warm commenda- tion is being heaped during December "Upon the Pilgrim Fathers as a part of the celebration of their landing on Plymouth Rook three hun dred years ago. The heraism with which they sealed their faith has proved a priceless heritage to ithe nation, and it could well ttftord it pay its respect to their memories by observing more of their moralities Instead of talking so much Hh'ont the splendid "characters that resuit from their complete Observance, '''" '" 'iinn t i For the last ten years the politicians of Ne braska have been saying that the people were uick and tired of the direct primary and that the first chance they got they would throw itintp the discard, At the last session of the legisla ture, the politicians screwed up courage enough to amend the law by providing lor the nomina tion of all state officers below governor by a " state convention. A referendum was taken on that part pi the law at the late election. The repeal pf the primary law ws defeated by a vote of nearly four to one. (From the Montgomery, Alabama, Journal.) The truth will. out. It can't be'concealed Why all this sudden hut very general abuse of Win. J. Bryan and the many falsehoods regard ing him, is now made clear. The explanation is foundin three lines ot a letter from one who is in Washington and right on the scene of the pending conflict between the contending forces, "I know the wots and reactionaries are making .a determined fight to get control of the Demo cratic party. We are doing what we can con cerning this, I believe it vill bo checkmated." Here we have the whole story in a nutshell. The wets do not know they "are dead as slavery. Thoyare trying to come again in 1928 and 1924. Having captured the Republican party, the re- ' action enes are now trying to capture the Demo cratic party 3ujjt as they captured It in 1304 at the St, Louis convention when Parker waa nominated at the dictation of Wall street. Jn this gigantic effort of these two groups of - Democrats to capture the party machinery, they will nave "behind them the same groups in the Republican party and all the subsidized press ot the country. In order to accomplish their purpose they must first destroy Wm. J, Bryan and are resort ing to the most despicable methods to this end. They have sent letters abroad to their subsidized "prose to deny publicity to any statement Bryaa may make, He Is not to be heard. The people mast be kept in the dark of the facta. v Only" the, aiftionary and wet side is to Ins glvrin to the .paTwic, To fej the people know the truth would he. fatal J their canaa. ' They piace their pnr "poae, however, ainleter and menacing to tha public, above any consideration of the righta of the people. It ia with them aa with tha late Commodore Yanderbilt, who, when t!d the peo ple Were protesting against the schedule of one of his Tallroads, answered, "D -m the ieople.' That TemaTk made the name of Vanderbilt not famoud but notorious. It expressed the view of the Vanderbilts ot the past, just as it expresses the view of the reacttorfary and wet groups of today. If they should got control of both, parties, the eastern Democrats and Republicans alike would be satisfied. They would be contend. They would' pour their millions in the campaign funds of the one or the other candidate's campaign, the one they deemed most "conservative," a greatly abused word. Their cry for "safety and sanity" in the parties is that ot the guilty conscience crying, "Stop, thief " Yes, Mr. Bryan is trying to save the ship from , the rocks. He is trying to prevent 'its utter w.reck. The sea rolls heavily, the waves tcc1c the. boat, and a brave mariner ia Tfeeded- at the helm": , t Who shall he be? Shalt it he WU Street? Shaft it be a combination ot the two"? , Or shall it be that" group of the party in no way i-esjponsible or. either the platform er the candidate, ot the San Francisco convention, and the tidal, wave that swept the Democrats from placeand power? t, What will the answer ha f. . The future ot thA Democratic party depends . upon the answer. J " ' Overwhelmed, burled beneath an avalanche of , votes in November, 1920, the wet group will , carry disaster to any party or faction with which it Tillies itself in 1922 or 1924. The re actionaries of the Democratic, party ure so in significant in number as compared with the re actionaries of the Republican party, they woUld have as much chance m success in a national election as a snow ball in a red hot furnace! Should not Mr. Bryan have all the moral forces, all the law-abiding and law-enforcing, , adherents, regardless of party, class or section, behind him in this greatest et his many great fights for the people as against the standpatter and the open advocate of anarchy. THE SIN3IiK MORAIi STANDARD ,-' While Mr. Bryan had no idea of urging thV, single moral standard as a political Issue, "his suggestion has given several editor a chance to expose their private views on the subject. The editor of the Philadelphia Record, for instance, under the caption ot "Mr. Bryan Too Ambitious," says: - ' "WWle Mr. Bryan has lately demonstrated that he is rather indifferent to moral issues at- feeling mass relationships, .moral issues affecting tho individual atill atroaglyapkeal'to him. There fore he has aligned himself with the proponents of the 'single standard,' and mountod the plat form ofjlno segregation of sin, up licensing of' vice, the penalties of immorality enforced' im partially against the two sexes.' "We would not be flippant In dealing with so serious a matter, nor question the 'justice of what is known as the 'single standard of moral ity as touching the relations of men and women. But we fear that Mr. Bryan is biting off more than he can Chew. Raising an army of a million men overnight would ba a "trivial achievement incoiapariaon with the proposal that tha penal ties, of immorality 4shallb enforced impartially against the two aexea. Tha Creator has willed otherwise, Mr. Bryaa ia deHng with physical facta. He can change lawa, but he cannot change tho decrees of Nature. We venture to suggest that the Nebraska statesman begin his experiments along tho lines indicated with the lower animals. In the poultry yard, for instance. It is part ot the Divine plan that the hens shall have all the labor of hatch ing and caring ferr the chicks while the roosters loaf around and brag about it. -When Mr. Bryan can secure a more equitable division of labor between the hens and the roosters it will be tinie to attempt to make aver the immutable laws that govern the great mystery in their ap plicatiom to humankind' - ' ' Illuminating, World, which isn't it. And- th StNeW., York constitutionally' 'views with alarm" any anggaatioiL mee hf 'lajUbLBryan, ruahes forward tiaay inaa aitaiat: headed "Bryaa'a Biggest Joh": - ., ' "When William J. Bryan 'decides upon "the next great moral issme' other, uplifters 'may as 'well take a back seat. According. to this apos tle of perfectionism, the One thing necessary to day is tk establishment of a single, standard of morality for men and women. Sin in one sex must carry the same penalties as sin In thetother. If men escape the consequences ot certain mis deeds, so mUBt women. , -" "To write this Teform into the constitution and statutes efthe United States considerable' time and energy will "be needed, so much: that the moral forces now hent uptn restoring the Puritan' Sabbath can hard!y expect to make headway while the high prices of righteousness by act pt congress hold the eenter-of the stage. The Sahbatarian movement,, therefore, is neither expedient nor opportune, hecause Brother , Bryan haaother and of; course, aobef plans.4 "Most men will regard this as a' happy deliverance- for, while th Sunday issue concerns them, deeply, the question of moral standards for. the sexes is one that they are perfectly willing. to leave to the women. Women are voters now, and they Can settle It in, their own way. Prom the "beginning pf fcistory woman's harshest Judge has beens woman. Men forgive or at least tolerate, the .erring sister, hut most women never do, Mr, i Bryan has tackled the biggest job Of his life' . Next! ' ' . :"" -4' OUT AT qCHE XNQtJES'U - The three great Democratic bosses, Murphy, : Taggarfc and Brennan, have returned to the scene ot their (let us say) accident. They are ,out in,. Xrench Xiick Springs, the historic place "whore they chose; Cox as their candidate. The" dis-f patches saythat they are making plans to "cpm back."--N$w York Herald. . MRi i5RYAN?S. SHtENCfE '-" ;Mr. Bryan's silence strike ends tomorrow, and after Tuesday he will feel t reete open his mouth and raise his voice in the way fcetoyed of Ins ad- . mirers. ' ' .. Has Oovprnor Cox heen n3uredt 3robah!y not. Mr, Bryan, could not have stumped for the'San Francisco ticket with aiiy sort of success. He is a sincere, man, and eo accepted by. the country. Hence, after pronouncing against making the league of nations the issue of the campaign, and against making Governor Cox the .candidate, had he toured, the country asking f or, votes for a plalr form and a candidate in which aiid he did not be lieve, he would have .injured iiuself and con ferred no benefit, on hlg party., , It would ,haye been on unprotitaule perormance, ' His enemies Would have sneered and his friends 'sighed.? Washington Star ,'''' j:. iXXStiiW 2A.- .'I -mtiti JSm. -i-wt