-r vviwi; r 'r FT7,rrW?TW,ty'y& "7f $ The Commoner VOL., 22, NO. 6 The Commoner ISSUED MONTIILY Entered at tho Pofitomce at Llndoln, Nebraska, as flccond-claaa matter. ' WILLIAM J. BRYAN, CHARLP3S W. BRYAN, Editor aild Proprietor Asflociato ISd. and PubliMior Edit. Itmn and Business Office, Suite 207 Press Bldg. -T- II- - I II --!! ! - I I I I One Ycnr T. .91.00 Three Month & Six Mouth .00 Single Copy 10 In Clubs of Fivo or Sample copies Free. more per year ... .75 Foreign Post 2Gc Extra SUBSCRIPTIONS can bo sent direct to Tho Com moner. Tlicy can also bo sent through nowspapera "which havo advertised a clubbing rate, or through local agents, whero such agents havo been ap pointed. All remittances should bo sent by post offlco money order, express order, or by bank draft on Now York or Chicago. Do not send Individual checks, stamps, or currency. UJNICWAI.S Tho dato on your wrapper shows tho time to which your subscription Is paid. Thus, January 22 means that payment has been received to and Include tbe Issuo of January, 1922. ADVKillTISINU Rates will bo furnished upon application. CHAN (HO OF ADDRICSS Subscribers requesting a change of address must givo old as well as new address. Address all communications to THE COMMONER, LINCOLN, NED. Speaking of tho efforts of the administration to prevent the price of coal being increased, have you noticed what lias happened to gasoline prices sinco the Senate decided to investigate them? Tho averago law-abiding citizen finds it diffi cult to grow very indignant when he reads in tho newspapers that some rich man's cellar has been robbed of many thousand dollar's worth of liquor. High schools find it comparatively inexpen sive to hold commencements during the year in which the biennial election falls. It is a poor school indeeed that cannot get a senatorial, con gressional or gubernatorial candidate to deliver the annual address free of all expenses. Sometimes events occur that se,em to have di rect connection. Tho report that Henry Ford for president clubs wore being organized in many parts of the country is followed by the an nouncement from "Washington that the house committee has changed its mind and has decided that Ford's Muscle Shoals proposition is the best one after all. This is likely, however, to alien ate the affections of the fertilizer trust from the Republican party. On the eve of his retirement from congress, Uncle Joe Gannon says that ho is not in sym pathy with -those people who are backing move ments to restrict and restrain personal privileges in various directions. While in congress Gannon lived up to this notiou.of the duties of the rep resentative of a people, in spite of' the fact that tho chief function of government always has been to do just that very thing. Uncle Joe may point -with whatever of pride ho possesses to the trusts as monuments of his adheronce to the policy ho enunciates. The metropolitan newspapers say that the pri mary system of making .nominations and the popular election of senators has greatly lowered the level intellectually among members of con gress. What they really mean is that it has con siderably lessened the number of members who take their orders from political machines and the big interests that finance them. Tho quality of a congress is determined by the character of tho legislation it enacts, and since the primary sys tem has been in effect the people secured a great mass of progressive legislation that was never before possible. Western farmers, millors, grain dealers and town merchants have, found a common cause and a common interest in the movement started to increase the wheat yields in the winter wheat belt. They propose to secure intelligent selec tion of seed and develop better harvesting and storing methods, the object being to increase the not return from the high-priced land of this sec tion. The merchants, millers and' grain dealers will find it more profitable in the end to assist in movements that aid agricultural prosneritv than to pursue the old methods of trying to keen the farmer poor by taking too heavy a toil of his produce. Fairview a Hospital The readers of The Commoner may be inter ested 1n the conversion of Fairview, Mr. and Mrs. Bryan's Nebraska homo, into a hospital. The fol lowing address, delivered by Mr. Bryan on May twenty-seventh, to the Methodist Committee and its guests at a luncheon, sets forth the facts: "Mr. Chairman, Members o.f the Committee and Guests: I appreciate the opportunity which you havo given me to formally present to the Methodist Hospital Association a deed to our homo at Fairview. The place is sacred to us and will ever recall delightful memories. "The ground upon which the house stands was selected and purchased in 1893. During the vacation between the adjournment of the first Congress in which I served and the special ses sion of the second Congress, convened in Au gust, I spent the time at home in the study of the money question which was then growing in importance. My exercise was horse-back riding and I found myself unconsciously turning - to ward the top Oif the little knoll upon which the house now stands. It was then in an unfenced field and I was attracted to it by the fact that it gave mo a splendid view of the agricultural lands in that section. "After my visits to the spot had become habitual, Mrs. Bryan and I decided to buy it for the site of the country home which we contem plated building. I went to the county records to find the o.wner and soon became the happy possessor of the title to the five acres. From time to time I added to it as adjacent owners wanted to sell until I owned the forty acres upon which the house stands. Afterwards the farm was enlarged until it covered nearly a quarter of a section. "About fivo years after we purchased the first fivo acres we built a little cottage upon the knoll and set out trees about the place where the farm home was to stand. After that our visits to the 'farm' became more frequent and I often went out there to write, Mrs. Bryan bringing out a lunch for us both at meal time. In the summer of 1901 we arranged for the building of our country home and broke ground for the same on tho first day of October, that being the seven teenth anniversary of our marriage and the fourteenth anniversary of our removal to Lin coln. Tho foundation was laid and the brick barn erected that fall. "On March 19, 1902, we celebrated another anniversary (the forty-second anniversary of my birth) by moving into the barn whore we lived during that summer, supervising the construc tion of the house. We observed two anniver saries again on the first of October following by moving into the house which was then near enough to completion to occupy. "I will digress a moment here to explain that a house of brick and stone had been, in my mind from youth, I having inherited it, as it wore from my father. When he was an orphan boy' working on a farm for money with which to pur sue his studies in college, he chanced to be em ployed by a farmer who lived in a substantial brick house While there my father conS e an. ambition to live in a similar home and this ambition was realized in 1866 when he built a brick house about a mile from Salem, Illinois This was my home from the age of six to the aLe of twenty-three, when I removed from Salem to Jacksonville, in the same state. ' tD "I had now realized my ambition, but I must confess that I was som vhat embarrased by the unexpected cost of the house. When Mrs Brvan and I planned the home we hoped to buHd ittoJ about ten thousand dollars but, as is not unusual with home builders, we made change after change, enlarging one room, adding another im proving finishings, etc., until the estimates ran considerably above that. I remember that about this time a friend told mo of overhearing T publican, riding-on a street car that runs n' the place, say that I was building a 'twentv thm, sand dollar home.' It made me indignantha? a man, merely because ho was politically opposed to me, would so exaggerate the cost of my house It seemed offensive partizanship to say the least But as time went on I began to wish that I could find a Republican who would guarantee thnfX cost would not run OVER twfy thoU8ana I? went higher than that; in fact it Zf , w u fused to examine the totals. I luat Si if checks and put the receipts away I do Sn the today what the place Jh'JStTt was a much more costly home than I ever 0x pocted to live in. .So much for the location imi the building. u "Wo had quite a time selecting a name. A mul titude of suggestions, were considered and turned down. Finally we hit upon 'Fairview' as being expressive and yet modest. I know of no spot from which one can obtain a more beautiful agricultural view. A mountin top gives a wider oxpanse, but from Fairview we could see for sev eral miles and were near enough to enjoy to the full tho colors that come with the seasons. 1 haVe stood on the front' porch and counted twenty-five wheat fields and fifty corn, fields, besides groves and pasture lands. - "I need hardly add that .we expected to make it Our permanent home. Our children were raised there and it 1s hallowed' by the memories of family life. When Mrs. Bryan found that the winters were too severe for her we selected a winter home, first in Texas and then in Miami Florida, expecting to' occupy Fairview during the summer months. "When, later, Mrs. 'Bryan became tho victim of arthritis, which, while causing no organic break-down, brought suffering and impairment of locomotion, it became evident that we could have only ONE home and Miami was chosen as the place where she could be most comfortable. When this change was decided upon we were brought face to. face with a serious problem: What should we do with Fairview? The chil dren were married and settled in other parts of the country. We could not resign ourselves to the thought of turning our home over to private owners, with the-chances and changes that are involved in it; so we decided to devote it to some public purpose. "Just about this time the Methodists were planning for a hospital. While I am a Presbyteri an, I am almost as intimately connected with the Methodists as with my own denomination. At the time of my birth my mother was a Methodist, al though she afterward joined the Baptist church with my father. My wife was raised a Methodist but afterward joined the Presbyterian church with me. While at Fairview we attended tho little Methodistchurch at Normal in order to ho more closely, associated with our neighbors. Our only son, who united with the church while we lived at Fairview, is a member of tho Methodist church. For many years I. have had delightful association with the leadership of the church in Nebraska and elsewhere and appreciate the very large part that this denomination had had in se curing two amendments in which I have been deeply interested, namely, prohibition and wom . an suffrage. I may add, too, that my law part ner's connection with the Methodist church has had no little weight to the attractiveness of the proposition. Talbot is one of the dearest men I have ever known. We became acquainted when at law school together forty years ago. My lo cation in Nebraska, with all that has followed, is due to tho fact that he lived here. For more than four decades our lives have been entwined and the remaining years are enlivened by the hope that we may frequently have opportunity to commune with each other and to review the days that are past. "A Christian school is the only institution that equalled a hospital in attractiveness, and even a school does not appeal to our sympathies so strongly as do the sick. Affliction is tho key that opens our hearts and makes an irresistible call upon our affections. The knowledge that suffer ing will be relieved here long after we are dead will yield more satisfaction than could be de rived from dividends from a similar amount otherwise invested. "To this great branch of the Christian church we gladly entrust this building which has meant so much to us. We are,-blessed with children and grandchildren and havo no reason to doubt that wo shall find a home with them, but if the time ever comes when either of us needs the care that yill be provided here it will be pleasant to know that such a haven of refuge is open to us. At .least, we shall have the pleasure of knowing that the building will shelter many who will find in it Christian benevolence applied. "Our prayer's anI blessings accompany the gift and we thank the members of your Hosptial As sociation for the opportunity you have given us to. give it." . It developed at a New York legislative investi gation of a proposed merger of independent steel plants that Kuhn, Loeb & Co., Wall street brokers, were to get 15 per cent for floating the stock and a present o half a million dollars worth of stock. People who demand to know what is this Wall, street that public defenders criticise are respectfully invited to step up and take a. look. Here it is in concrete form. Si, ,j- ffr, ttj 'jft. ,'.i. j ,fcr '&if ,-'-tt ..