His Birth , His Credit Boyhood able Career a > nd First In Congress Yea.rs In wlrk Law and In Politics . * . Journalism His Birthplace. Salem. HI. By ROBERTUS LOVE. [ Copj-right. 190S , by Robertus Love. ] E has spoken face to face be yond all question to more hearers thau has any ottter man in the world's history , " says one who traveled with William Jennings Bryan during the presiden tial campaigns of 1SDO and 1000. and there is no doubt as to the truth of the statement The purpose of this article in briefly to sketch the life of Mr. Bryan up to the age of thirty-six , when he wtv. * nominated by the Democratic party fo : the presidency of the United States. It Is a life possible only to American pol itics , and. whether or not Mr. Bryan shall reach the presidency , it is au interesting - teresting chapter in United States po litical history. The town of Salem , 111. , is the birth place of Bryan. Judge Silas L. Bryan , a substantial , intellectual settler from Virginia , was his father. Maria E15a- : j beth Jennings was his mother's maiden name. The child was born March 19. 18GO. Judge Bryan lived on a farm near the edge of town. He had nine children , of whom William Jennings is the fourth. The boy grew up out doors , drinking the daily medicine of sunshine and the open air. His phys ical constitution , a marvel of robust ness and energy , came by Inheritance I the party leaders offered him the nom ination for the lieutenant governorship of Nebraska. He declined' the offer , but made a stumping campaign for the ticket throughout the state. The next year , 1S90 , the young De mocracy thrust upon the young De mosthenes from Illinois the nomination for congressman from the First dis trict J. Sterling Morton , who in his time was father of Arbor day a d a member of President Cleveland's cab inet , had been defeated in the race for congress from that district in 18SS by ' a Republican majority of more than o.OOO votes. Scarcely anybody expected - ! ed young Br3an to win. He was not , so very sanguine himself , but he made an oratorical campaign and defeated i Congressman Conuell by nearly 7,000 votes. In Omaha , where Council lived. Bryan was sneered at as "that Lincoln ! boy. " It was the reaction against the new McKinley tariff that elected Bry an that and the silver tongue of the Lincolnr ad. So at thirty Bryan was chosen to the national house of representatives. He j delivered his first speech in the house 1 the 12th of March , 1S92 , on the subject of free wool. Senator Burrows of Michigan , temporary chairman of this year's Republican national convention , declared that it was the best speech on the tariff he ever had heard. News- WILLIAM J. BRYAN , FROM HIS LATEST PHOTOGRAPH. and was nurtured by wholesomeami healthful environment in boyhotvl Bryan attended the public schools in Salem until he was fifteen , when IK' entered Whipple academy at Jackson ville , 111. Two years later he matricu lated in Illinois college , in the same clt3r , from which institution he was graduated with honors at the age of twenty-one. During his college course his oratorical abilities made him prom inent in middle western collegiate life lie wou the honor of representing his school in the state contest of college orators. He won that contest "and rep resented Illinois In 1SS1 at the inter state oratorical contest , held at Gales- burg. 111. , where he achieved second honors. He was class orator at gradu ation. Jacksonville has a female seminary In that school Miss Mary E. Baird was j a student while'young Bryan was in J Illinois college. She was from Perry. 111. , and was of excellent family and an ambitious student. A bright young man and a bright young woman at tending college in the same town some times emphasize the aphorism that like attracts like. Perhaps th t explains j why Bryan , after attending the Union J Law college in Chicago and reading i law at the same lime in the ofnce of ! Judge Lyuian Truinbull. tha celebrated associate of Abraham Lincoln , returned - j turned to Jack : onville to begin the j practice of hi.piv.'ession. . P.ryan and j Miss Baird were married shortly after j his return. Mrs. Bryan studied law in j order to assist her husband in his proj j fesslonal work. After the Bryans re moved to Lincoln. Neb. , in 18S7 Mrs. Bryan was admitted to the bar. Mr. P.ryan became junior partner in the j " law firm of Taibot & Bryan. He believed - j lieved there was more opportunity for i a rising young lawyer in a new state i rt belief assuredly well grounded in his ! own case. Bryan plunged into politics in the spring of ISf'S. nud that became hs life vocation instead of the law. lie was elected a delegate to the Democratic state convention at Omaha , where he made a "speech strongly advocating free trade : also ! : m : ' < ' a rcputtlou : ns a speaker. lie w ; only twenry- eijht years old , y t the - . t-ry next year apers of all political persuasions call ed it a masterpiece. The chairman of the ways and means committee wa William M. Springer of Illinois. Spring er was so delighted with Bryan's free wool talk that he procured the appoint ment of the young Nebraska n on his committee. Old gray beards have sat in the house for a generation without achieving that coveted honor. Here was a youngster member so honored in his first term. And when Bryan was- returned to congress for a second tcr.u he was continued ou that most impor tant committee. In the interim the Nebraska district- had been reapportioned so that Omaha was eliminated from the First tlistrk- ! The district in its new shape was con ceded to be Republican by about y.HOU Judge Allen. W. Field of Lincoln. on < of the ablest and most popular IJepub licans in the state , was nominated to run against Bryan. lie resigned from the bench , so sanguine of success wa- ; he , but Bryan beat him by 1-10 votes. When President Cleveland called an extra session of congress in the sum mer of 18513 to push through the repeal of the Sherman silver bullion purchas ing act of ISiX ) , the Democratic presi dent of the old school unwittingly gave to the man of destiny In the new school of Democracy au altitudinous stepping stone toward the presidency. Bryan of Nebraska , aged thirty-three , delivered In the house ou the 10th of August a speech against the repeal of the pur chasing clause of the Sherman act. The whole house and most of the sen ate heard It. When Bryan ceased ppdaking he was picked up by enemies and friends alike and borne around the hall on the shoulders of enthusiasts who liked a ripping Tine oration when they heard it regardless as to whether It suited their politics. Nobody dis puted that it was the greatest speech of the extra session. . ' Bryan declined a renominatiou for congress lu 1S04 and became editor of the Omaha World-Herald. He'wanted , ' to go to the "United States senate. The World-Herald business office made a contract run daily on the editorial page two columns .of "stuff , " liaid for by Republicans , which was inimical to Bryan's prospects. Bryan resigned the ,1 editorship after a fierce legal fight ngalnst the advertising contract. He was nominated for the senate by the | unanimous vote of the state conven tion , despite the fact that many of i them disagreed with him ou the silver coinage issue. With John M. Thurs- ton , tbe leading Republican candidate i for the senate , Bryan engaged in two ' joint debates , having challenged Thurs- i ( on. The forensic- duels took place in Lincoln and Omaha. The tariff was ( lie sole topic of discussion. P.ryan I defended the Wilson tariff , which as a member of the ways and means com mittee he had helped to create. At Lincoln the enthusiasm was such that Bryan was carried from the platform outside and down into the street , where howling mobs of "overllow" admirers awaited him. Thurston was elected by LVo , X 3IKS. ILLIAII H. I/EAVTTT. the legislature. Mr. Bryan remained a private -citizen. lie had challenged William McKinley also to a joint de bate on the tariff , but tiie Ohio tariff builder declined. Mr. McXiuley was destined to meet the Nebraskan in a broader contest a little later. In the meantime Mr. Bryan was happy at home with his little family , the helpful wife and three children. The children now are grown up. Ruth is Mrs. William II. Leavitt and has made her father a grandfather. Wil liam junior is eighteen , and Miss Grace is a budding belle of seventeen years. Young Mrs. Loavitt herselfis some thing of a politician. She has been elected a delegate to the Democratic state convention in Colorado , her home being in Denver. Young William is a student in the Nebraska State univer sity at Lincoln. Miss Grace , who in the event of her father's election to the presidency will become "the young lady of the White House , " is at home with her estimable mother on the Bryan farm near Lincoln , known as "Fairview , " where the head of the family some years ago built a hand some residence. Prior to that the fam ily had occupied a modest cottage in Lincoln , where Mr. Bryan returned to his law practice after his unsuccessful campaign for thu senator-ship. When in 1S9G the lie-publican conveu- tiou which nominated McKinley for president met in St. Louis. William J. Bryan held no' office whatever. He still had a connection with the Omaha paper , and he went to St. Louis as a press correspondent. At the Planters hotel the clerk looked over the plainly garbed young man who signed "W. J. Bryan" on the register and made him pay in advance. The clerk put Bryan in a room with seven Kepnbli.-aus. Un der date of June i ; > a correspondent of the New York Tribune sent to his pa per from St. Louis this highly inter esting paragraph : Ex-Conjrro.ssinan William J. Bryan , the loader of the free silver wing of the Ne braska Democracy , was one of yester day's arrivals. The appearance of Mr. Bryan in a hotel corridor in consultation with several Republicans from free silver states of the far west excited much com ment. In response to a question concern ing his mission Mr. Bryan remarked. " 1 have nothing to say now except that these gentlemen and I will be found next November voting the same ticket. " Senator Henry M. Teller of Colorado and others wore the free silver Ke- publican leaders indicated by the Trib une correspondent. It was an. accurate arrss GP.ACE BP.TAX. prediction by Mr. Bryan that they would be voting the same ticket with him in November , for they walked out of the Republican national convention when the gold standard platform was adopted and aligned themselves with the free silver Democracy. But neither the New York corre spondent nor the free silver seceders nor the Nebraska correspondent and free silver loader himself could fore tell that the seceders would vote for William Jennings Bryan : is the presi dential candidate on the ticket which ivas to be nominated at Chicago a few ( reeks later. "Cross of Gold His Renomina- and Crown of nation In 1900. Thorns"--Kow The Dominant a Wonderful Spirit of the Speech Won a Democracy For Presidential Twelve Years. Nomination . ' . Bryan In 1908 Mrs. William J. Bryan. By ROBER.TU5 LOVE. [ Copyright. 1COS. by Robertus I.ove.J 'HEN the Democratic national convention met at Chicago in 1SOG one of the4 delegates from Nebraska was William Jennings Bryan , a young man of thir ty-six , a private citizen of the city of Lincoln. His prior political career comprised two terms in congress , lie had been his party nominee for a Unit ed States senatorship in a Republican legislature. The national Democracy had broken away from Grovcr Cleveland , whom it had elected president twice and who was then in office. The split was on the money question. Cleveland had called a special session of congress to repeal the silver bullion purchasing act. The mass of the party stood for the free cojnago of silver , chiefly at the ratio of 10 to 1. The Cleveland wing stood for the single gold stand- J. BRYAN IN 1SDG. j "You shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns. You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold. " ard. The mighty chasm widened at the convention. Congressman Richard P. Bland of Missouri. "Silver Dick. " the old war horse of the fiee silver coinage movemen , was the logical aiul ; apparently the inevitable candidate for j the presidency. His nomination seemed - j ed to be a certainty until a thing happened - pened hitherto unprecedented in Amer- j lean politics. Bryan of Nebraska , known as "thu silver tongned orator" and "the hey ! orator of the Platte. " mounted the platform - j form and delivered a brief but bold j and masterful speech. II is vibrant j voice rang out over the heads of the 15.000 persons in the vast hall , pene trating with clarion intonation to the farthest corners. The customary "I > - roar of a .great political con vent ion , which the strongest of oratorical lungs , as a -ile. ; cannot que'l entirely , was hushed into unbreathing awe. No such * eloquence ever before had been heard in a national convention. The man and the occasion had met. and the man had mastered the occasion. The ad dress was an impassioned appeal for bimetallism and an exalted glorifica tion of the new Democratic ( jnanciai doctrine. When the orator closet ! with his epoch making metaphor of "the cross of gold and crown of thorns" the cMithusiastic approbation of his sentiments and of the man himself was.indicated by a whirlwind of ap plause beyond description. And William Jennings Bryan was nominated for the presidency of the United States. Flashed to the remotest reaches of the nation , the news was the most son- saliona-1 political titbit that ever toolc the wires. Bryan was but one year above the minimum age required by the constitution of the United States for a president While some of his speeches in congress a few years be fore had given him a momentary repu tation , he was practically unknown to the nation at large , and particularly so to the great eastern section of the country. Never before had a great party nominated for president a man living west of the Mississippi river. Never before had so young a man been nominated. Never before had an orator won the great prize by a single speech. Democrats. Republicans. Pop ulists , everybody wondered how the newcomer would conduct himself iu the campaign. Presently the wonder turned to ama7.er.HMit Young Mr. Bryan was a campaigner there was no doubt as to that He injected into American poli tics a presidential campaign such as the nation never knew before. Men called it a whirlwind campaign , and such It was. The whirlwind road was the railroad , and it carried the candi date up and down and across the land upon au amazing schedule of traveling and talking. Mr. Bryan traveled ip that campaign more than IS.UOu miles and delivered considerably more thai ) 2,000 speeches. lie made forty-nine speeches In one day In New York state. Thirty-five addresses , short and long , were delivered by him oil several days , while it was an ordinary thing for him to address twenty crowds at twenty different towns iu twenty hours. The candidate showed a phy sique and a voice that stood the tre- ( nicndous strain with marvelous endur ance. As the campaign progressed and the fame of P.ryan spread people got to sitting up all night and traveling many miles just to hear the phenome non speak. Bryan's first appearance in the east was on the 12th of August , when he delivered his speech of acceptance of the nomination. Madison Square Gar den was packed with a suffocating mass of men and women , though it was one of the hottest days ever known in New York and a dozen persons had died from sunstroke during' the day. j Bryan read that speech from manu script , a disappointing thing , for it de tracted greatly from his eloquence. But the candidate was Avell aware that great issues hinged upon his utterances j on that important occasion , and he did not care to trust himself to the un curbed enthusiasm of the moment. With Arthur Sewall of Maine , the vice presidential candidate , Bryan went down to defeat at the November elec tion , though he had been nominated also by the Populist party , with Thomas E. Watson , of Georgia as the vice presidential candidate on that ticket. McKinley and llobart went into oillce. and there were those who predicted that Bryan was forever elim inated from the Democracy. JPour years later at the Democratic national convention in Kansas City Mr. Bryan was renominated by accla mation. There was absolutely no other candidate suggested for the nomina tion. For vice president Adlai E. Ste venson of Bloomington. 111. , who had been vice president during Cleveland's second term , was named. The war j with Spain and our consequent acquisi-1 tion of the Philippine Islands had brought new issues into politics , but the silver plank was reinserted into the Democratic platform. Mr. Bryan declining to stand for the nomination without it. It was expressly declared _ j fc _ i - M. . - - - _ _ f _ -ml r- --T Again.thereat cast lag'.ie.i .l candidate tv..i smashed the western aomoiiiac denunciation , thou-.i umj > < lafce Incrcaso ery time there was a In personal respect for Mr. Brynn. lie had proved himself to be by n . means the amir Uistlc rev- the wild visionary , Dlutionist. the dangerous fanatic , which the opposition in his own party had pictured him as betas In JS9C. when lie Democracy split open and the less er section thereof nominated a "gold Democratic" ticket , with General John M. Palmer of Illinois and General Si mon B. P.uckner of Kentucky as the standard bearers , thus contributing to Bryan's defeat In the first campaign. In" the campaign of 1000 the Demo cratic seceders simply voted the McKinley - Kinley and Roosevelt Republican tick- NEW PICTURE OF MR. AND MRS. BRYAN. in the platform , however , that imperial ism was the paramount issue of the campaign. The Democracy opposed the forcible subjugation of the Filipinos and the control of the archipelago in the colonial style of the British empire. Mr. Bryan made another whirlwind campaign , even breaking his own rec ord for traveling and speechmaking. I pk s i ! IAM j. EIYAT , JR. 3e was fortj * years of age and in the iill flush of magnificent manhood. During the four years since 4SOU he lad done much political speaking and vriting.he had lectured many times n other topics , he had traveled abroad ; nd studied other governments and ouditions of people ; also he had be- onie Colonel Bryan , havinrj gone to amp during the Spanish war as cole icl of a Nebraska regiment Sin. BKYAN Ef THE 1900 CAHTAIGJT. et A second time Bryan went down to defeat , but gracefully and with good cheer. lie was at his home In Lincoln on. election day. ate an early dinner , went upstairs at about G o'clock and slept soundly until 11 , when he came down and discovered that he was badly beaten. He smiled to the assembled reporters , returned to his bed and slept soundly until morning. It was' said by those present that he evinced not the slightest sign of disappointment Mr. Bryan did not seek the nomina tion In 1904. He was quite willing for the disaffected wing of the Democracy to name the ticket just to see If that element could do better than the other. He attended the convention In St. Louis as a delegate , made an amazing fight for a platform upon which he and his supporters could stand and won the fight by sheer force of brain and brawn. He arose from his bed on the early morniug of the last day of the convention , though threatened with pneumonia , and just as the dawn was breaking over the city he delivered in that convention to the vast throng which had waited and sweated and fretted all uight long just to hear him a speech which for pathos and power and thrill no inveterate convention fol lower ever heard equaled. The Demo cratic ticket. Judge Alton B. Parker i 1 of New York and ex-Senator Henry G. Davis of West Virginia , was defeated in November inexpressibly worse than was Bryan hi either of his campaigns. The discovery of vast deposits of gold in Alaska and elsewhere since the free silver campaigns has eliminated the money issue from politics. Mr. Bryan has accepted this fact and now stands upon other Democratic Issues. Despite all opposition , he has domi nated the national Democracy for twelve years. For several years past he has given expression to his views in the weekly journal , the Commoner , which he established at Lincoln. He has removed to a fi e farm near Lin coln , built a commodious residence and become known throughout the world as the "great American commoner. " titular successor to Henry Clay. He has traveled around the world and written his impressions for a syndicate i f American newspapers. He has been for years the most popular and highest paid lecturer on the American lyceum and Chautauqua circuits. U Is said that his income from lecturing alone is as much as $30,000 a year , the presi dent's salary. Mr. Bryan is a total abstainer from alcohol and tobacco. He is a member of the Presbyterian church and never works on Sunday , save to deliver i\ re ligious address now and then. Hla * ideal is morality , personal , political and civic. The Bryan of 1QOS looks older than the Bryan of 1890 , but he lane no less vigorous and virile than ho was when his voice flashed across the con tinent from the Chicago convention hall.