THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL * CAMPAIGN COMMENTS “Many hearts rejoiced when after a great struggle Con- gress finally passed a Child Labor Law in 1916, which was signed promptly by the President, and which, though far from perfect, bid far to relieve many untoward conditions in our in- dustrial life and to release from slavery many boys and girls whose childhood has been murdered through human cupidity : It is, we believe, another five to four Like good Americans, we must yield to the will of the majority and be amenable to the ‘“‘court of last resort.” However, it is justifiable to remember that it is really by the decision of one man that this legislation, which promised so many blessings, has been ruled out.”—Reformed Church Mes- and ignorance. . . decision. senger. What has become. of the government of the people, when it is in the power of one man to annul the will of the people, enacted into law by their representatives? Is it not time for the people to awaken to the idea tha they collectively should be “the court of last resort” rather than that one man should have that power, and by the improper ex- ercise thereof use it to keep in slavery our children and impose his will upon the rest of the people? Are we not, in our sleepy condition, in danger of losing al the liberties for which our forefathers contended in 1776 and Let us again turn to that im-! mortal document, the Declaration of Independence, as our one) T OF pLAl PEOP brated and again declare that “We hold these truths to be self THE Vi EwpOIN laid down their lives to gain? hundred and forty fourth anniversary of Independence is cele evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, de riving their just powers from the consent of the governed.” Let all men and women who have the right to vote recog nize their great responsibility in the coming election and so| form and find out for yourself just what it contains that gives use their ballot that men who will serve them will be placed in|the old party politician the cold shivers, that causes the cold office, men who will enact the will of the people into laws and sweat to come out all over his body for fear the common people not the will of special interests whose main purpose it is to| might make use of the dynamite contained in it and blow up exploit the people and make game out of them. Let us make our will so profoundly felt at the next election al that no judge of the supreme court will have the audacity to| nant note of the Socialist program. annu | a law that has for its object the protection of our chil dren. To protect their bodies from being fed into the indus trial machines of millionaire owners to have their lives ground | animal named “Dry” which they may choose as an unsuspect- into profits for the owner of those machines. Are you not guil ty of a great neglect of duty if you maintain in office those who | litical tricksters will likely succeed in riding him into office. are feeding on your own lives and the lives of your little ones by| They will then proceed to get rid of the intoxicating liquors that maintaining a system of industry which has that result? You would resent with all the manhood that is within you Deeaing ihe people do not have sense enough to do the job th ri 1 b ruel beast the child for|*® . he tearing away from you by ne Da al in Sour be able to think clearly and act for themselves. The political power to prevent it from being devoured by that beast. Cap-|Posses have controlled the affairs of this country for many years italism as it exists is such a beast and is devouring you and your|iD a way to deprive the people from voting on an issue like the whose life you are responsible. child in order to maintain itself. You farmers, you laboring men, you small merchants and business men, you are not the beneficiaries of such a system you are its victims—your trials, your worries, your anxieties mm the effort to maintain yourselves and make the future secure for yourselves and children amounts in many instances to the same thing as a man fighting the air. The individual is help- Jess. He represents the unit of power that in combination with other units of power will become all-powerful in overcoming the beast of Capitalism and freeing himself from its cruel sway. The cruel beast of capitalism has many heads and as many to annul a law passed by a majority vote ei mouths. It also has piercing eyes, and great brain capacity. | their representatives. Dut of its mouths go the sayings which have deceived the com-| mon people of the world and made many of them willing even There have been times when this beast has suffered with indigestion, but its to be devoured by the great mouths of this beast. intelligence overcame the disease for the time being. Its eyes have been used and are being used to spy out every source of knowledge which might awaken the common people 3 Saw It A chaffin’ you, mebby, for romancin round and arouse them to see their plight and have it removed. tries to have them believe all the time that its interest is their interest. Just now there is danger that the beast may die from over exertion in its effort to maintain itself and the common people of the world will then everywhere be free to use their own brains to maintain themselves, rather than that they should be allowed to come to certain stages of life only to be food to nour- ish a great beast. You can overcome this beast in this country by your votes. While fighting for political democracy to obtain the world over, use your political democracy here to secure industrial democ. racy. As long as you allow the industries in which the people Iabor to be owned and controlled by a few industrial lords you are feeding the beast and being starved yourself. When once as a united people you determine to own and control the indus- tries to feed yourselves—and use them to supply your needs rather than pile up profits for others—you can do so, and starve the beast in this country. There is only one political party entirely devoted to the task of getting the earth and its resources back from the profit- eers and restoring it to the whole people who live on it saying to them, “Here is the earth and its resources; it is as free to you as the air you breathe. Take it; till its soil, dig its miner- als, fell its trees, manufacture its raw materials into anything you please. You will have any privilege any one else has. You will not be allowed to appropriate the work of others to your own use without rendering an equivalent. You shall have the fruits of your own labor, and equal rights and opportunities with all others. Your rights stop where another man’s begin. Your government will rest on the consent of all the people— men and women of mature age. This party’s purpose is to make it possible for you to own every thing you need, and se- euring you in such ownershipas long as you live. It proposes that the people shall own collectively or in common everything that they need collectively or in common, such as roads, rivers, schools, factories, ships, railroads, in fact all the tools of pro- duction and distribution that are collectively used, and exercise democratic control over them.” No laboring man, no farmer, no small business man, no small manufacturer, in fact no man who desires to live by his own honest efforts has anything to lose by this program except his worries, his anxieties, in other words, “nothing to lose but his chains.” He has a world to gain. Think over this program, examine it in all its details, think for yourself—talk it over with your neighbor. Then ask your- self whether you like the way things are just now, and whether you think you, would like to have every thing continue as it is now. Then ask yourself whether the Republican party politi- cians told you the truth as to what the Republican party would do if they were in power. Then ask yourself whether the high E For REPRESENTATIVES IN TRE GENERAL ASSEMBLY t | Eber K Cockley and Herman G. Lepleyo REPRESENTING a EVERYWAERE"$ 5 - [Socialist party program. You should be ready to read its plat- the old party machines. Equal rights for all, special privileges to nome, is the domi- The old parties have been -| nearly beside themselves to find some popular sentiment on -| which to ride into office, and it seems they have discovered an -1ing brute, willing to bear their burdens. Some odoriferous po- befuddle men’s minds. They will make all the people sober— After they have this accomplished the people will liquor problem direct. You know they desire to have the hon- or of solving it for the people. It would be an awful thing for the people to find out how to do things for themselves. It :| will indeed be a very excellent thing for this problem to be solved. It will enable many to reason and think who would otherwise be deprived of this privilege by the demon strong drink, and it may be that they will rise to the occasion and do away with all the primary evils which tend to enslave them by voting the Socialist principles into power, taking control of the government politically and industrially, and forever doing away with minority rule, making it impossible for any one man ther of the people or NN me A, Ae mo, mr EUGENE V. DEBS--THE MAN Continued from first page. You’ve seed him, ’fore now, when his liver was sound, And his appetite notched like a saw. With a big posey bunch in yer paw But you ketch him, say, when his health is away, And he’s flat on his back in distress, And then you can tro: out your little bokay And not be insulted, I guess! You see, it’s like this, what his weaknesses is, Them flowers makes him think of the days Of his innocent youth, and that mother o’ his, And the roses she used to raise; So here all alone with the roses you send, Bein’ sick and all trimbly and faint; My eyes is—my eyes is—my eyes is—old friend, Is a—leakin’—I’'m blamed ef they ain’t! PRESS COMMENT University Daily, Ann Arbor, Mich.—Newberry Hall was packed to the doors last night to hear Eugene V. Debs. His brilliant sallies of wit, and his glowing descriptions kept inter- est at a high pitch throughout the entire lecture. Boston Advertiser—Some of Debs’ utterances were of such lofty and ennobling nature that they would not have disgraced a Phillips Brooks. At the end of his lecture many hundred people stopped to shake hands with him. San Francisco Examiner—Eugene V. Debs had tremen- dous audience at Metropolitan Hall last night. He is a terse and nervous speaker, lean in person, with the quick, eager movements of a panther; eager, insistent, earnest, full of mat- ter, gifted with a neat turn of phrase, but never wasting time on ornament. He held his audience for two hours and over. He could have held them for two hours more. An Arbor Evening Times—Through the efforts of the en- terprising students of the University of Michigan Ann A:bor- ites are being afforded the opportunity of hearing three of the five great orators of the world—Bryan, Cochran and Debs—and the greatest of these is Debs. Bryan is battling for the suc- cess of a political party, Cochran is the tool of the money pow- er, while Debs is championing the cause of humanity. Washington Gazette—Honesty and force of character are the chief qualities of Mr. Debs. In him one sees not only the true and consistent friend of the laboring element, but man in his noblest form. Intelligence and sincerity are stamped on his every feature and the traits of a born leader of men are dominant within him. Columbus Evening Press—The greatest audience ever as- sembled in Columbus to listen to an address of a private citizen cost of living came down when the Democrats took control of | met in the new Auditorium to hear from Eugene V. Debs the the government as they said it would. Then ask yourself the question why the Democratic party and Republican party poli- greeted the orator. greatest speech ever delivered in this city. Fully 4,500 persons He announced no topic for the most re- ticians are so much opposed to the Socialist program, and by|markable discourse upon the rights and dignity of labor, and the time you come to think this over your eyes may open so that you can see. ; By this time you should be ready to examine carefully the for equality and justice among men, that has ever been made in this country. His entire speech of two hours was a fervent i appeal for justice and a higher humanity. It combined all the * = WW a TT SW WW rm, cM, WW, Wy, WW, -_ rr oom: 22> 22 FOR GOVERNOR Charles Sehl, of Philadelphia. LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, 5 Dalton T. Clarke, of Washington. 2 SECRETARY OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS, William Adams, of Pittsburgh. REPRESENTATIVES IN CONGRESS AT LARGE, Cora M. Bixler, of Lancaster. John C. Euler, of Erie. Henry W. Schlegel, of Allentown. Harry T. Vaughn, of Wheatland. REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS, 23RD DISTRICT, Louis S. Mellinger, of Dawson. SENATOR IN THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, Andrew Lindstrom, of Holsopple. REPRESENTATIVE IN THE GENERAL AS- " SEMBLY, Eber K. Cockley, of Garrett, Herman G. Lepley, of Meyersdale, R. D. “REPRESENTING THE VIEWPOINT OF , PLAIN PEOPLE EVERYWHERE.” \ ET A ST Ts on: s £5 ES . 2. 2. 7M ~~. Tn -—— nn a a a a a Ss a ae THE SOCIALIST MOVEMENT ARE YOU A MEMBER? President Woodrow Wilson has written in one of his schol- arly works, Division and Reunion, page 13: “There can be a moneyed aristocracy, but there can not be a moneyed democracy.” In the evolution of the American Republic we have reached the stage of “moneyed aristocracy.” The revolution from this moneyed aristocracy, from this industrial despotism, to an in- dustrial democracy MUST COME. And the Socialist Move- ment is the organized effort peacefully and legally to overthrow mocracy. : ¥ If the Socialst Movement does not move forward fast enough to suit you, then get in and help make it move faster in your community. The Monster Capitalism. Rememper that Capitalism grows more and more mon- strous every day. To illustrate, Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Sr., owns more wealth than he could have earned if he had gone to work the morning Jesus Christ was born and had worked every year since, three hundred days in the year, and had received over $1,700.00 PER DAY. His two children will receive, by inheritance, the equivalent of more than 550 TONS OF GOLD —a heavy load for 300 horses. Remember that one-half of one per cent of the total popu- lation of the United States own 65 per cent of all the wealth of the entire nation. At present we of the Socialist Party are doing the very best we can without your encouragement, without your small monthly dues, without your constant co-operation. We need the stimulus, the power and the courage of a large membership, the inspiring, conquering membership of which we should like to have you become a part. It would make us glad indeed TO SEE YOU HELPING in the great struggle for the freedom of yourself, and your chil- dren, and your class. learning of economists, all the sentiments of the poets, all the wisdom of philosophers and all the ethics of moralists and di- vines. The vast audience was enchancted with the magical grace of his speech and the dignity and elevation of his senti- ments. Astonishment and admiration were equally blended in the minds of all. They had listened to one of the greatest dis- courses ever inspired by courage, conviction and humanity in any age of the world. When the history of this generation is written, the palm of praise for his unselfish courage and devo- tion in the cause of a better humanity will be accorded to Eu- gene V. Debs, the inspired evangel of fraternity in religion and economic life. The following telegram, reprinted this week in the Republican, was not considered sufficient reason to deny that paper use of the mails. Mr. Livengood says, “Postmaster Shipley considered this contu- macious message as sufficient ground to deny the B. S. circulation through the U. 8. mails.” Meyersdale, Pa., July 2nd, 1918. W oodrow Wilson, The White House, Washington, D. C. As long as Eugene Debs remains in chains you cannot consistent- ly address your scholarly orations on freedom, liberty and a common brotherhood to labor in Europe or in America. Two thousand readers of the Meyersdale Commercial who believe in justice and fair play will expect as much for Debs. If charity is to begin at home then Debs must be given his freedom and the infamous espionage act drop- ped from the statute books of our country. With Gene Debs under lock and key no comrade can himself feel free. Eber K. Cockley, Business Manager, Commercial Co-operative Council. this industrial-moneyed despotism and secure industrial ‘de- ~ ] Volume XL After a Lapse o Again Takes I papers—Does § Friends — Will of, News and tioh, Poetry an Measure — In] ‘Commercial W After suspending pul «dale Commercial again resuming publication, w dale.. We are simply t: The Commercial was ac property all these year We are encouraged in i: step by reason of the solic many friends of the Comme for years have read its col «cherished it as their favo paper. In resuming publi are assured of the support leading citizens of this sect county, and we shall en make the Commercial suck paper as shall measure up tc pectations. ? It shall be the purpose of to make th Commercial a 1 in the truest:sense of term. employ every means to give ers all the news that is fit t and to bring to them all the ‘tion that it is possible for u shally We shall furnish th with a continued story in weekly installments. We forget the newspaper featu as a cartoon, woman’s colw column, agricultural colu | stories dealing with history graphy. And as time go shall add such features as 1 ‘with the approval of its rea In’ politi mot share. Far be it from ‘mercial to stoop to polit slinging or party or faction ganda. If a principle or me is involved, this paper sha commending the good and co the evil. i 1 Upon this basis, we enter new career and invite the suj ¥ patronage of the public. W vite you to use these column ‘Any news that is fit for publ ‘welcome. People come and ‘there are visitors at your kh you visit at another’s; a birt ‘been celebrated; perhaps yo hale and hearty at 80; y« some interesting circumstanc ‘past; a thousand and one thi come into your life that are est to your friends—if you v in such news, we shall be gla ‘it publicity through these ec Weekly Health | “It is generally conceded / -this time of the year ithe ph; sistance of the average p likely to be lower than du ‘Open-air’ months. This re cause the usual winter habit individual do not include out-door life,” said Dr. The Appel, Secretary of Health, “The natural tendency on of the average individual is the heater, indulge almost ex in in-door recreation and rec side exercise to a minimum habits invite germs to do the “Phere iis .much more to . during the rigorous weath just keeping warm. | Many low (that unnatural practice jeopardize their health and tims to disease. In additic more deprive themselves sense - of ‘splendid wellbein; winter so excellently affords. ‘and yearning for spri should daily make a real f he cold northern blasts and crisp atmosphere are literal with pep but they will not ¢ one’s house and extend their tages at the fireside. One to meet them. “Jf everyone enjoying re ; the keen zest of high th would be realized b ands who now are satis hearted existence and aplaint against freezing 'h refore, make real frie _ for your safety and