n1 'Eyfy t " The Commoner. n VOLUME 8, NUMBER. 52 -- awtlS -nr ,nm - CURB8NT TOPICS ""tlr, fyn 0isX T .-s"-.. 7 ..i:rliliiQ; r 1 1 , 1 1 J i II HM J.il i ! r' iQ-yt jmj p- WILL M. MAUPIN, who lias been actively connoctod with The Commoner since it wus first established, has been appointed by Gov ernor Shallenberger to be labor commissioner for the state of Nebraska. Mr. Maupin has for years been a faithful champion of democratic principles and ho has been an ardent worker for the causo of organizod labor. His appoint ment by Governor Shallonberger was a recog nition of organized labor, although Mr. Maupin was cordially supported by democratic news paper editors generally and by many men promi nent as workers in the democratic ranks. Com moner readers who havo como to know Mr. Maupin well through his charming verse and bright story, will be glad to know of his good fortune and they will bo glad to know, too, that they will not bo denied tho pleasure of reading "Whether Common or Not." Mr. Maupin will continue to contribute to The Commoner that intorosting department. JOSEPH TELLER, nr New York working man, makes contribution to prosperity literature in a letter addressed to tho New York World. The letter follows: "Christmas was tho first 1 iinefor mo to see a "broad Une. The talk of. 'pe'aco btf'oarth and good will to men' is pre posterous. ' How can there bo peace and a bread line afthe same time? How can there be peace when thousands of men must humiliate them- selves and stay in line for hoiirs to procure a miserablo lunch? How can there bo peace' vhen you see women with infants in their arms, wait-' irig many hours that they may got some food for themselves and little ones? How can; there be peace when every man in the bread line rep resents a broken home, an aching heart, the Jonging of children for their fathers and innu merable weeping mothers of these men in line? No peace will reign on earth until poverty is abolished and every man celebrates Christmas and other "holidays at his own table, ,pur-( rounded, by his 'beloved ones, and riot In the bread line." A SPECIAL dispatch from Rome printed in tho New York Herald says: "Archbishop : Ireland and Bishop Scannell; of Omaha, have"; been received in private audience by the holy father, to whom they gave an account of ttfe state of their dioceses, at the same time present ing their congratulations and those ' of their diocesans on the occasion of the pope's jubilee. They will remain in Rome at least until the end of January. The Herald correspondent is in a position to say that never before were the chances of Archbishop Ireland's becoming the pocond Amorlcan cardinal so strong as they are today. The president-elect is a warm "personal friend of tho archbishop, and this fact is1 now urged by tho admirers of Mgr. Ireland as an additional reason for giving him a seat in the senate of the church, and if the president-elect will express a desire to havo this honor be- stowed on the archbishop of St. Paul the ap pointment is as good as certain." FAR-REACHING effects of Italy's great earthquake are indicated by a writer in the New York World, who says: "It will be years before tho Italian coast recovers from Mon day's catastrophe. The rebuilding of San Fran cisco can have no parallel there. In the Amer ican city material destruction was tremendous, but there wan little loss of life. Tho real city 2-Tts men remained, their faith in its future grounded both in sentiment and conviction. But In many an Italian town half tho people are dead, while for tho rest it is a placo of eyil memories and poor prospects. Villages will re cover more Blowly than cities. Messina, and Reggio cfan Jtfl bo "kltled Thair "position in the pajh of commerce requires rebuilding, thona Messina will continue to lose in relative importance to Catoia-lin'd Palermo. Qreat mod ern "ship?, uroro"" often go through the straits vithouL-ftopping for repairs or trans-shipping cargo 'than dd the buffeted little sailing craft ojf-old days; and Messina has behind it no such lmbutary country as the plain of Catania, or tho Jshell of gold' which smiles oh Palermo; but Messina' will bo again Messina. There are villages in the earthquake zone which will hard ly survive. Of many of them, until tho panic, almost all the able-bodied men were In the United States. If these people must build up from the bare earth their ruined fortunes, it is as easy to do so in America as to stay by the haunted sites of their old homes. Relatives in tho new world will hold out help with lavish hands. Nor should Americans of other races bo backward in this. Economic conditions will aid in depopulating the region. For years the condition of Sicily and Calabra has been a prob lem of. statesmanship, California has hurt tho fruit industry, the crude processes of sulphur mining afford only the scantiest wage, and tho barrenness of the grain lands of the Interior is a continuing evil from the time of Cicero. Nothing but money sent from America has made life possible in many families. The brief min istry of Sonnino, Italy's ablest statesman in all but tact, set the railroad problem on the way to solution and planned tax and industrial re lief for the south, but had time to accomplish little. The debate of such proposals as a gov ernment bounty on denatured alcohol distilled from unsold lemons and grapes show how keen' is the crisis, even without earthquake. Unless the living are too few to swell the Hosts, an in crease in Italian Immigration may be expected. If the newcomers are to herd In bur cities, wait ing for the resumption of construction work' at . full tide, much suffering may still await them.'' But there is room for all who may be helped to a foothold upon the land, which none know bet ter how to cultivate." r ;.. ?... o ; J i .m'i ffio LifW t' 'r :('. Hi'.)' .:. :-c -.. ;.; ' F -ROM- MR,,- BRYANS,;( jecen.U address, at..: Uniontown.,- Pa., the Omaha., W$dTHeraid,, prints this .extract: "The great curse of this, . country today is the corporate influence that conn trols the party organization , For. a quarter, of , a century tho great corporate, interests of this country have dominated this land through tho, republican party and In this., last campaign, the . largest single influence against ns wjis the in-, fluencq of -thogreat corporations... I was ,,de-, , foated, gentlemen, but might. haye .won.had,,., I been wllJlngt.Q nur.cha.se a - victory. aBthQ.re-,, publican party purchased a. victory, I wfts . de feated by influences that no republican can re fer to without blushing. A few days after the election Mr. .Brown, an officer of the New York . Central railway have any of you ever heard of him? Mr. Brown, according to a, newspaper, said that he had just sent out 'a hundred tele grams, placing orders for $31,000,000 worth of goods that had been held up and were contin gent on Mr. Taft's election. One man repre senting one company ordering $31,000,000 worth of purchases, contingent upon the election of n republican candidate! Suppose that one man had divided the orders among half a dozen doubtful states, It would amount to $5,000,000 in orders for each doubtful state; and suppose he had divided these orders among a few large factories in each of those close states. Do you not suppose it would exert a tremendous in fluence? These corporations that had these con tingent orders, would they not immediately be come interested in the election and would they not toll employes how to vote? And were not orders placed for the very purpose of 'coercing employes? Would anyone doubt that this tre mendous powor in the hands of one man might turn tho tide in this state? In the state of Mis souri we lost by less than 5,000 votes. Con sider that 2,500 votes turned from one side to the other would be sufficient to turn the elec toral vote in our favor. I had an interview With a" republican there, in which he said that he had heard a speech from Mr. Cannon down hoi$ and tb$t Mr, Cannon had said that if they would show their influence by electing a repub lican congressman from that district, he would get them a tariff on zinc and that, influenced by Mr. Cannon jtatoment, they had helped to carry Missouri For the republican ticket. A -promise, by tho speaker, of a tariff if they would carry the district was so potent that it was sufficient to elect a congressman, and there by turn the state. If that can be done by a speaker's promise, if it may turn the vote of a people in a district, what may be done by men like Mr. Brown, representing great corpora tions, who places $31,000,000 vorth in orders contingent on republican success that ho may coerce men into voting the republican ticket? And, if that can be done by the New York Cen tral, what about the Pennsylvania? What about the Erie? What about the Baltimore & Ohio? What about the Wabash? What about tho Santa Fe and the Rock Island, the Union Pa cific and the Northern Pacific? Why, my, friends, you can take a few of these men arid count them on the fingers of your tvo hands, and if they all act like Mr. Brown they can bring enough influence to bear to coerce and change hundreds of thousands of votes in those close states. I say to you, my friends, in all sincerity, I would rather remain a private citizen than be president and be backed by an influence like that which elected Mr. Taft. I am told that more than one hundred republicans honor us by their presence tonight. I want to say a word to these republicans. I am not soliciting their votes. I can make my living. I can leave my children all I need to leave them. I tell these republicans that I am fighting for their children when I am trying to make this great country a people's government. I ask these republicans whether they dare stand before their God and boast of their part in the victory that throws the greater part of the wealth to 'one person and places the fetters, more and inore on the struggling masses of this country? Do they think they have reason to be proud of their party? I am proud of mine. I have made my fight and I am not ashamed of it. I would not today trade places with Mr. Roosevelt. In'ttie thick of that fight he dragged down the high position of president and made It a football Of American politics. I would not trade positions with Mr. Taft. I would rather-be a private citizen-with a record of having fought for what I fought 'for than be president and be tied as he is-tied to these interests which, -gaveim his election." - " " REFERRING TO1' the-; proposition that fth' president's salary be increased to $10'0'00 S. S. W. Hammers of Gettysburg, Periri-1 sylvania, writes to the Philadelphia North American to say: "We recently noticed in your paper that the president's salary was to be raised to tho enormous sum of $100,000 an nually. This we call outrageous. It costs the people of this country over a million dollars to elect their president. The salaries of all public officials of this government should today be re duced at least one-half. We have hundreds of hard-working men in Adams county today 'who are working in the lumber mills who are get ting $1 a" day, and must pay 50 .cents a day for boarding, leaving them 50 cents per day to support large families. At the same time the trusts are making millions upon the necessaries of life. The poor, hard-working men must help keep these sap suckers. It is true we have labor unions, but we see the members of these unions on every street corner. We ask them why they are not employed. Their answer is, shop shut up, no work. They can make their prices, but not the work. Speaking of the laboring class, we must deduct about half their time for. bad weather. The state is full of hard-working men who make about $75 yearly, and keep large families, and orir president can not live on $4,000 and over monthly. Now talk of giving him over $8,p00 monthly. Outrageous!" A PECULIAR Christmas story is given to tho New York World by its St. Louis corre spondent in this way: "A Christmas tree, orna mented as for children's festival, stands on the grave of Mrs. Martha Adeline Rolling in Concordia Lutheran Cemetery. Over the tree and covering the entire burial plot is a canopy of holly and evergreen supportod-by frame work like that of a tent. On the tree are thirty-three electric lights green, red, amber and white the number equalling the years of Mrs. Rolling's life. The headstone bears twelve lamps, corre sponding to the number of years of her married life. On the grave in green and red letters," T ' snf i.k k W NA-ju