"fffir wv r- -rr-nnr" I ; 3 AUGUST 12, 1910 - pressing an opinion on the subject. I refused to let anybody know whero I stood or what I thought, and yot, the question was so much an issue then that the brewers of Omaha had sent a republican lobbyist down to Lincoln to tell democrats how to vote in the legislature on this subject. If it was not an issue then, why had the liquor interests gone from place to place and pledged men to vote against county option? They had made it an issue before I knew any thing about it or expressed an opinion. Not only that, but Douglas county declared against county option last summer before I had ex pressed an opinion on the subject. Do not ac cuse me of bringing this question into politics; I met an issue after it had been introduced, and if I have any apologies to offer, I shall not offer them to the liquor interests for speaking now; I shall offer them to the fathers and moth ers of this state for not speaking sooner. If I am to blame at all, it is for keeping silent when they had more reason to ask me to speak, than the brewers have to expect me to keep silent at this time. But even after I had expressed an opinion on this subject, I did not at once decide to make an active fight. I dreaded, as I have never dreaded anything before, entering" a dis cussion where I might find myself out of har mony with these men whom I have loved and with whom I have worked all these years. Not until I came home from a' trip to South America, arriving here in April, did I decide what I would do. When I reached homo I learned what was being done; I found that the liquor interests of the nation had entered Nebraska politics, and that the liquor interests of the nation were joined with the brewers of Omaha, for I received the information from one who talked with both. They were banded together to select the senators in this state that they might block legislation that was unfavorable to them. I satisfied myself that the other spe cial interests were allied with the brewery in terests, and that they were about to burglarizo the state of Nebraska and that they Intended to use the democratic party as the tool with which to break into the state house, What could I do, but give the alarm? I acted as I would if I saw a man attempting to burglarize the house of a neighbor. You may not believe me, or if you do, you may be indifferent, but I shall warn you that the conspiracy is going on. But, they ask, why not be content with a declaration in favor of the initiative and refer endum? I tried my best to get the initiative and referendum in the last legislature; I not only made a speech before the senate and house but I .went personally and solicited men whom I knew to vote for it. They told me that the liquor Interests were against it; they gave as their reason for voting against it that their people were afraid that if we secured the initia tive and referendum county option would be submitted and that' they opposed the initiative as a' means of defeating county option. I warned them that the liquor interests had enough to do to take care of the saloon busi ness, that it was not their duty to legislate or to run the state of Nebraska. I reminded them that the initiative and referendum did not deal with this one question alone, but with all ques tions; that it was first embodied in our plat form fourteen years ago when the liquor ques tion was not before this state. But they would not listen to argument and they defeated the initiative and referendum. We had the governor on our side, we have an overwhelming majority of the democrats, on our side in the house, and a majority of the democrats, in the senate, but there were nine' democrats in the senate who would, not jpin with the rest, and they are to blame for the fact that we have not the in itiative and referendum as our paramount state issue this year. I want you to know upon whom to place the blame. I abject to having democrats lay it at my door when I endeavored to give you a means of submitting this question that would have avoided the necessity of bring ing it up at this time, but the legislature ad journed and nothing was done. The democratic party was denied the splendid advantage we would have derived from submitting the initia tive and referendum to the people. Our party was denied the advantage of that issue in this campaign. Democrats, do you feel no resent ment towards the liquor interests that for mon ey only were willing to prevent our patty from going before the people of this state with asprop osition so in harmony with popular government? I was not willing to stop there; when I found it was necessary to make a fight in this state, I decided to try once more, and so I wrote the members of the legislature and asked them if The Commoner. they would agree to voto for the initiative and referendum at a special session. I had no au thority, and republicans said I was tryiug to help the democratic party out of tho hole; that I was trying to got rid of an Issue that was embarrassing, trying to fight the campaign on national issues, and why not? Wo have a sen ator to elect, why not elect him on national issues? Wo havo six congressmen to elect, why not olect them on national Issues? I made ono more effort to get county option out of tho way, and I camo so near nineteen senators pledged that if one of these. senators who re fused to vote aye, had joined tho nineteen wo would have had tho necessary twenty in tho senate. Who has tried to save tho paTty from this issue? I made this fight to get a special session, and had I had the support that I had a right to expect from the leaders, wo would havo had the special session and would bo out fighting for tho initiative and referendum, and county option would not havo troubled us in this convention. Do not blame me, blame tho men who after tho democratic stato convention of 1909 had declared for the initiative and ref erendum still refuse to promise to voto for it. And why? Because of tho opposition of- liquor interests in their districts. And these men aro here today, nearly every ono of them delegates to this convention and coming from counties which with ono exception, did not indorse tho Initiative and referendum. You ask mo why I do not trust a platform promise in favor of tho Initiative and referendum now? Because I will not trust any man who' is under secret promise to the liquor interests, no matter what ho promises in his platform. It has been said by tho opponents of county option that a county option plank In the state platform will not bind a man in a district that Is opposed to county option. If that bo true, then who says that a plank In favor of tho initiative and referen dum will bind a man In a district where his people aro against it? If these men would not voto for the Initiative and referendum after their party had declared for it last year, what assurance have wo that they will vote for it thfff year? Did not democrats in Colorado re fuse to vote Xor the initiative and referendum although it was in their platform? In Minne sota, also, the democrats dedaTod for It in their platform, but some democrats voted against it in tho legislature. I was not willing to go out and promise tho people that it would be done next year unless this convention would sever the tie that binds it to tho liquor interests. News has come this afternoon that tho repub licans have declared for the initiative and refer endum in their state convention, and that tho populists have also declared for It. Aro you glad? (Cries of yes, yes, no.) Why do you not applaud? You ought to applaud, because that is the only way we havo a chance of getting it. If we had to depend on democrats alone wo would never get It as long as they march behind the brewers. I am glad because I think that with all parties for it, the liquor interests will not be able to get enough legislators to violate their pledges to defeat It. Who made county option the para mount Issue In this state? Do you say I did? You flatter me. I appreciate It, but I can not accept the compliment. Did I make the repub lican party declare for county option at Lin coln? If so, I had, more influence with the republican party than I seem to have with the democratic party. Did I make the populists declare for county option? If so, let me thank the populists . for being nearer to me than tho democrats .are. I did not make the republican party do this; I foresaw that they would do it.. I did not make the populists do it; they did it two years ago, before I expressed an opinion on the subject, Who forced this issue? Your liquor dealers, they made county option para mount. How? By telling us that wo could not have self-government as long as the fear of county option stood in the way, and so the people said: "If we can not govern ourselves until we get It out of the way, then we will act upon it at once so we can proceed with other things." As a result of their stupid opposition the liquor interests will probably havo county option two years sooner than they would have had it if they had not prevented the submis sion of the initiative and referendum. Had we succeeded in submitting the initiative and ref erendum, It could not have been voted upon untl next November, and then county option could not have been submitted under the in itiative and referendum until two years from next November. If the legislature this year gives you statutory county option, a committee ought to bo nppointod to thank tho browors for advancing temporancQ legislation in this stato. These nro tho mon who made it tho paramount issue, and now let us meet tho issuo that thoy have mado paramount. Somotimoa you read In tho papers that thin question Is not ncute. There Is ono peculiarity about it: it is only ncuto on ono side. Tito men opposed to county option can not under stand why anybody wants it, but they can under stand why every person who Is opposed to It should loave tho democratic party If tho party declares for it. Did you over know a question so one-sided? I affirm that county option Is a democratic proposition; I refuse to go to tho brewers to learn either constitutional law or tho principles of tho democratic party. Do you doubt that this stato can voto on tho liquor question, do you doubt that a city can voto on tho liquor question? Of course you do not. Why can not a county, larger than a city, but smaller than a stato, voto on tho liquor ques tion? Is It democratic for a stato to voto on it, and democratic for a town to voto on it, but undemocratic for a county to voto on It? Who will say so? You can not find an argument that can bo mado against county option from a dem ocratic standpoint. Either a mnjoiity of tho county or tho minority will rulo. And who says it Is democratic to hnve a minority dccldo what ought to bo done in a county against tho protest of tho majority? If you desire demo cratic authority consider tho states that havo county option. Texas, that gavo mo my largest majority In three campaigns Texas has It. Is it undemocratic? If so, why did Texas adopt it? Missouri haB It. Is Missouri democracy a kind that ;you can sneer at? It is true thoy exempt towns of a certain size, but remember Missouri has the county unit. Ohio hns It, too, and I remind you that Ohio has largo cities. I do not Want to hurt the pride of Omaha, and yot there are several cities in Ohio as largo aa Omaha. Cincinnati, Cleveland, Toledo, Colum bus, Youngstown, Springfield, not all these ar as large as Omaha, but of considerable size. There aro a great many of these cities and yot thoy havo county option. Tell mo you can not havo county option whore Germans are numer ous? Do they not havo Gormans In Ohio? Is there any stato that has moro Germans? la there any city other than Milwaukee more known as a German city than Cincinnati? And yet they not only have county option, but tho domocratic convention that met the other day did not dare condemn it. It has been adopted in more than half tho counties. I know Ger mans who aro not interested in the saloon ques tion beyond all other questions. Four German ministers worked for the closing of every saloon in the city of Lincoln, and I havo talked with Germans who feel as much Interest In protecting the young men of their neighborhood from theso men traps as any other American. Wc havo " no German saloons in this state or nation. Ask tho Gorman who has come from the fatherland and he will tell you that the German saloon is different from ours thero Is no treating there, and there ought to bo none here. The largest German society in the United States has de clared against treating. We have a statute against It, and yet it is violated in nearly every saloon in this state. Give us the German sa loon and then it will be timo to say that tho Gormans are from tradition opposed to the reg ulation .of. this traffic. County option Is not un democratic; the time has come when you will have to stop saying that it is undemocratic to do anything dlstastful against tho liquor Inter- . csts. A maa can be a democrat in good stand ing without staggering when he walks. The re publicans used to question a man's democracy if he did not drink. A brewer in Chicago called me a degenerate because I am a teetotaller. I contend that I can be a good democrat and yet refuse to put a' glass to my lips or to set an example which might lead my neighbor to ruin. No, you can not say it is undemocratic to favor legislation on this subject. Democratic states have not only adopted county option, but they have adopted state prohibition. It is said that county option is unfair because, if the county goes dry all the saloons are closed up, but if it goes wet you can still have pro hibition in the towns and villages. That argu ment is entirely unsound. Did not this state go wet twenty years ago? And did not this stato, when it went wet, still have prohibition in every town that wanted it? Why did not the liquor interests demand that, because it went wet there should be no prohibition anywhere? If it had gone dry, there would have been no saloons anywhere. We have a situation in this state that is similar to the situation under coun- i. i ii .: ; m iN 4 - ii.WfM 1 I 1?' i 4 'M Mft fti vi ''ufc.-f.iflMf i- A.-