.' !i The Commoner. 7 OCTOBEHt iV? 1911 Chairman and Gentlemen: My feeling at being called upon this occasion is only marred by a feeling which I muBt frankly confess to you, that it would have been the proudest moment of my life, Mr. Record, if I could like you, have opened the meeting which I believed is destined to be historic in the annals of our republic. Some six or eight weeks ago a distinguished senator tried to bo humorous in the senate, an unfortunate combination in the lack of humor in the senator and the lack of sympathy in sur roundings. I enjoy humor but I don't like my contemplation of humor to be disturbed by the creaking of the pump handle when it is wrung out by the force pump process. This senator thought he would be humorous by distinguishing between the progressive and the reactionary and so ho said 'the reactionary is one who when ho stopB can never start again, and that the pro gressive is one who when he gets started can never stop, and tho sage, calm temperament of New England forced a smile, not so much at the humor as from tho sense of obligation to the senator to the portrayal of the setting. "This distinction, however, is correct and it is a great racial significance in the race from which you spring. Long ago in the history of northern Europe there arose that spirit pro jecting itself. You see that race moving west ward overcoming every physical opposition. You see It working along the northern shore. You see it take possession of England and in its more tempestuousness finally- brave the rigors of the Atlantic and found a republic upon this continent. Thank God you and I belong to a race that when it gets started It never knows how to stop. Out of the great problems wrought in the history of tho republic there came a crisis when a party was founded, a party that you and I wore proud of down to a year ago last spring. (Applause.) I am here today to stir up no unnecessary' animosity but I am here today to speak in tones that will not be mis understood or mistaken. During those years from the foundation of our party down to the' spring of 1909, making allowance for those imperfections inherent in human nature, our party in the hands of the 'American people was the great instrument which fairly well solved the problems as they came face to face with the development of 'our republic. But, my friandg, nonparty can'Jive upon the mere story- of its achievements. If there is one fundamental es sential of republicanism it is that spirit of pro--gress in harmony with the best Interests of this republic which It inherited from the story of migration to revolution, war to sacrifice, that finally found its fruition in the establishment of this republic. "During those years we met some of the gravest problems of history and it Is a proud thing for every republican to cherish that dur ing fifty years of the most momentous hiBtory In all the annals of the world save that period which covers - the advent of Christianity, his party was the instrument used to solve these problems. "We stand today at the threshold of a new and distinct movement involving no principle that has not been either outwardly or inwardly fundamentally republican. "Your chairman has spoken of that more acute stage of tho question which presents Itself today. It is the same story, the same Question. Abraham Lincoln in 1861 amid the dark clouds of civil strife realized as well as &ny American realizes today that African slavery was a mere Incident to the struggle of the ages find that struggle of the ages from time to time presents the same great fundamental problem put presents it in a different aspect today. The problem today is whether the American people .will be able to take back that which they have surrendered in government, to re-clothe itself with that power with relation to the govern mental policy that was Inherent and natural in every government and by so doing serve all, or whether they shall allow that few who through the prostitution of their government have put the government of the great republie m. the interests of a few. "Now this gathering means that the people are resolved that the people themselves shall role and the people ruling, ruling will be in the interest of general welfare. (Applause.) "Against this effort is that reactionary spirit Which has been in part yrlthin onr party as it fcaa within every party-and within every human agency. It would seem as though the minority Bourbon spirit that has claimed the party, part, And parcel, would read the handwriting on the .wan, but, my friends, there is a common tie that binds Bourbonism wherever it exists BVhether facing the terrors of the French revolt- tlon, whethor sitting on tho crumbling throno of Spain, or whethor finding a place and seeking power within tho political agencies of this re public, that common tie is its blindness. Tho Bourbon wherever ho is, is blind. All blind men are not Bourbons but all Bourbons aro blind. It would scorn as though tho warning that came from rock-ribbed Maine, from tho groat state of Massachusetts, from Now York, from Wcat Virginia and tho warning that fairly shook Pennsylvania until she was rocked in a storm, the warning that involved tho loss of Ohio by 100,000 last year, would have been warning enough for blind Bourbonism. But, no, that was not sufficient. On tho heels of that camo tho splendid victory last week from tho state of California. "And still Bourbonism sits chattering to itself that this is a mere momentary impulse of tho people. "Now, my friends, in this movomont permeat ing the rank and file of tho republican party from one ocean to tho other thero still remains one thing to bo done. Tho human is so constituted that he over requires a symbol which shall stand as an outward expression of tho faith within him. "If today we could part the curtain that falls in mystery on tho pagan faith we would find tho pagan temple drawn with a pagan imago and bo, in Its Inception in the outward expression of the faith, wo deal in tho pagan mind. Nations could not live without a banner, and so humans, no matter how determined or how broad spirited, they must havo something around which tho purpose and policy may cluster. I am one who has minimized the individual in the current of human affairs, and yet I recognize that man is so constituted that ho must havo something of the human to stand for tho purposes within, and after all, my friends, if we wanted to epitomize the historic achievements of our party, in order to do It by name we would look back thero a half a century and wo would see 4,000,000 of human beings hold In bondage; wo would see the at torney general of the United States, with that solemnity that always attaches to Bourbonism solemnly advising the president that there was no authority in the constitution to hold tho union together. "We see an uprising of the peoplo, wo see the strife, the sacrifice we see thq shackles fall from those 4,000,000 slaves, yet we could read it all in ono short name, the name of Abraham Lin coln. ( Applause.) "We view another scene when depression over spread our land, when strong men begged for work and begged in vain, when tho bats wero building their nests in tho chimneys of the mills. We see theTe another transformation, we hear tho whirr of the wheels, wo see tho smoke pour forth from the chimneys, we see the man re turning home at night with the fruits of toil in the wages he has earned, and yet that could be summed up in one name, the name of Wil liam McKinley. (Applause.) "We see another picture. Wo see a groat people so engrossed in commercialism that the higher ideals seem to havo been lost to view. We see an abatement of the best and purest in public life. We see a change come over tho scene. We see a people, grasping for higher ideals, wo see men brought to tho bar of justice, we see organized effort in behalf of the people to hold in check those giant forces that have been developed in our midst, and, while we might spend hours upon that picture, it is all epitomized in one man's name, the name of Theodoro Roosevelt. (Applause and cheering.) "We see another picture. In a sister state, a state that I can speak of with some authority, having in my younger days seen, witnessed and felt the brutal tyranny of the bi-partisan forces that held Wisconsin in its clutch. We see one man brave enough to defy that force, we see him call down upon himself the bitter hostility of that force. Every sinister effort is arrayed against him, but he carries on his fight unflinch ingly not tho wild fight of a dreamer, but the struggle of one who, I have no hesitation in say ing, in my humble judgment, is the greatest constructive statesman of his age. (Applause and prolonged cheering.) "By their fruits ye shall know them, is the highest law ever given to man for the test of truth. (Applause.) Can it be said of a mas; who, for a quarter of a century strews his path way with those enmities horn of the struggle in Wisconsin, and then receives a verdict of 100,000 majority, that his views were unsound? No,, lacking In that share of personality which some possess, stern, and rugged in his nature, fearless and defiant in his fight, when that man received last year (although his own" voice silonccd on tho bed of pain) a ono hundrod thousand majoritry, it was a tributo to tho wis dom and tho soundness of tho pollclos for which ho had stood. (Applause.) "I don't know 1 don't like to montlon names (laughter), but you havo got nn old gontloman In this stato who sayB ho would llko to hang men llko mo (laughter) I cherish no hostility bccaiiBO I do not hold him accountable for what ho says (laughtor) ; but among tho othor inur murlngs of barbarism Is tho assertion that wo men havo disrupted tho party. As an answer to that challongo put tho 100,000 majority last year of Bob La Follotto In Wisconsin (npplauso), against tho 100,000 rolled up ngainst us In the stato of Ohio. I care but Uttlo for tholr muttor ings and their chattorlngs, and yet I do think tho time has como whon wo as republicans ongagod In tho strugglo of caving a party from Bourbonism, should meet their challenge by pointing to the states whoro Bourbonism lost in the Inst campaign as the local leadership of tho republican party. "Wo pans from Wisconsin to the Amorlcan senate A fow years ago, if thero was a close corporation on tho earth it was tho Amorlcan sonato. Tho ipsit dixit was binding, and to chal lenge its correctness was troason. Its business was boing conducted behind closed doors, but thoro camo a change in tho sonato. Tho door ' of tho conferenco committee has been thrown open, and tho Amorlcan sovereign now can know what his servant is doing in conferenco work. Of all that has been accomplished in the last two yoars in its fundamental rolation to funda mental progress that victory overshndows all else. (Applause) The years of this man's ser vices rolled by, and, as In Wisconsin, you could not if he was In his grave repeal a law that he ever helped to put on the statute of that stato; so today you could not repeal a law, nor can Bourbonism forever successfully contend against tho proposed laws advocated by that same man. (Applause.) Again, we havo a symbol, and that picture is 'all epitomized in ono man's name, the name of Robert M. La Follotto. (Prolonged ap plause.) "I believe for one I of course voice only my opinion, because Jt is fundamental in this move ment that men have a right to their opinion, and tho right to express it without boing de nounced as traitors. (Applause.) My own opin ion is that this great uprising, this forco that is betraying Its presence from ono ocean to tho other, will wasto itsolf In internal faction and discord, unless, as in all respects of human affairs, we take a symbol around which to rally and within which to crystallzo our forco and our purpose. (Applause.) "Now tho chairman has well said that wo could not today anticipate all the Issues of tho future. No platform can bo drawn that will anticipate and meet them all. But as in the past, men llko Lincoln, McKinley and Roosevelt took tho place of the necessity of detail in all respects In platform, so Robert M. La Follotto in his own llfcwork, in his grand and triumphant achievement, is in himself a platform that represents the progressive spirit of the republican party. (Prolonged applause.) "Now thero is a difference between violated pledges and pledges redeemed, and tho American people are not satisfied with violated pledges even though in deathbed repentance it bo promised that they shall eventually bo carried out, (Applause.) Tho American peoplo de mand that there bo genuine sincerity in pledges, and there is no sincerity equal to that of achievement itself. Some men in public life must sink a plummet into tho current of Ameri can thought and purpose to catch its drift, to measure its depth and moasuro its force. Such men may bo safe and they may not, but there is ono man who docs not require to sink a plummet into the currentof American thought and purpose, neither to measure its force, to sound Its depth, or to ascertain its directions; for the very In carnation of all that is best in American thought and purpose is Robert II. La Follette himself.' WHEN IT SUITS THE TRUSTS Minden (Neb.) Courier: Archbishop Ireland calls the initiative and referendum democratic madness. Being a republican they could not very well be anything else. Being a republican he is in favor of limiting the power of the people instead of giving them more. He says: "W trust the people when they treat matter with which they are conversant." He would no doubt like to have the class to which ho be longs have the power to determine what matters' the people were conversant with, and the final verdict of such egotists would be, that thoy were not competent to treat upon any question. 3 1 . fcJiiv I -.l j, ,M.a adlxi MiU")