DECEMBER- 22, 1911. A Weak The Commoner. Presidential Candidate an Injury to the Party In its issue of Friday, December 8th, the Cincinnati 'Enquirer printed, under the head line, "A Weak Presidential Candidate an In jury to "the Party," the following editorial: When the democratic voters begin their work lor the campaign of 1912 they should bear in mind . that it is not alone the presidency, the executive branch of the federal government, they should contend for, but that if they nomi nate a candidate popular throughout the United States they vill be able to control both branches of congress and many of the states through the strength of their presidential candidate. Democratic candidates in townships, citie3, counties, .congressional districts and states, will, one and all, be injured if the democratic na tional convention should nominate a candidate for president who has not the complete confi- dence of the voters in his devotion to their interests'. The campaign of 1912 it would now appear will be largely based upon the enforcement of the Sherman anti-trust law and its application to monopolies and combines, and no man who 'in office was lax in executing it can expect to be the candidate of the democratic party, how ever much, out of office, he proclaims his attach ment to the provisions of the statute. The voters of today speedily become familiar with the records of candidates. They discuss them, analyze them, quickly appreciate their importance and make application at the polls. The democracy desires no candidate who, if nominated, from start to finish will bo upon the defensive through official failure to strenuously enforce the Sherman anti-trust law. That law has been upon the statute books for twonty-one years. It was put there to protect the interests of the masses of the people, and the officials of the department of justice were the persons ,directly in charge of its enforcement. Is there a democratic congressman from the .state of Ohio who believes ho can hold hla seat in the next congress if the dembcratic candi date , for president should be one who, while in federal office charged with enforcement of the Sherman anti-trust law, failed to make a record of active work against violators of that law? Do they not know that the voters will take no chances with any candidate who neglected or failed to use that statute against all violators or offenders? Every democrat in the states of the union, especially every man who expects to be a can didate of the party for any office to be voted 'upon in 1912, must insist upon a democratic 'candidate for president whose actions and words have ever been in accord, whose associations are free from all suspicion that he will be con ' trolled by objectionable interests, and whose life of fidelity to the organization and the candi dates of the national party will guarantee to 'him the full party support. The democratic party has many leaders who have no flaws in their steadfast devotion to party candidates, who have no records of errors of omission or commission, men whose candi ' dacy would re-enforce our candidates for office from the lowest to the highest positions, and it is such a candidate that should be named when the national convention assembles. ' ' - PROGRESSIVE, ANYHOW Wicliita (Kan.) -Beacon: Enemies of Wood row WilBon are in high glee because the things he now says are different from some things ho wrote in 1893. Good Lord! can't a man grow -in eighteen years? Why, its another century now and conditions are vastly changed. What would you have a man accumulate in his brain between the ages of thirty-seven and fifty-five ideas, experience and widened con victions, or just moss? " GET INTO POLITICS The following from the Richmond Virginian la applicable to all sections of the country: . ; "Wo heartily indorse the following articles 'Which we have clipped from the editorial columns of the Greenville Piedmont: " 'A few days since the Manufacturers' Record ' r 'Fof many years the Manufacturers' Record has urged' the south to cease to make politics Its business, and, instead, to make business its politics.' " . "The Columbia Stato replies: " 'The advice of the Manufacturers' Record was long ago taken to the extent that the ablest men of the south became so engrossed in busi ness that the political field was given over, in the main, to second-raters.' "The Piedmont adds this comment: " 'The Stato is correct. What South Carolina most needs now is for some men to take enough time from their business to study the political situation. The commonwealth would bo much better off.' "We join with the Piedmont and the Stato in the belief that the one thing that can savo the political situation and result in permanent purity and patriotism in politics is the intelli gent and persistent activity of citizens in tho game. When tho average good citizen Is In different and inactive, by that very condition Is created the opportunity of the professional politician and so do corruption in politics and graft in administration find their origin. "Get in the game. When the citizenship generally does get in tho game it will bo clean and fair and the city and state and nation will discover the difference." Pass it along. streot has dono business with tho republican party for many yoars and it naturally vlowa now associations with distrust. It prefers an old customer, and Mr. Roosovolt Is Its logical choice for president. Ho can fool tho western radicals while Insuring to big buslnosa tho roally important stakes for which It is playing. Domocrats in congress and out of congross can not ignore this situation. Thoy aro no . longor dealing with a frank, good-naturod, tactless Taft. Thoy aro dealing with tho moat daring, audacious and practical political mani pulator of his generation. Thoy must proparo to beat Roosovelt. - WHO CAN BEAT ROOSEVELT Editorial in New York World: Who is tho best man to beat Roosevelt and a third term in 1912? This is the question the democrats of tho country must face, and they might as well meet it first as last. They have nothing to gain and much to lose by shutting their eyes to tho facts that confront them. We do not say that Mr. Roosevelt's nomina . tlon next year is inevitable, but it is probable. Luck is running with him and tho advantago ' of position is on his side,, thanks, to, Taft's mis takes and Roosevelt's adroit disloyalty. Mr. Taft is politically dead, and there is little hope of a resurrection. He has succeeded in alienating both radicals and conservatives, both progressives and stand-patters. His candidacy is without popular support and is sustained largely by tho power of federal patronage. Scarcely one republican In five believes that the president can bo re-elected unless democratic folly throws away the election. The president himself is doubtful. Opposing Mr. Taft for the nomination is Sena tor La Follette, the most aggressive of the west ern insurgents; but outside of a comparatively small section of the. country tho Wisconsin sena , tor makes no convincing appeal to tho rank and file of the party. The east frankly distrusts him, and the great debatable states of tho middle west, like Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Mis souri, display no enthusiasm for him. If tho Issue of the nomination were to lio between Taft and La Follette, Taft would un questionably win; but here Theodore Roosevelt enters the field. He still retains a largo meas ure of his strength with the western Insurgents. Most of the federal office-holders, who are tho backbone of the Taft machino, are Roosevelt appointees as well, eager and anxious to hold their position. To them Taft's nomination means defeat and the loss of their jobs. Roose velt is at least a fighting chance. Big business is against Taft, but Roosevelt offers it a haven and a refuge, with the Whit house doors wide open. His attack upon tho Sherman law in last week's Outlook is Wall street's attack. He offers big business the kind of federal "supervision" that it is begging for, but chiefly he offers tho destruction of the Sherman anti-trust law. It is to the destruc tion of tho Sherman act that Wall street Is concentrating all its political power. If big business could be sure that his election would mean the repeal or amendment of that statute, all of Its money and influence and .authority would be Instantly arrayed on tho side of his candidacy. In any event Wall street would accept him rather than Taft or La Follette. It has bargained with him la the past and knows Sow to bargain with him in tho future. Big business might consider a hidebound con servative democrat to be more desirable than Taft or La Follette or Roosevelt, but there Is small chance of its obtaining such a candidate and leas chance of electing him. Besides, Wall BALLOT ON PRESIDENTIAL PREFERENCES Editorial in Washington (D. C.) Post: A telegram from Clovoland, O., datod Dacombcr 4, states that tho results of a ballot on presi dential preferences, taken by a Clovoland nown papor and a Toledo nowspapor jointly, show these views on tho part of democratic voters of Ohio who Indicated preferences: Mr. Bryan received 39 per cont of tho wholo number of votes, Governor Harmon 28 por cont, and Governor Wilson 23 por cont, with tho other 9 per cent scattered between Speaker Clark, Representative Underwood, nnd others. This would Indicate that In tho stato of Ohio's democratic camp no ono commands a nialority of tho preferences -of tho voters as yet, and what Is true of Ohio seems true of tho United States. It is plainly In ovidonco that democratic senti ment is concentrated on no ono man or ovon upon any two or threo of tho gentlemen whoso names have been proposed for tho democratic nomination for tho ofllco of chlof magistrate of tho republic. Tho coming six months may bring somo leader's name to tho front in such a mannor as will fix upon him tho attention of tho peoplo of the union and give him a popularity that will demand his nomination. Tho mombors of tho congress, both those of the senate and those of the houso, have, through this present session, a great advantago in this contest over persons that aro not so much In the limelight of public notice. At this writing tho democratic candidacy Is in no man's keeping or control, but it Is per fectly apparent that tho man who will be nomi nated must be in full accord with tho views of the masses of tho peoplo if ho would stand any chanco for election. . .. Tho campaign of 1904 gavo sufficient data upon the impossibility of polling a full demo cratic vote, If the electors of tho party aro not enthused with the candidate, or pleased with tho platform or tho candidate's interpretation of it. Situated as Ohio Is, In tho heart of tho coun try, acted upon by sentiment of the east as well as that of tho west and south, experienced In political warfare as the voters of that stato aro this tabulation of preferences carries with it mofo than ordinary information to political observers. It Is evident that state pride has played no part in tho voting. GOVERNOR HARMON AND TOM JOHNSON Editorial In Dubuque (Iowa) Telegraph Herald: Supporters of Governor Harmon, of Ohio, for tho democratic presidential nomina tion, seeking to commend him to progressive democrats, assert that Tom L. Johnson was his warm supporter and that they worked together in Ohio. Perhaps no man In America is bettor quali fied to substantiate this statement, if it is true, and refute it if it is false, than Louis F. Post, editor of "The Public," Chicago, who was John ion's political confidant nnd friend. A corres pondent in Nevada having apprised Mr. Post that "some of our democratic democrats out hero place Harmon in tho progressive column," and that tho correspondent had received a pamphlet "which makes It appear that the pro gressives of Cleveland Indorse Governor Har mon," Mr. Post replied: "Tom L. Johnson did understand Governor Harmon's position; but ho was: aot satisfied with It. There aro probably few men of presi dential size with whom Tom L. Johnson would have been less satisfied for the democratic can didate than with Mr. Harmon. Harmon is a reactionary, and has been such throughout the whole period of the struggle between democ racy and plutocracy within the, democratic party. It Is not merely that he opposed Bryan in 1896. Many democratic democrats did that, npon the erroneous supposition that they were m Ml 111 HI n i . i ,!ij I 91 4 .1 piH.p.aHUWTir.T-J