The Commoner. 'AUGUST 18, 191J 9 THE NATIONAL PROGRESSIVE PARTY AT CHICAGO (Continued from Pago 7.) tually incompatible promisee which there is not the slightest intention of redeeming, and which, if re deemed, would result in sheer ruin. Far-seeing patriots should turn scornfully from men who seek power on a platform which with exquisite nicety combines silly inability to understand the national needs and dishonest insincerity in promising conflicting and impossible remedies. "It seems to me, therefore, that the time is ripe, and overripe, for a genuine progressive movement, nation-wide and justice-loving, sprung from and responsible to the people themselves, and sundered by a, great gulf from both of the old party organizations, while representing all that is best in the hopes, beliefs and aspirations of the plain people who make up the immense majority of the rank and file of both the old parties. "The first essential in the pro gressive program is the right of the people to rule. But a few months ago our opponents were assuring us with insincere clamor that it was ab surd for us to ialk about desiring that the people should rule, because as a matter of fact, the people actually do rule. Since that time the actions of the Chicago convention, and to an only less degree of the Baltimore convention, have shown in striking fashion how little the people do rule under o(ur present conditions. "We shpuld, ' provide by national law for presideptial primaries. We should provide , 'for the election of United States ' senators by popular vote. Wo should provide for a short 'fi'aliipt; nothing'-makes it harder for the people to control their public "servants than itf forCo them to vote for so many officials' that- thoy can not really keep track of any ono of HOW MANY OP US Fail to Select Food Nnturo Demands to Ward Off Ailments? A Kentucky lady, speaking about, food, irays: "I was accustomed to eating all kinds of ordinary food( until, for some reason, indigestion and nervous prostration set in. : "After I had4 run down seriously imy attention was called to the neces sity of some change in my diet, and rI discontinued my ordinary break last and began using Grape-Nuts with ka good quantity of. rich cream. "In a few days my condition 'changed in a remarkable way, and VI began to have a strength that I had never been possessed of before, a vigor of body and a poise of mind that amazed me. It was entirely new In my experience. "My former attacks of indigestion had been accompanied byj heat flasheB, and many times my condition was distressing with blind spells of dizziness, rush of blood to tho head and neuralgic pains in the chest. ' "Since using Grape-Nuts alone for breakfast I have been free from these troubles, except at times when I have indulged in rich, greasy foods In quantity, then I would be warned by a pain under tho left shoulder blade, and unless I heeded the warn ing the old trouble would come back, but when I finally got to know where these troubles originated I returned to my Grape-Nuts and cream and the pain and disturbance left very quickly. "I am now in prime health as a re mit of my use of Grape-Nuts." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek Mich. "There's a reason," and it is ex plained in the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new tone appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and fall of human interest. them, so that each becomos indis tinguishable in tho crowd around around him. Thoro must bo strin gent and efficient corrupt practices acts, applying to tho primaries as well as tho elections; and there should be publicity of campaign con tributions during the campaign. "We should provide throughout this union for giving the people in every state tho real right to rulo themselves, and really and not nomi nally to control their public sorvants and their agencies for doing tho pub lic business; an incident of this be ing giving tho people tho right them selves to do this public business if they find it impossible to get what they desire through tho oxisting agencies. I do not attempt to dog matize as to the machinery by which this end should be achieved. In each community it must bo shaped so as to correspond not merely with tho needs but with the customs and ways of thought of that community, and no community has a right to dictate to any other in this matter. But wherever representative- govern ment has in actual fact become non representativo there tho people should secure to themselves tho initiative, tho referendum, and tho recall, doing it in such fashion as to make it evident that they do not intend to use these instrumentali ties wantonly or frequently, but to hold them ready for use in order to correct the misdeeds or failuro of the public servants when it has be come evident that these misdeeds and failures can not be corrected in ordinary and normal fashion. The administrative officer should be given full power, for otherwise he can not do well tho people's work; and the people should be given full power over him. "I do not mean that wo shall aban don representative government; on the contrary, I mean that we shall devise methods by which our govern ment shall become really representa tive. To use such measures as the initiative, referendum and recall in discriminately and promiscuously on all kinds of occasions would un doubtedly cause disaster; but events have shown that at present our in stitutions aro not representative at any rate in many states, and some times in the nation and that wo can not wisely afford to let this condition of things reiriain longer uncorrected. We have permitted tho growing up of a breed of politicians who some times for improper political pur poses, sometimes as a means of serving tho great special interests of privilege which stand behind them, twist so-called representative institu tions into a means of thwarting in stead of expressing tho deliberate and well-thought-out judgment of tho people as a whole. This can not be permitted. We chooso our rep resentatives for two purposes. In the first place, we choose them with the desire that, as experts, they shall study certain matters with which we the people as a whole can not be in timately acquainted, and that as re gards these matters they shall for mulate a policy for our betterment. "Even as regards such a policy, and the actions taken thereunder, we ourselves should have the right ultimately to vote our disapproval of it, if wo feel such disapproval. But, in the next place, our representa tives aro chosen to carry out cer tain policies as to which we have definitely made up our minds, and here we expect them to represent us by doing what we have decided ought to be done. All I desire to do by securing more direct control of the governmental agents and agencies of the people is to give the people the chance to make their rep resentatives really represent them whenever the government becomes misrepresentative instead of repre sentative. "I have not come to this way of thinking from closet study, or ns a mero mattor of theory: I have been forced to it by a long oxporlenco with tho actual conditions of our political life. A few years ago, for Instance, thoro was very little domand in this country for presidential primaries. There would havo boon no demand now if the politicians had really en deavored to carry out tho will of the people as regards nominations for president. But, largely under tho In fluence of special privllego In tho business world, there have arisen castes of politicians who not only do not represent tho people, but who mako their bread and butter by thwarting tho wishes of tho people. This is true of tho bosses of both political parties in my own state of Now York, and It Is just ns true of the bosses of ono or tho other politi cal party in a great many states of tho union. The power of the people must bo made supremo within tho several party organizations. In tho contest which culminated six weeks ago in this city I speedily found that my chance was at a mini mum in any state where I could not got an expression of tho people them selves in tho primaries. I found that if I could appeal to the rank and file of tho republican voters, I could generally win, whereas, if I had to appeal to tho political caste which includes tho most noisy defenders of tho old system I generally lost. Moreover, I found, as a matter of fact, not as a mattor of theory, that these politicians habitually and un hesitatingly resort to every species of mean swindling and cheating In order to carry their point. It Is be cause of the general rocognitlo.i of this fact that the words politics and politicians have grown to have a sinister meaning throughout this country. "The bosses and their agents in the national republican convention at Chicago treated political theft as a legitimate political weapon. It is instructive to compare tho votes of states where there wore open pri maries and the votes of states whore thoro were not. In Illinois, Pennsyl vania, and Ohio, wo had direct pri maries, and the Taft machine was beaten two to one. Between and bordering on these states were Michi gan, Indiana, and Kentucky. In these states we could not get direct primaries, and tho politicians elected two delegates to our one. In the first three states tho contests were absolutely open, absolutely honest. Tho rank and file expressed their wishes, and there was no taint of fraud about what they did. In the other three states the contest was marked by every Bpecles of fraud and violence on tho part of ur op ponents, and half the Taft delegates in tho Chicago convention from these states had tainted titles. "The entire Wall street press at this moment is vigorously engaged In denouncing tho direct primary sys tem and upholding the old conven tion system, or, as they call it, the "old representative system." They aro so doing because thoy know that the bosses and the powers of special privilege havo tenfold tho chance under the convention system that they havo when the rank and file of tho people can express themselves at tho primaries. "Tho nomination of Mr. Taft at Chicago was a fraud upon the rank and file of the republican party: it was obtained only by defrauding the rank and file of the party of thoir right to express their choice; and such fraudulent action does not bind a single honest member of the party. Well, what the national committee and the fraudulent majority of the national convention did at Chicago In misrepresenting tho people has been done again and again in con gress, perhaps especially in the senate and in the state legislatures. Again and again laws demanded by the peoplo havo been rofuscd to tho people hocauao tho representatives of tho pooplo misrepresented them. Now my proposal Is merely that wo shall glvo to tho pooplo tho powor, to bo used not wantonly but only In ex ceptional cases, themselves to sco to It that the governmental action taken In thoir nnmo Is really tho action that thoy desire. "The American people, and not tho courts, aro to determine thoir own fundamental policies. The pcoplo should havo powor to deal with tho effect of tho acts of all their gov ernmental agencies. This must bo extended to Include tho effects of judicial acts as well as tho acts ot tho executivo and legislative repre sentatives of the pcoplo. Whore tho Judge merely docs justice as botween man and man, not dealing with con stitutional questions, then the In terest of tho public Is only to seo that ho Is a wise and upright judge. Mcann should be devised for making It easier than at present to get rid of an incompetent judge; means should bo devised by the bar and tho bench acting In conjunction with tho various legislative bodies to mako justico far moro expeditious and moro certain than at present. Tho stlck-In-tho-bark legalism, tho legal Ism that subordinates equity to tech nicalities, should ho recognized as a potent enemy of Justice. But this is not the matter of most concern at the moment. Our prime concern is that in dealing with the funda mental law of tho land, in assuming finally to interpret it, and thereforo finally to mako it, tho acts of tho courts should ho subject to and not abovo tho final control of tho people as a wholo. I deny that tho Ameri can people havo surrendered to any set of men, no matter what their po sition or their character, the final right to determine thoso fundamen- ' tal questions, upon which free self government ultimately depends. Tho peoplo themselves must bo tho ulti mate makers of thoir own constltu-f tlon, and whoro their agents differ' in thoir interpretations of tho con stitution, tho pooplo themselves should bo given tho chance, after full and deliberate judgment, authoritatively to settle what Inter pretation It is that their represen tatives shall thereafter adopt as binding. "Whenever in our constitutional system of government there exists general prohibitions that, an inter preted by the courts, nullify, or" may bo used to nullify, specific laws passed, and admittedly passed, In tho interest of social Justico, wo aro for such immediate law, or amend ment to the constitution, if that bo necessary, as will thereafter permit a reference to tho people of the pub lic effect of such decision, under forms securing full deliberation, to tho end that the specific act of the legislative branch of the government thus judicially nullified, and such amendments thereof as come within its scope and purpose, may constitu tionally be excepted by vote of tho peoplo from the general prohibitions, tho same as if that particular act had been expressly expected when the prohibition was adopted. This will necessitate tho establishment of ma chinery for making much easier of amendment both the national and the several state constitutions, especially with tho view of prompt action on certain Judicial decisions action as specific and limited as that taken by the passage of the eleventh amend ment to the national constitution. Wo are not in this decrying the courts. That was reserved for the Chicago convention In its plank re specting impeachment. Impeach ment implies the proof of dishones ty. We do not question the general honesty of the courts. But in applying to present-day social conditions tho general prohibitions that were In tended originally as safeguards- to j l&4l&tfilfcrvMiurf)ttf - -8m4i