I ' NOVEMBER 20, 19 OS The Commoner. .ti $ w - 9 it was read " yesterday. Tlio president's stand was unanimously approved by such of tho min isters as were asked for their opinion on tho subject. 'President Roosevelt is perfectly Jght on the subject said Jehkin Lloyd Jones, pastor of All Souls' church. 'The time has gone by long ago when dogmatism can count much in the politics of this country. Tho number of bigots who scratched Mr. Taft's name from their ballots because of his religious convictions would not fill an c ld-fashioned omnibus. There is no reason why a man's religion should bo consid ered because ho is a candidate for office.' 4Tho president hit the point exactly,' said Rev. Ed ward A. Kelly, pastor of St. Ann's Roman Cath olic church. 'Nobody has the right to question a man's religion in considering him as a candi date for office. When Roosevelt declared that a man's religion was his own personal and in dividual business he reflected the almost unani mous sentiment of the American people. I am -glad he put it so forcibly. One of the strongest reasons for his popularity is that he is a true type of -the American citizen., The people appre ciate his good sense and fairness all tho more now that, he has spoken on this subject.' Rabbi T. Schanfarber, recognized head of the orthodox Jews in Chicago, agreed most heartily with President Roosevelt's views. He said' that lie had preached on the subject within the last few weeks, after his attention had been called to tho fact that former Governor David R. Francis of Missouri, at a banquet In St. Louis, had declared that Mr. Taft, as a Unitarian, did not believe in the divinity of Jesus Christ, and that he was therefore open to suspicion. 'President Roose velt is right when Le says that such arguments arc out of accord with tho spirit of our consti tution,' said ,Rabbi Schanfarber, 'and that a man's religio,us views are- entirely a matter be tween him and his Maker. The faqt that a man is a Catholic; or a Protestant ov a Jew ought to have nothing to dp with his chances in politics. There, have Jbgpn some very wise statesmen wjio didn'p bellevoin God at all, and, in a country where a prctcnoo is made of a 'complete separa tion of churoh end state I see np reason why an infidel shoul.d,not become president of the United States, provided; his other, qualifications are right. None but the bigoted and narrow, who can not sco beyond their own creed, will find 'fault with tho views . expressed by President Roosevelt.' " solved it by recording Mr. Cleveland as 'tho twenty-second and tho twenty-fourth president.' Then he went on and listed Mr. McKihloy an the twenty-fifth president. That mado Mr. Roosevelt tho twenty-sixth, and Mr. Taft natu rally will bo the twenty-seventh. That Is tho way tho enumeration now stands, but it is far from satisfying. Call .Mr. Taft tho twenty seventh president, and then call tho .roll. You will find that Mr. Taft Is tho twenty-sixth Indi vidual to hold that high office. According to the system of enumerating individuals, Mr. Taft clearly will be tho twenty-sixth president. But if you call him that, what aro you going to do with Mr. Cleveland's place in hlBtory? Was ho tho twenty-second or tho twenty-fourth presi dent? If you call him tho twenty-fourth, who was the twenty-second? If you call him tho twenty-second, how do you justify tho fact that the twenty-second president served four years after the twenty-third-president had complotod his term. Let's see. How old was Ann, any way?" O HERE IS AN interesting editorial from tho Columbia (S. C.) State: "It was tobo expected tho World would wail that with John A. Johnson as tho democratic candidate, 'Mr. Taft's majority, in the electoral college would have been small, indeed.' It was to have been expected that the World would say Mr. Bryan is 'weaker than his party,' and point in proof to the fact that the democratic governors were successful in a number of states not giving their electoral votes to Bryan. Such arg ument may soothe tho World for giving no sup port to Mr. Bryan and for its sporadic,' and half hearted support to democracy, but it must know it Is fallacious. Tliere is little or nothing in com mon between the national and the- etato con tests. 'Party lines aro: drawn in tho national election in the north; thoy aro not drawn in the state election's. Local questions-are abso lutely supreme, and if the democrats happen to represent the popular side, as in Ohio, Minne sota anff Nebraska, they win. In the state elec tions, tlio people have a chance to express them selves with much greater freedom than in the national elections, for the trusts and other pred atory concerns take less Interest in such con tests. Mr. Bryan carried Nebraska, a stanch republican state, but the . democratic candidate larger 'majority. Our . nrgumoiit la furthotK:' proved by tho World, which, while aligning it . ; self with tho national democracy, openly ahamT pionod tho causo of Hughes, republican caridff dato for governor. Was Bryan 'woakor than J his party.?' If tho World will rofor to thooiec-? . tlon returns it will find that wlillo Taft ran. ahead of Roosevelt In tho east .cxcoptfng In? Pennsylvania, Bryan cut down tho republican1 majorities In western states as compared with the 1904 election, by tho numbors Indlcatod: ' California 35,000, Colorado 40,000, Idaho 9,000, HllnolB 130,000, Indiana 81,000, Iown 102,000, Kansas 101,000, Michigan 93,000, Minnesota 62,000, Montana 9,000, Nebraska 80,000, Ne vada G.000, North Dakota 28,000, Ohio 20G.0007 ' Oregon 20,000, South Dakota 31,000, Utah 19,- '' 000, Washington 23,000, West Virginia 21,000, Wisconsin 70,000, Wyoming 0,000, and Penn sylvania, tho marked exception in tho cast, re-' duced her republican majority by 200,000. A' total reduction of Roosevelt's majority in tlio l western states of nearly twelve hundred thou- ' sand votesa million and four hundred thou'-"1, sand with Pennsylvania. Does that Indicate' tliaV Mr. Bryan is weaker than his party? Judhon Harmon, democrat, In elected governor or Ohio1. No democrat has ever got that state's electoral votes. Does Harmon strength spoil Bryan '' weakness? It could bo contended, with better'" '""l logic, that Bryan's strength In tho west wa& riiC. " asset for tho democratic candidates for.gov-' " ornors, and enabled, them, with tho addltlonaV,'" popularity of tholr local issues, to scoro victories,'' , So long as the beneficiaries pf tho tariff In tho ' '' Intorcsts of tho trusts., control tho states ojf (hq'V " east, press and politicians, alj men of the rynri' mold will ho w(eak h) ,tho east." lit( . " ' ' MJ ' - WJIfAT A mVFRIlhJNOlU :UA 'n- It js'Ano.w moro than a wok 4Inco. thcfJ61etf-s,e''11 tlon, anil neither Prdsldcntf fRoosoVelt uoVHlr ' Taft has expressed indignation at tho-WdLhH' Mr. Rockefeller voted tho 'republican ticket. What a difference there Is between "beforo tho election" and "after tho election.' ' t a ''' ' u.'- v in, , If what the mighty fiuhtcr cdes 'ttf 'thd'.,',,' AfrfpfiYi t fnmr la tin mnrn linn wliof Mri .. aw. riw m vr v w Minn wlinf -liri 11UO UUIIU bb bVJ J1I1JU1 1V.UJ HUIIUI, bllU JUU&IUU will not run red with uioou, although tho maga- zines may run black with Ink. .r i'i'"i NOW COMES a complicated problem: "Is Mr. Taft the twenty-sixth or twenty-seventh president?" A writer in the Sioux City (Iowa) Journal, says: "George Washington was the first president of the United States and John Adams was the second. The enumeration ran along without possible complication for a long time. Every man who served as president, whether he served two terms or one, or less than one, was given a numeral. So it ran until Grover Cleveland was elected in 1884. His predecessor, Chester A. Arthur, had been re corded as the twenty-first president, so Mr. Cleveland was put down as the twenty-second president. Mr. Cleveland served only one term, giving way to Benjaman Harrison, who was elect ed in 1888. Sticking to the original formula Mr. Harrison was recorded as the twenty-third president. Then came an entirely now prece dent but not a new president. After four years in private life Mr. Cleveland was re-elected president in 1892 and resumed the office the following year. Mr. Harrison had been the twenty-third president, so his successor must be the twenty-fourth president. But Mr. Cleveland had already been recorded in history as the twenty-second president. Should he then be written down as the twenty-second, or the twenty-fourth, or the twenty-second and the twenty-fourth? Call him the twenty-second dur ing his second term and you would have the anomaly of the twenty-second president serving after the twenty-third had completed his term. Call him the twenty-fourth, and you would not adequately describe him. Moreover, the twenty second would then be expunged from tho record entirely. Call him the twenty-second and the twenty-fourth, and you would depart from the rule of giving each man a single numeral. - If the term rather than the individual should gov ern, George Washington was the first and second president, and so on down the line. Men who had served only fractional terms would be diffi cult to describe at alh" EVEN THE Journal writer admits that It is a complicated problem. He adds: Tho historian of tho International Encyclopedia ' a h l KJ