. ji.u. riiiiTiir-i"gJP1 '! I 1 WW,tjH,IJUfl,l(flJI,: m The Commoner. VOLUME 10, NUMBER 15 -r - y JTinjrasjfiSniwwiBiB r w I 1 Kft, I B R 1 6 Ship is Leaking WIOKHItSIIAM'S SrEIJCM Washington dispatch to tho Chicago Rccord Horald: Mr. Wickorsham Bpoko authoritatively for tho administration, and whilo tho president doclarod extemporaneously that ho wanted to road no ono out of tho party protesting that ho was not sounding any keynote his attorney gonoral's contemporaneous declarations are In terpreted hero as an attempt to do somo "read ing out." Tho Wickorsham speech has not worked for harmony is not regarded as intended to har monize Insurgency still is insurgency. Tho progressive lino of battlo is not to bo changed. Tho speech has aggravated those It called to particular attention; yet it is declared to bo adroit and to havo hit tho mark his side wanted to hit. "Mr. Wickcrsham may havo mado many mis takes in his llfo, ho probably has," said Senator Cummins of Iowa to the. Record-Herald corre spondent today, "but ho never mado a greater ono than his Saturday night's performance. Tho blunder was a natural ono, however, for until ho took a position as a cabinot o nicer ho had little to do with the republican party and was ignorant of its make-up, its spirit or its pur Pobo. Ho novor fought Its battles, sat in its councils or defended its doctrines. "With this meager acquaintance with tho party it is not wonderful that ho looks upon tho cabinot tablo as tho whole thing. After he has had somo experience ho will know that fidelity to tho party means fidelity to principles, not to men; and ho will discover that tho rank and fllo of republicans havo not appointed him, or any other person, no matter how high his sta tion, to fix tho standard of loyalty to party prin ciples and party organization." "I think tho speech very able and adroit," said Senator Borah of Idaho, a progressive, not a radical, and only occasionally an insurgent. "But his logic," declared Senator Borah, "fol lowed to a final conclusion would render abso lutely unnecessary a legislative body except for tho formal endorsement of bills. In other words, it will not do to say that men can not zealously and earnestly discuss tho details of bills and diffor with other mombors of tho patty as to what bills should bo without incurring the charge of giving aid and comfort to tho enemy. That is tho old machine rule of politics reduced to an absurdity." HUNTING FOR TROUBLE Editorial in tho Chicago Record-Herald, re publican: But tho tariff controversy of tho laBt year has not been wisely managed on tho Bide of tho presldont and his standpat friends and nothing can alter this fact. Tho adminis tration makes a mistake in adding provocation to provocation where it should try to conciliate and harmonize. SCOUTS BRING BAD NEWS Washington dispatch to tho Chicago Record Herald: Scouts havo been out through tho west, and thoy havo brought their reports to tho White House, and to tho campaign chieftains Thoy have traversed Kansas, Illinois, Indiana and other states, and thoy report that condi tions are the worst overthat the house is going to bo carried by tho domocrats. Tho most regular leaders are hoping for right now is to savo as many as possible of their work horses" so as to have a nucleus for ac tion two years hence, when it is hoped that reaction will sot in. Speaker Cannon is admit ted to bo down and out, but it is declared ho will run for re-election in his district (ho could not he re-elected speaker, it is realized if the republicans carry tho house), and strivo to be leader of the minority, in whioh position he can make it interesting for his enemies. That the party organization machinery con trolled by the regulars at present, will bo de voted mostly to saving members of its kind looking to tho carrying of tho country by tho democrats, is regarded as likely. There is sus picion that somo leaders prefer a democratic house for two years to a victory that will nut the progressives in control of tho party The progressive leaders are not pessimistic They hold that there will bo a republican vic tory; but that it will be won on progressive lines, overthrowing absolutely the present con trol. Friends of Senator Boveridgo mako prophecy that Indiana will go republican by a l big majority, somo observers who claim never to have been mistaken in their judgment of re sults thero placing tho minimum at 50,000. Somo of tho same observers declare that condi tions pertaining to tho neighboring state of Ohio predict a democratic landslide there. In Iowa a repetition of the recent events in Indiana is expected. The primaries will be held early in Juno, and delegates will bo elected to tho state convention, it is proclaimed, who will enthusiastically indorse tho course of Senators Dolliver and Cummins and adopt a platform as forceful as that adopted by the Indiana repub licans. At the primaries the defeat of three "regular" members of congress is predicted Walter I. Smith, Hull and Kennedy. Dawson, who is sometimes regular and sometimes in surgent, is not a candidate for re-nomination. It is declared a solid progressive congressional ticket will be in the field. If republican candidates are beaten at the polls In Iowa, it is asserted it will be due to defection on the part of "regulars," In other words, the so-called regulars in Iowa are the bolters, if any bolting bo done. It is being urged as tho duty of progressives everywhere to mako a determined fight against the election of democra'ts. It is expected there will he some republican losses in the west, hut it is declared the chance of defeat will be greatest in districts where progressives do not win in tho nominations. FRAUDS AT ST. LOUIS Washington dispatch to the Richmond, Va., Times-Dispatch: The alleged shortage of more than $60,000 at the United States sub-treasury and of the collector of customs at St. Louis, which, it is charged, have been in existence since 1906, were discussed by the new rules commit teo of the house at its first meeting today. The matter came up in the form of a resolution in troduced by Representative Shackleford, of Mis souri, providing for a congressional investiga tion. Mr. Shackleford said that he had tried unsuccessfully to get an investigation for three years. He said there was no doubt in his mind that the guilty parties were being protected by others higher up. He pointed out that although the secretary of the treasury had recommended that suits be brought against the bondsmen of alleged defaulters, that the responsible parties in St. Louis had neglected to do so and that the statute of limitations had now run against them. Bills had been pending in congress for several sessions to relieve the St. Louis treasurer of the liability, he said, and unless an investigation was had without delay it might soon be too late. Representative Champ Clark, of Missouri, told his fellow committeemen that the "federal offices at St. Louis had long been passed around in a little clique, and that if an investigation could be had, a lot of big fellows out there would be sent to the penitentiary. It would get some republicans and it might some demo crats, and I don't care if it does," added Mr Clark. "The only thing I want," said Mr. Shackle ford. is to he assured by this committee that thero will be no white-wash." The committee thought an investigation of tho charges should be undertaken by the house committee on expenditures in the treasury de gartntent. After the hearing Representative Shackleford went to the committee on expendi tures to arrange for the investigation. WAITING FOR PRINCIPLES Editorial in New York World: What could be more pathetic than this spectacle of the re publican partythe party of Lincoln, Grant and McKlnleywaiUng with ill-concealed apprehen sion for the coming of Theodore Roosevelt and tho day of judgment? na Waiting for him to divide the sheep from the goats waiting for him to judge the ouick 1 the dead-waiting for him to nly whether u has fought the good fight waiting for him to sav ssrdbi2iMB llko tto S5sr fni?iMmbein omui1science has come, and when In fallibility has judged, what then? Suppose the decision is in favor of Mr T-nff uie cost of living, and weep tears of craHfu for half a loaf? Will labo? joyfully . 3 ,eXVitIng tnat to Permitted to earn s bread in tho sweat of its face? Will AidriSiiS and Cannonism be sanctified, and Ball linger b hailed as the great conservator? Will reaction ary and insurgent alike find peace that passeth all understanding? Or suppose the decision is against Mr. Taft. Will the president meekly confess that he is only a proxy, and an incompetent proxy at that? Will he be contented to go down in history as a political understudy, a sub-tenant in the White House, who did not wait for dispossess proceed ings? Will the adimnistration kiss the hand that smites it, and bless tho foot that kicks it into oblivion? Will MacVeagh return cheerfully to the wholesale grocery, and will Knox, Wick ersham, Dickinson and Nagel gracefully resume the gentle art of corporation law, while Wall Street gets ready to make its regular campaign contribution to the cause of the just man armed? Whatever the decision, there must inevitably be anguish and disappointment and heart burn ing; for even infallibility can not bring ecstasy to everybody, and millions of republicans seem doomed to suffer in silence. There can be no protest, of course; no appeal. He is the court of last resort. He is the ultimate judge. Re publicanism has bowed its neck to the yoke and is waiting in breathless suspense for his verdict. We recall no other such awe-inspiring spec tacle since political organizations were insti tuted under free government. When Tom Reed died was there nobody left in the republican party with a sense of humor? A BOLT THREATENED Editorial in tho Kansas City Star, republican:! With the rank and file of the republican party overwhelmingly in sympathy with the progress sives, and with the democratic party in its full strength opposed to the reactionaries, one of two things soon must happen: Either the pro gressives must gain control of the republican organization or the democratic party must get control of the government. Therefore, representatives of this republican minority may set forth from time to time to read the progressives out of the party, as did Attorney General Wickersham Saturday night; thoss in places of power may continue to de pose the earnest disciples of Theodore Roosevelt from appointive places in the government ser vice, as Pinchot and Glavis were deposed; the priests of the party caucus may continue to pro nounce the sentence of excommunication on those who defy their laws; the money changers may continue for a time to have the chief places in the temple and at the council board; but in an intelligent, assertive democracy, no fac tion of a party can withstand a hostile majority;! no democratic government can long remain in the hands of those to whom the great ma jority of the people are opposed. These truths ought to be as apparent to tho organization leaders of the republican party as they are to other observers, but either they are not or there is a defiant purpose to rule or ruin. In the face of these truths the attempts of any man or set of men to put the progressive repub licans out of the party are so fatuous as to bo almost ludicrous. That is a mighty big contract. If it should succeed, the host that would follow the banished remain Tin dumund th w that would wmiM h if! ?ei,BtS,teB ?ot enough republicans would be left to hold a barbecue. ALDRICH TO RETIRE An Associated Press dispatch from Washing- thatqhe0twiH NelSn A AldrI aiStae that he will not be a candidate for re-election to the senate but will retire to private life at mieXPSeanl?orfA?P,reSent "? Mih 3 xjii benator Aldrich says that thpro 1r -nnt- the slightest doubt but that a republican will succeed him in the senatorial seat? r HALE TO RETIRE he voluntarily retiree he win h, 1t,iat;"nIelJ3 the nomination by JudgeVe'L $ MR. BRYAN AT HOME which he is a member VlSatMS club' oI T1,PT,E0T E SUPREME COURT mSonTveenf t"b'a asking him not to annn f DreSlnt n n0"" to succeed thftaS See' Brewer attorns t jL111 '" -