fifH?kF.v "' ' w ijuw -te . m)k ya- 'JANUARY , 1911 The Commoner. "v gtnn "t ll"11 i&m wm b- r. OTfe. " mW9$L m0mmt 9MI Mm mmmKmmmmr Mmwmw mr mT mm mm bHT M mr mftJL s lfwiP'LE. Hb ". . v- V u w ' SEATTLE WILL make uso of the recall pro vision of her charter during the present - - uuui.u. rue suoject or the recall will bo the ffit: S?ayor of th0 cit Hiram 0. Gill. The San 4.J-4. .-;" '- jrrnnrlfri Stn antra nm i . nv illi owjo. vxni ia uuurgeu wna per mitting gambling and other vice to be conduct ' ed by syndicates which paid for their special ' privileges. The necessary signatures for the mayor's recall have been secured, the petition containing 11,300 names, 2,600 in excess of the number required. Of the signers, 631 are women, who qualified as voters for the purpose of signing the petition. Under the law, the comptroller at Seattle has ten days in which to check the names and send the petition to the council. The council must set the date of the recall election within ten days after receiving the petition. This will bring the election late . in January or eaTly In February. The outcome - will be watched with interest. At Los Angeles two years ago, a recall movement was started .' against the mayor of that city, but before the f-election could be-held the mayor resigned. The Seattle mayor, however, seems likely to fight far his seat. If he does, the recall will be put to practical test." V ,' . WX - i ' V -.",- '-. .' T" HAT PRESIDENT TAPT and Theodore Roosevelt have been corresponding regu larly for several weeks is the report that comes "from "Washington by way. of "Sumner," the Chicago Record-Herald's Washington correspon dent. This correspondent says: "The Taft Roosevelt relations have been a matter of much gossip since before the recent elections. Now - itlis strongly Jntjmated at the Washington end tliat to all Intents jind purposes the two men ar$ working together for the general good -ot the .republican party in the next national cam paign. As interpreted, by friends of President Taft this means, of course, that the renomina tion of the latter will not be opposed by Colonel Roosevelt. As to New York there seems to be an understanding that the president's inter ests are not to be menaced by any factionalism and that as matters now-stand a Taft delegation is likely to be chosen on a real harmony basis. The exact nature of the correspondence passing between Washington and Oyster Bay has not been disclosed. Some of it, however, it is un derstood, has pertained to matters of legislation designed to round out the progressive policies inaugurated by Roosevelt and supported by Taft. Letters are understood to have been exchanged with particular frequency since President Taft's return from Panama, the latter part of Novem ber. Whether personal politics has been re ferred to directly Is doubtful; but the impres sion conveyed through persons In close touch with the White House is that the relations be tween the two men are far more friendly than was supposed to be the case just prior to and immediately following the, November elections." THE NEW JERSEY campaign is getting hot- . ter and hotter. James Smith, Jr., has made a reply tp Governor-elect Wilson In which he says- "Dr. Wilson's statement is as I expected it would be. It appears over his signature, but the reasoning is not familiar. The charges and insinuations suggest a' harassed mind. Un influenced Dr. Wilson would have been above misrepresentations. But certain public applause has proven fatal to calm judgment. He has been, swept to the heights with such sudden ness that his judgment has not accompanied him He has my sympathy. He asserts that I am ' nledged to special interests. He was charged with being Wall Street's candidate I aar 'that neither statement is true and Dr. Wil son should have been the last man to assert the contrary. I do not stand for free trade free silver, or new nationalism. I stand for state rights, for a- just tariff, for such con Semtlon of onr natural resources as will per mit of their wise development, not their waste Si distribution; for the restoration of our Merchant marine, and for other doctrines which J recently publicly: enumerated. Dr. Wilson says thaVhe was assured by my spokesman be- fore his nomination that I would not be a can didate for the senatorial ofllce. I never made such a statement. No one was ever authorized by me to make such a statement and no one representing me made such a statement to Dr. Wilson. Furthermore, hero is a challenge which L submit for his acceptance. Let him name the man or men coming from me who so informed him. Let there bo no hiding behind the seal of confidence. If ho be my spokesman, I re move the seal. Let Dr. Wilson speak or by his silence stand convicted before the public of attempted trickery and deceit. I called on Dr. Wilson shortly after election. Tho sena torial matter was discussed. I told him that I had not yet reached a decision as to my can didacy. Professing a high regard for mo, Dr. Wilson said that my candidacy would meet with some opposition from tho people, that in his judgment they wanted a man who had not pre viously appeared in the political arena, some untried man. Stating that tho recent primary was a farce and that 'it would be a disgrace,' to the state to send James E. Martine to the senate, he asked me to sit down with him and agree upon a candidate who would bo acceptable to him and to me. How it. will sear the doctor's soul to have his real view as to tho primary and as to the man he now lauds for senatorial honors brought home to him with such painful accuracy. He will try to disavow it, but it is true, and in his heart he knows it to bo true." WOODROW WILSON has replied to former Senator James Smith, Jr. Dr. Wilson says: "I certainly would not havo allowed my name to go before the convention that nominated me if I had not thought that tho man who told me that Mr. Smith would not be a' candidate 'for the senate spoke to me for Mr. Smith. I had every reason to think he did. I will not name him because he is a man whom I very highly esteem, and on whom I do not care to bring the mortification of being drawn Into this now very public matter. I am quite willing to go with Mr. Smith before the court of public opinion on the charge of attempted trickery and deceit. If the gentleman of whom I havo spoken did not speak for Mr. Smith, in what ho told, why did Mr. Smith corroborate what he said. He himself told me exactly the same thing after election. He told me in tho plainest terms that before the election he had not desired to go to Washington; had not felt equal to seeking, or occupying the office, but that he was now feeling stronger and did desire it. He was evidently referring to something he knew I had known. I pointed out to him the deep discredit that would fall on him If he were himself to seek the senatorship. Finding him utterly contempt uous of the primary and towards .Mr. Martine; finding that he insisted that the state would be disgraced should Mr. Martine rather than he represent it in the senate, I tried to point out to him in all kindness the only course that lay open to him In the circumstances where he could win through faithful men. I told him that, feeling as he did, the only honorable course open to him was to come out and say that he was not himself a candidate and would co-operate in the choice of any man whom general opinion might agree on as representing, not special in terests, but tho opinion and the character of the state. He told me that he did not know of any such man in the state who had any 'claim' on tho party comparable to his own." TEN PER CENT of the voting strength In Adams county, Ohio, Is under indictment charged with corruption at the polls. A Ports mouth, Ohio, dispatch carried by the Associated Press says: "With- a total of 633 indictments and 114 pleas of guilty to chaTges of vote selling during the recent election, Adams county, Ohio, presents a condition unique in political history. A vigorous campaign of investigation carried on by a grand jury acting upon the instigation of Common Pleas Judge A. Z. Blair of Portsmouth has resulted in the indictment of nearly ten per cent of the voting strength of the county and predictions were made that the number of indictments would reach 2,000. Judge Blair says voto selling in every township will bo probod. During a gubernatorial campaign In tho eighties, republicans, by an nlloged liberal uso of money carried tho county, which pre viously had boon democratic. SInco thon con trol has shifted back and forth. As a result of tho grand jury's investigations, it Is. apparent that both parties havo participated In the voto buying. Starting at $1 and $2, prices havo risen In recent years to $20 per voto. Much of tho boodllng has been almost public. In stances of auctioning votes aro reported. Judgo Blair, born and brought up In tho county, ro contly determined to end tho corruption. Among thoso indicted aro many of his life-long friends and some of his early playmates. Men In all walks of lifo and unblemished reputation other wise, havo been caught In tho net. So far, tho judgo bus indicated his purpose to go after only tho vote sellers. So strong have boon their de mands for compensation for tholr bnllots that officeholders have beon able to earn only small net salaries. Where pleas of guilty havo been made the offender has beon disfranchised five years and fined a nominal sum. Workhpuso terms have boen given to practically all, but most of (he prison sentences havo been suspend ed. An editor who denounced the Investigation has been punished for conlompt. Corruption Iu Adams county goes back for more than twenty years and Is perhaps largely duo to a gonoral sanction of a growing custom as well as tho abaence of railways, telegraph and tho telephone. There Is In the county only ono railway lino, a branch of tho Norfolk and Western, and few tele graph and telephone lines West Union, tho county scat, is not reached by either telegrapft or railway. In this respect it stands alone among county seats In Ohio." THERE WILL BE a hot scramble for positions for the democratic house of representative!!. A Washington dispatch printed In the Sioux City (Iowa) Journal says: "When the demo crats como into control of the house in tho next congress they are expected to make a clean sweep of republican officeholders In tho organi zation of that body SInco 1895 tho republican party has had a majority of tho house member ship . Now office hungry democrats in overy state are demanding appointments. The demo crats will fill every position from the clerkship of the house, which pays $6,500, down to tho committee janitors and the pages. In all, tho triumphant democratic hosts will dispose of jobs worth more than $600,000 a year. Tho clerk of tho house, the doorkeeper, each with a small army of well paid assistants, aro doomed to leave Uncle Sam's payroll. The four officers named will be selected by tho democratic caucus. Hero is tho present lineup of those who seek some of tho best paying positions at the disposal of tho democratic house: For sergeant at arms, a position worth $6,500 a year Representative John A, Kollher, of Boston, defeated for re nomination; Representative Leonidas F. Liv ingston, of Georgia, also defeated for re-nomination after twenty years' continuous service in the house; Clyde H. Tavenner, of Illinois, In charge of publicity for the democratic con gressional campaign committee; Charles A. Edwards, newspaper correspondent, of Texas and Washington; Hamilton DeWeese, of Co lumbus, O.; John W. Thompson, of Raleigh, N. C; George Scanton, of West Virginia, and Stokes Jackson, state democratic chairman, of Indiana. Tho clerkship of the house of repre sentatives also is a much sought for position. It, too, pays $6,500. The candidates so far an nounced are: Ex-Representativo South Trimble, of Kentucky; ex-Representative W. H. Ryan, of Buffalo, N. Y. Tho duties of tho houso door keeper are comparatively easy, and that placo pays $5,000 per year. Joe Sinnott, now a special employe of the house, who halls from Rich mond, Va wants to bo tho next doorkeeper. So does Georgo F. Parrish, of Ohio, secretary to Representative Sherwood of that state. The postmastershlp In tho house pays $ 1,000, There are as yet no active candidates, but they will materialize." . m' lXjffi4t&MM'f4efUh mitmf rUn.faAy "f itifr 1 1 to Jim