f 'Wii tm ip ! ! iww in ! K K' K K K B' y i . I 4 The Commoner- ISSUED WEEKLY Entered at the Poatofllco at Lincoln, Nebraska, KM HccoiKl-clusn matter. William J. IIhyam Kdltor nnil Proprlotor IlICUAIll) L. IIktcai.ku Aexuclnlo Kdltor ClIAltLKfl W. IJllTAK Piibllfllior IfdltorJnl itoomii nnd llnsltiosa Ofllco 824-330 South 12th Street One Ycnr 91.00 ttlx MtmthH 00 In Cluba of Flvo or moro, per year... .7B Three Month .28 Single Copy OS Samplo Copies Froo. Foreign Post. 6c Extra. SUnsOIUI'TIONS can bo acnt direct to Tho Com moner. They can also bo sont tin nifr' nowspapors which havo advertised a clubbing rate, or through local agents, where sub-agents havo been appoint ed. All remittances should bo sent by postofllco monoy order, exproHH order, or by bank draft on Now York or Chicago. Do not send Individual checks, stamps or monoy. L SCONTINUANCRS It lo found that a largo majority of our subscribers prefer not to havo their flubscrlptlonn interrupted and tl clr flics broken In caho thoy fall to remit boforo expiration. It la therefore assumed that contlnuanco Is desired un less subscribers order discontinuance, cither when ubscrlblng or at any tlmo during tho year. PftlflSISNTATION COPIES Many I ersons sub scribe for friends, intending that the paper shall stop at the ond of tho year. If Instructions aro given to that effect thoy will receive attention at tho proper tlmo. UMNMWAIjS Tho dato on your wrapper shows tho tlmo to which your subscription Is paid. Thus January 21, 10, means that payment has boon re ceived to and lnclrdlng the last lssuo of January, 1910. Two weeks aro required after money has been received beforo tho dato on wrapper can bo changed. CHANGE OF ADDRESS Subscribers requesting & change of addresw must glvo old as woll as now address. ADVERTISING Rates will bo furnished upon application. Address all communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb, JAMES WAS RIGHT It sooms that Congressman Ollio M. James protested against tho action of tho state com mitteo of Kentucky in leaving out tho senatorial nomination In Issuing tho call for a primary. James was right on this subject as ho is on others. It would not take long to build up tho democratic party if all its representatives in ofllco were like James, thoroughly democratic at all times. In addressing tho committee he said: "Gentlemen of tho committee, I believe our party was honest, candid and sincere in three groat national platforms. We have said: 'We favor tho election of United States senators by a direct vote of tho people, for this is the gate way to all other reforms.' We not only wrote it in our platform, declared it as our faith but from ovory platform and stump in the republic democratic orators advocated it with wonderful power and irresistible eloquence. I believe it is our duty now In our party affairs to as nearly approach this pledge, this promise, this bond of honor which wo gave to tho people in our party affairs as possible. I believe that every democrat in Kentucky has as much right to a voice in selecting our senatorial nominee as he has to a voice in selecting our nominee for governor, for auditor, for treasurer, for attor ney general or for any of tho other state offlcers. Tho moro than 240,000 democrats in Kentucky havo as much right to a voice in selecting their nominee for United States senator as for anv ofllco within tho gift of tho people, for it in the most important ofllco in our dual form of gov ernment sayo one, and that the presidency alone fhJStl nPnnmSry 0r convenon you tell each of tho 240,000 democrats everywhere within the confines of the commonwealth whom ho shall support, and yet you deny the right of the great body of democracy to say to fifty-five men in the legislature whom they shall support "Tho democrats who live ln the republican counties of the state, who are not so fortunate to bo in a district which is democratic are de nied absolutely any voice whatever in the It lection of their United States senator Yet n one will say that their loyalty to democracy is not as great as that of any democrat who is in tho majority Six times the house of rlp?esent atives of tho United States has passed an amon ment to the constitution, providing for ? tCiteht of the people to elect their senators by a direct y.,t0- Todi such a resolution providing tor nf n SS1 Is pendinS before So senate bv th I? Sta,teS' havIng been recetly Passed by the house of representatives. Your own The Commoner. legislature in Kentucky, recognizing the people should havo tho right to select their senator, has many times memorialized tho congress of the United States for tho passage of an amendment, giving tho right to tho people to elect their sen ators by a direct vote. When your candidate for governor is nominated, he must go belore the people and ask their suffrage at the-polls, but under our system tho nominee for uniteci States senator is neither selected by the people nor do tho people havo an opportunity to pass upon tho nomination. I believe in giving tho people a chance to cast their ballot. Shall wo turn our back upon this democratic doctrine of a lifetime? Shall we say it is true we advocate it on tho stump and write it in our platform, but when opportunity offers to show our faith by our work, to act it and live it, we do not do so? "Tho senato today is fifty per cent million aires. Why? It is because the people have had no opportunity to select them. Scandal and bribery are constantly throwing their black shadows upon seats in this great parliamentary body. Why? It is because the voice of the people Is not heard, and the democratic oppor tunity is not given to the voter to pass upon them at the ballot box. Corporations, monop olies and combinations have been enabled to select their champions and place them there, because the public will has been throttled. I make bold to say that I do not believe there is a single candidate for the democratic nomina tion for United States senator who will have the courage in the open to oppose the nomination of a United States senator at the same time and in the same manner that you nominate your other state offlcers. If those who seek the ofllco are unwilling to come in the open and attempt boldly to throttle the public will why should they ask you to do it for them? "The voice of the people is the voice of God, and it is equally true that the voice of the people should be the voice of democracy. Let your call provide for the nomination of a United States senator along with the rest of your state officers. Free this great office from the trickery, trading and corruption that has attended in the past, the selection of the United States senators by the legislatures in the various states of the union. The honest democrat will welcome it. Tho dishonest one is not to be considered. Our sister stato of Indiana met this issue in a cour ageous way the democratic convention of that stato nominated the Hon. John W. Kern for United States senator. They went before the people in an open, honest, frank fight, and swept the state triumphantly, electing the legis lature, the state offlcers and the senatorial nominee. "The democratic party of the nation never faced a greater- opportunity. The eyes of the whole nation turn to it with hope and expec tancy. They are trusting us. Let us not betray them. Popular government is not a failure. Democratic principles are growing more popular. Equal rights to all men and special privileges to none have survived. Thomas Jefferson was not only the founder of our party, but he fought for the election of United States senators by a direct vote of the people. Include the sena torial contest in your call, vindicate the wis dom of tho father of democracy, Thomas Jeffer son. Vindicate your three national platform declarations. Vindicate the state legislature when it asked congress for such a right. Vindi cate the six houses of representatives which have passed such a resolution. Vindicate every democratic orator in the land, who from plat form and stump has advocated it, and above all, vindicate yourself and the democracy of Kentucky, and the democracy of Kentucky will love you for it." GORE OF OKLAHOMA Extracts from Senator Gore's remarks before" the investigating committee: "I have but a few words to say. I shall neither analyze the evidence nor answer the argument of counsel. I shall engage In no crimination or recrimination. Least of all shall I enter upon a defense of myself .against tho aspersions cast upon mo. I need not remind the committee that those charges stand upon the uncorroborated word of a single witness who was driven by the most powerful motive to malign and to misrepresent. "Mine has been the common fate of everv one who makes such a disclosure. He thit 5fBupt.a,.,leJ?t of BerPents need not be sur prised if he hears the serpent's hiss or if he feels the serpent's sting. Other instances are not wanting in our history. "races are "Theirs has been the common refuge of all VOLUME 11, NUMBER 3 those against whom such disclosures are made. Tbey answer with charges and counter charges and like the scuttle-fish, darken the water and seek to escape in the darkness of their own making. "I knew that those who would undertake to debauch would not hesitate to defame. I knew that all that malice and all that money could do would be done to discredit me. Senator LaFollette and I foresaw those consequences and discussed the eventuality. "It was an ordeal of fire which any man would prefer to escape. Any one would seek to shun such a sensation and to avoid the notoriety en tailed. I therefore, exhausted every resource; I tried every expedient; there waB no alternative left; I had no choice; I went to the last ditch; I placed my back to the wall. It came to pass that silence would be criminal. There may be those who still think that my silence even then, would have been golden, but it might have cost the Indians millions of dollars. "While I knew that the viles of wrath and re sentment would be poured out upon me, there has been a measure of malignity that I dreamt not of, but If I had known in advance that the assaults would have been a thousand, times worse than they have been, I still should not have been deterred from the discharge of my duty as I saw it. I had no right to calculate upon consequences either personal or political to myself. "My experience in this affair has demon strated how much easier it is to remain silent and secure, rather than to wage war upon wrong doing and wrong doers of a certain description, especially if they chance to be both powerful and venal. My experience in this affair has been a terrible example, and a terrible warning to others to purchase security at the price of silence and neglect of duty. There are those, it seems, who would have this committee, add to the terrors of that example, and to the terrors of that warning who would have this committee place the finger of silence upon its lips and signify to all others that they who would be safe must be still, and speak not lest the accused should have the power, as he will have the disposition to reap ruinous vengeance upon his accuser. - ' . . " "While this bitter cup has been pressed to my lips I have not murmured. I still believe that I rendered some service to the Indians, and that service compensates me for all tho sacrifices which I have incurred. I still believe that I may have helped to save the Indians from three to five millions of dollars, and that saving and that service more than compensate me for all calumny which has come upon me in the past and for all that may come hereafter. I pro nounce no eulogy upon myself I simply did my duty as I saw it, and I shall abide in the faith that the truth will triumph." GIVE US LIGHT Editor of The Commoner: The Baltimore jubilee is a thing of the past. Will you please let the readers of The Commoner know whether the extremes got together or not? Did the dog get his tail ln his mouth or the tail get the head? Also what big interest that was doing a lawful business was ever threatened by the success of the democratic party? Why so much stress was laid on a middle of the road policy between the conservative or reac tionaries and the radical? If this was not a bid for the corruption fund that the favored in r0? h?Teiee? contributing to the republican SSJE t. b,e uture work of the democratic 25SLSLto liB a wrong by Piece meal or a scheduled reduction toward the right? Are they going to demonstrate "at what rate per annum !nnCSSbfe?,n5e8 a llBht" In theIr tri work? m?Slr n?ok J011611 tne ideas of the ban 8S?ft wi e,F banuet) the previous even SS W York' t00k the through train for tho nul cmnr Pat? n?1 us & on thia repast SSJt ? ?ere, Ti11 be a reat many of tho X? , d e 0f tbe democratic party working S?,hii?e SUCC?SS ith0 radlcal wing of the r publican party. No one that has at heart tho teMtaS? f ?l8 . and has been 23U; F I the principles of real democracy, is at anv hbnno ?eftracd by a milk and water diet at .any banquet. Yours respectfully A NEW YORK READER. lolini? Sn Homestead, monthly farm tvSSSi naItlonal scope, will be sent to all ShHS !bscribcrs. thout additional cost, Sf 5SfW e,lp Ascriptions during the montH of February when tlds notice is mentioned. i!SmmiK8tciaiu