"'AfTi- - FEBRUARY 10, 1811 The Commoner. ' t ' . . v T 7 li Mi rCURRNT topics "? THERE WILL BE sorrow jn every land over the news carried In the following dispatch Li'om Cleveland, Ohio: "Friends of Tom L. oohnson are worried concerning the condition of his -health, which has srown worse. The ' former mayor is afflicted with liver and kidney trouble. Ever since his defeat for the mayor alty a year agp he has dodged the limelight ot publicity and only on one occasion hft3 he ap peared in public. That was at the closing of the recent gubernatorial campaign here, when he appeared on the platform with Governor Har mon to urge his followers to support the demo cratic state ticket. Only his most intimate friends are allowed to see the former mayor and . his friends despair of his recovery." WRITER IN THE Denver News says: jCjl "Sunday, January 29, was the Chinese Now Year, the first day of the year 4657. For 4557 years, according to their own records, China has had a continuous civilization, language, tradition and, to some extent, government. European scholars cast some doubts on this claim; but there is no doubt of a substantial basis of fact underlying it. What children tho very mention of those figures makes us west erners feel! The laBt conquest of England dates back only eight and one-half centuries. The -charter of English liberties is some 700 years old... The history of' France is a thing of four teen centuries, 'if you give it the most liberal possible interpretation. Even if you go baok to- the beginnings' of western civilization in Greece, tho first Olympiad was held in 776 B. C, and the Trojan "war is supposed to date from abotit 1100 B. Of. But the Chinese calendar harks back to 2646 B. C, a time when tho pyramids were still 'new and shiny. Persistence of .civilization dike1 that 'argues a deal of char acter; and we believe the argument Is exact. hinarJias Jived not only because she ha,d an unusually good chance to live, l)ut also, because Qhe had a most unusual hold on social life. When the history of our own time is studied with the dispassionate exactness which we bring to the study of Rome, it, may be the savants will de cide .China had quite as much to teach us at tho beginning of tho twentieth century as we "had to teach her. Let us .hope It will not be re corded that China was the better pupil." MANY PEOPLE who hardly remembered the name "of , the vice president arerpaying con siderable attention to that office since Mr. Sher 'm&n's yote carried ship subsidy through the senate. A writer in the Lincoln (Neb) Journal says: "Now and then the vice president be comes more than a fifth wheel -in our govern ment, Last Thursday was Buch a time. Ex ercising his right to cast the deciding vote In caso of a tie, Vice President Sherman saved the ship subsidy bill -and set back the bill for the popular election of senators. Both votes -were of importance. This does not often happen. Ordinarily o little is the vice president In evi dence that his office Is regarded as a political burying ground. Says Oliver's 'Alexander Ham ilton:' 'The vice, president ia not an active force in government. He is not even a member in thid; but a sort of queen bee kept in xe gervo in ar cell In case the acting monarch should die or' be killed. His position Is one of honor and dignity, but of no executive importance. He presides over the senate, and in earlier time was held to, hay ft kind of reversionary inter est in the presidency.' If such incident as that of -Friday occurred bftener""it would make a dif ference7 in the selection of vice presidents. Jn general, under our system, a nominee for vice president never TepTesents the views of the ma jority of Tils party nor of the president. It happens in this way. Each of the two chief parties is commonly divided Into two elements, these being about as violently antagonistic to each other as to the opposing party. In every national convention these elements fight over the presidency. One element wins. Then to 'harmonize' the party the defeated faction is al lowed to choose the vice president. In tho last republican convention 'the-element of the party led' by Theodore Roosevelt named the presiden tial candidate... Tho element represented by Speaker Cannon and Senator Aldrlch recoived tho vice presidency as a consolation prize. Of course the most objectionable feature of this method; Is the chance it gives a minority faction of a jjarty to. inherit the presidency by tho death of tho elected president. Mr. Sherman's opportunity to cast a deciding vote on an im portant measure this week ahows another direc tion, in which the practice does not work to tho accurate expression of popular needs or wishes. This inconsistency will vaniBh with the spread of direct primary methods of choosing delegates to national conventions and direct expressions as to presidential preference. The plan will naturally extend to tho vice president, making both members of the ticket representative of majority opinion in the party." A WASHINGTON dispatch to tho "Lincoln (Neb.) Journal says: "Tho success of Governor Woodrow Wilson in New Jersey in preventing tho election of James Smith, Jr., to the United States senate, and bringing about the election of Jamos E. Martine, who was tho choice in tho primary, has given Dr. Wilson ad ditional support among the progressive demo crats in congress. The New Jersey governor has many admirers among the progressive dem ocrats at the capital. Their enthusiasm for him has been quickened by the performance with respect to the senatorship. A disposition has been manifest here to talk of Governor Wilson as-learned In the theory of politics but -short on the practice. His friends here say this sort of talk will be indulged in less than before "in view of the way in which ho has forced the election of Martine. That Gbvernor Wilson will have' to be reckoned with seriously as a presi dential possibility '- Is now, clears "His 'boomers are' expected-'to get extremely busy and to make capital of tho Smith, defeat. In tho meantime, opponents of Wilson in congress are showing a disposition to say that Wilson has given Smith the 'double cross' and Is not deserving of the presidential nomination and that if ho Is named he cannot carry New Jersey. An era of Wilson talk may now bo looked for. Governor Judson Harmon "has had the advantage of most of the talk and publicity thus far. But Governor Har mon Is far from being nominated. Not only is he not going to have things his own way, but definite steps are being directed to head him off, and prevent him from getting hold of a' lot of pledges. Some of Champ Clark's friends are busying themselves to this end. They do not propose to, allow 'Uncle Jud' to ,go gumshoeing along and getting promises from prominent poli ticians in numerous states without trying to get some pledges themselves. At least, they want democrats to pause and consider and not let themselves get tied up to the Harmon chariot so they cannot disentagle themselves." LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY, is tho first bidder for the democratic -national convention of 1912. A Washington dispatch to the Courier Journal says: "Louisville for the democratic national convention of 1912. The plan was suggested to Prospective Speaker Champ Clark today, and ho- is little less than .enthusiastic about it. 'It is a first-rate Idea,' said the next speaker. 'Going to Louisville will bo like going home. All the Mlssourians are kin to the Ken tucklans,' said Mr. Clark, 'and I would be glad to see the Kentucky metropolis get the conven tion. It is centrally located and easily readied and I believe its. hotels would accommodate the crowds; It was suggested to Mr. Clark that three years ago Louisville could have had tho convention, hut at the last moment the money necessary failed to show up and Denver was selected with Its 100,000 golden dollars. 'I want to say,' replied Mr. Clark, 'that I, for one, am opposed to putting national democratic con ventions on the auction block. I believe Louis ville or any other city which wants th 'Conven tion should not be made to contribute more than the expenses of the convention, and if the citizens of a city guarantee legitimate expenses thia is all that they ought to be made to do.' All the members of the Kentucky delegation aro willing to go in and help if Louisville busi ness men say tho word. Baltimore is already conducting an active campaign, and Chicago, Denver and San Francisco aro also expected to bo bidders when the time conies. Tho demo cratic hosts were never better treated than at Denver, but it is recognized (hat the mountain city is too far away and that tho fight will como for tho selection of a city more centrally locat ed. The democratic national committee, which meets hcr6 in December, will fix tho time and place for tho convention. National Committee man Uroy Woodson, of Owensboro, is tho man for tho Louisville peoplo tc get in touch with." C CONCERNING THE claim that tho financial J honor of tho country, was recently "saved by Morgan" the New York World says: "To bo saved by J. Pferpont Morgan is one of tho most expensivo luxuries that a financial institu tion can Indulge in. In tho long run it is prob ably moro expensive oven than honest banking. Mr. Morgan is a dashing and melodramatic rescuor, but ho always collects his Carnegio hero medal in advance. Yesterday Mr, Morgan saved the Twelfth Ward and Nineteenth Ward banks, which are allied with tho Carnegie Trust com pany, by tho benevolent expedient of taking over another allied concern, tho Madison Trust com pany, and annexing it to his Equitablo Trust company. During the panic of 1907 Mr. Morgan did considerable" financial rescuing, as a result of which he added tho Tennessee Coal and Iron company to his steel trust, turned the Metro politan steamship line over to tho Now York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad company, and gathered inHhd Port phester road by way of gpod. measurement. As for yesterday's trans action, the superintendent of banks says that 'every one iff tobe -congratulated at thetUiil of events and doubtless ho is right. "Surely the wight that had just been snatched from' a watery grave ought not to complain becauso tho daring rescuer took his clothes by way of reward," SENATOR HALE of Maine will retire March 4, after having served Iwenty years in tho upper branch of congress. A Washington dis patch carried by tho Associated Press says: "When Senator Hale and Senator Aldrlch retire from the senate in March there will bo only one senator left whose term of service In the sdnate began tho same year as thoso of tho two yeterans from Maine and Rhodo Island. He is Senator Frye, of Maine. All three en tered tho senate in 1881, Hale, March 4 of that year; Frye, March 15, and Aldrioh, October 5. The only other senator whoso term of service approaches these in length is Senator Cullom, of Illinois, who began his senatorial career March 4, 1883. Although Senator Frye entered the senate only eleven days behind Hale, Frye has been the 'junior' senator from Maine for thirty years. He is seventy-nine years old and Hale's senior by five years In point of age. He succeeded James G. Blaine in tho senate and has seen seven presidents in tho White House- Garfield, Arthur, Cleveland, Harrison, McKInley, Roosevelt and Taft. Senator Fry has been presi dent pro torn, of the senate- the man who. pre sides when the vice president is absent or after the death of a vlco president since the middle of tho second Cleveland administration. Adlai E. Stevenson, of Illinois, was vlco president when Mr. Frye was chosen president pro tem. Ho has Tield that honor by re-election ever since. When Vice President HobaTt died in. November, 1899, Mr. Frye presided over the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh congreses. Again, after tho as sassination of Mr. McKInley took Colonel Roose velt from the senate chamber to the White House, Mr. Frye became president pro tem. and presided over the senate in the Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth congresses. Colonel Roosevelt presided over the senate only five days from March 4 to March 9, 1901, in st special session called to pass upon Mr. McKinley's first nom inations. In the fifteen years that Mr. Frye has been the president pro tem. he has been th6 actual presiding officer for six years of that timo in tho -place of Vice President Hobart and Vice President Roosevelt." .' ..'dim.i.iis- ' -' '-"g'r.igstea !