"v (IMMMkUaMM The Commoner. VOLUME 12, NUMBER 4 4 I a-. : ' II The Commoner. ISSUED WEEKLY t .At i.....i. J1ttfi if tn Entered n t I'ohioiiicq ai liinwi". ww. -. an ncoml- im matter. WII.I.IAM J. HIIVAN , , f ClIAM.M. W. HKYAN ItiLiiAim I. ' AJ K,,tor ,,, :,2.i ftw south 12th Street One Vcnr $1.01) Nix .Month flO In Clubu of Five or moro, per year.. .75 'I'll roe .lloiillm "'I Single Copy 0 Hum pic CoplcH Free. ForclRn Post. Cc Extra. HlJn.SUItll'TION.S can be Bent direct to The- Com moner. They run uIho ho went through ncwHpapern which have ailvi-rtlacd a clubbing rate, or through local UKcntf, whero HUb-acnla have been ap pointed. All remittance?! Hlmuld be Hcnt by post onice money order, express order, or by bank drart on New York or Chicago. Do not wend Individual clicckfl, Btanipu or money. HlflMCWAl.S The date on your wrapper shows the time to whleh your Hubscrlptlon l paid. Thus 191 a. Two we Ick are required after money has eelved to and Including the last Issue of January, January 21, '12 means that payment luui been re been received before the date on wrapper can bo changed. 0IIANI3 OP A DDK I3SS Subscribers requesting a change of address must give old as well as new ud dress. ADVICIITISINO Ratca will bo furnished upon application. Addross all communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb. CAISNtiGIH AS A WITNESS .That was a clover trick that Chairman Stanley played on Mr. Carnegie when he read him the first section of the anti-trust law and asked him what ho thought of that as a proposed measure. IIo thought It ahsurd and ridiculous; no wonder tho audionco laughed when Stanley explained that that has been tho law for more than twenty years. Mr. Carncgio is not a brilliant success as a witness. Tho commlttoo is restivo under his ovaslons and wanderings. "The remoteness of his mind from tho subject under discussion," as was onco said of Lord Salisbury is the chief characteristic of tho wily Scot. But they aro getting something he admitted recommending Mr. Knox, his Steel trust attorney to President McKinley for attorney general. A little light is thus thrown on tho methods employed by predatory wealth to control tho government. And how quickly tho subsidized press rush into dofensivo explanations! FIGHTING IN MISSOURI . Following is an Associated Press dispatch: St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 2S. Virgil Rule, chairman of Speaker Clark's campaign committee, to night addressed a letter to Lon Sanders, cam paign managor for Former Governor Joseph W. Folk, in which ho refused to appoint two Clark supporters to meet with Folk suppotors to provide for a divided delegation at tho Baltimoro convention. Rulo called attention to the statements issued by Folk and Clark a short time ago in which thoy agreed to abide by tho decision of tho delogatoB at the stato convention at Joplin, each declaring ho would refuse to permit his name to bo used as a presidential possibility if his op ponent was indorsed by tho delegation. Tho letter was written in reply to one by Sanders in which ho urged both camps to adopt "William J. Bryan's Idea of harmony and agreo on somo plan for a divided delegation at tho national convention. ROBERT BURNS Robert Burns was born Jan. 25, 1759. On Jan. 25, 1912, tho Chicago Tribune printed tho following tribute from S. P. Prowse, Peoria, 111: With spendthrift hand ho gavo his largess of poetic loro that those who crouched In fear might stand oroct on freedom's summit undis mayed. Upon the distant peaks of faroff years ho saw, through prophet's keen and penetrative glanco, tho dawning of tho brotherhood of man. Ho mado tho littlo rivers of his native land historic streams. In ovory mountain-sheltered loch ho saw tho bright reflection of his country's glorious past. He know that tyranny could never scale her heathor heights while sons re tained tho pride derived from patriotic sires Auld Scotia's rugged cliffs and smiling braes and ! -brier-scented dolls, tho rustling barley fields that caught but could not hold the sun sets varied hues, the strident call of curlew wtmnjr ueora m gatnering mist, the blithesome wiiu umi tunned Mb morning note of A. A. ouse D eman ds p .-A I ubiicity on- juqicia Appointments Following is an Associated Press dispatch: "Washington, Jan. 24. Publication by the president of every written or verbal indorse ment of candidates for all federal judicial judgeships from the supremo court down, prior to the appointment of the judges, would be re quired by a bill passed by the house today after a lively struggle. The requirement was added by Representative Cullop of Indiana, as an amendment to the Evans bill, which would abolish the federal circuit judgeship at Chicago made vacant by the resignation of Judge Peter S. Grosscup and supplant it with an additional district judgeship. "Republican Leader Mann demanded a sepa rate roll call on tho Cullop amendment, which was adopted, 148 to 82. Mr. Mann then led a fight against the entire bill and lost, 93 to 147. Tho Cullop amendment reads: " 'Hereafter, before the president shall ap point any district, circuit or supreme judge, he shall make public all indorsements made in be half of any applicant.' " This is a good bill and it ought to pass. Mr. Taft has been repeatedly challenged by Mr. Bryan to make public verbal and written recommendations upon which he appointed men to the bench and ho also urged the senate to require the president to file a statement of these remommendations at the time he sub mits the name of Justice Harlan's successor. The senate ought now to pass this house bill. Tho following reproductions from The Com moner will be interesting at this time: Extract from Commoner editorial October 6, 1911: "But, speaking of challenges, here's one for the president: Mr. Bryan challenges him to make public the written and verbal recom mendations upon which he appointed Justice White to the position of chief justice over Justice Harlan and the recommendations, writ ton and verbal, on which ho appointed the jus tices whom he has placed on the supreme bench. Did he know how they stood on tho trust ques tion or was it PURELY ACCIDENTAL that ALL of his appointees took the trust side of the question? Ho signed a publicity bill that re quires publicity as to campaign contributions. Why not have a littlo publicity as to the in fluences that control the appointment of United States judges?" Extract from Commoner editorial October 13, 1911: "Now that Mr. Perkins discloses the REASON for Governor Hughes' appointment to vH.w.. ucuu, win rresiueui rait tell US appintments to the supreme court.' 'That answer,' said Mr. Taft, 'reminds me of the story of the Irishman who inquired: 'Tell me, was your grandmother a monkey?' ' " But The Commoner has not asked Mr. Taft for his 'mo tives' in his appointments to the supreme court. It has asked Mr. Taft to make public the writ ten and verbal recommendations upon which ho appointed Justice White to the position of chief justice over Justice Harlan and the recommen dations, written and verbal, on which he ap pointed Justice Hughes, now famous as 'the rule of reason' originator. Did Mr. Taft know how these justices stood on the trust question or was it purely accidental that all his appoin tees took the trust side of the question? If Mr. Taft will make public these recommendations the people will be in a position to pass accurate judgment as to his 'motives.' In the meantime Mr. Taft need not be surprised if his refusal to give the people publicity as to the influences behind the successful candidates for justices of the supreme court is interpreted to mean that the men who persuaded Mr. Taft to appoint these gentlemen were the beneficiaries of tho decision whereby Viq Sherman anti-trust law was destroyed." Extract from Commoner editorial October 27, 1911: "TO THE PRESIDENT: You are about to select a successor to the late Associate Jus tice John M. Harlan. This will be the fifth associate justice chosen by you, not fo mention the privilege you had of naming the chief jus tice. The Commoner has repeatedly urged you to make public the recommendations, written and verbal, upon which you appointed Justices Lurton, Hughes, Van Devanter, Lamar and Chief Justice White. While you are makiug up your mind as to the advisability of comply ing with this suggestion you will have oppor tunity of giving complete publicity with respect to the selection of Justice Harlan's successor. The Commoner suggests that you make public all the recommendations, written and verbal, given you with respect to the appointment of an associate justice to take Justice Harlan's place. You can not fail to observe the high esti mation the people place upon the public services of Justice Harlan. You can not be unmindful of their anxiety that his successor be a man upon whom the special interests may not count in the rendering of judicial decrees. The people are watching this appointment, Mr. President. Will you take them into your confidence?" Commoner editorial November 10. 1911: "If President Taft persists in his refusal to make upon whoso recommendation Governor Hughes Public the recommending , h was appointed?" mfiT1t- nf fha .. A T . .. w Buuv-caoui lu justice Jtianan tuen Extract from Commoner editorial October 20, 1911: "The Associated Press report of Mr! Taft's meeting at Tacoma, Wash., October 11th, says: 'The president referred sarcastically to his challenge to publicists and jurists and 'others who don't deserve. the name' to find a loophole for illegal trusts in the Sherman anti trust law under the supreme court's Standard Oil and Tobacco decisions. The only answer to tho challenge, ho said, was tho Yankee one to tho question, 'Tell me your motives in your the progressive democrats and republicans in the United States senate have an opportunity to render distinct service to popular government. When the president sends to the senate tho name of Justice Harlan's successor let the pro gressive democrats and republicans demand that the president submit to the senate a state ment of tho verbal and written recommenda tions upon which tho appointment was made. This is an opportunity which the senate ought not to permit to go by." praiso, and the mavis' benediction in the thicket s green retreat, wore freely used to touch the golden harp of song and stir with hope tho languid souls of listening men. He deeply sinned and suffered, and yet it in not ours to judge his will's perversion and Ms blood 8 excess. His great unquestioned genius not his obliquity, concerns mankind. Borne down by poverty that could not bend his ind nr S, WlU' and forced to bar tho open alight oUn 2n ?T J?0 dId not clalm UIm thett! wTth ISH,?8?111 clalmei him first. Since then, wL5 nitUde ald pride- loly and tho wCsLf UJnarly trlbut0 to tte re Bard wWchniH 8tweetest strains the notes of Tonf Bhce0 rUnd orId uatU &WWa9&33Bi "BmKSRMEMR: ,1S!!MttOT! & ..al . "!!'l4iaiiiii