((" f . The Commoner. VOLUME (12 NUMBER 38 I? '. 11 h s c , V I"". it h-i V r- J! if ft 4 v K i E fl 4. t Jffcv 111 New Commoner Readers from One Township Oliver Van Syoc, Milo, Iowa: Enclosed find draft for .$27.75 to pay for 111 campaign subscriptions to The Commoner. When. I read in The Commoner of n certain township in Indiana sending 100 subscriptions, I set out to beat them in my township. I am a private citizen, living in licllmont township, Warren county, Iowa, and have no political obligation whatsoever; my township has always gone republican and my county has never been democratic. My 111 subscribers are from 111 people, each paying for their own naper, except four, who wore al ready Commoner subscribers and each of these sent the paper to a friend. My list consists of 45 republicans, G4 democrats, 1 prohibitionist and 1 socialist. Eighty-six are people who have never read your paper. Now I challenge any township in the United States to beat us. A GOOD AMENDMENT Senator La Follotto has introduced a resolu tion submitting an amendment making it easier to amend the federal constitution. A newspaper dispatch says: "Senator La Follette by a resolution proposed a radical change in the method of amending the constitution of the United States. By the terms of the resolution a majority of the two houses of congress would have authority to propose a constitutional amendment, or it might bo pro posed on the petition of ten states acting through their legislatures or through popular vote." The La Follette amendment is in the right direction but it should go further. It should permit ratification by a majority of the states, providing tho states ratifying contain half the population of tho United States. Thero Is no reason why three-fourths of the Btates should bo required. Tho present con stitution enables a minority to prevent progress. SO SUDDEN Tho reform impulse sometimes comes on one very suddenly. Take Mr,. Roosevelt's case, for Instance. When, last winter, Mr. La Follette pointed out the dangers which a second Taft term would bring, Mr. Roosevelt refused to take sides with him against tho administration. Now the danger is deemed sufficient cause for a new party. ALONE! A cartoonist, after reading the president's pathetic appeal for an unamended constitution and his enthusiastic indorsement of himself as the last surviving champion of that constitu tion, might be excused for recalling a declara tion that the children learn in'school. Why not a picture of the good ship Constitution on fire in mid-ocean and just below: , The boy stood on the burning deck )Vhence all but him had fled, The flames that lit the battle's wreck Shone 'round him o'er, the dead? ' Senator Beveridge, In his speech as temporary chairman trotted out the same old protective tariff ffraud tliat has been .exhibited every four years by the republican party. If the manu facturers are to be permitted, to write our, tariff lawB they can do it as successfully through the old republican party as through a new republi can party. Tt took Mr. Roosevelt seven years and a half as president to say nothing against the steel trust. How long will it take him under Mr. Perkln's management to do something to pro tect the people from tho steel trust? If Mr. Roosevelt has earned a third term be cause of tho service he has rendered to the re publican party, how many terras will he be en titled to if ho succeeds in organizing a successful new party? They used to "say that nothing but hard times could produce a new partyj but here we have a progressive democratic party and an entirely new party with good crops.' Mr. Roosevelt thinks that a great revolution Is coming unless, .he is given a third term. No need for alarm. .He is thp ,only blood spot on tho moon. Mr. Taft now sees the .'mistake he made , in AUowing himself to be indorsed so highly in 1908. 4 He could not live, up to the advance" notices., r ' t ' " : i l Editor Hamilton Holt of the New York1 in dependent pleads for an "endowedMiewspaper." Well? Carnegie, Rockefeller or Morgan? WHY THE DEMOCRACY SHOULD WIN The New York Independent prints the follow ing statement made by Mr. Bryan to the New York Independent at Baltimore: "Because it has won the right to put its principles into prac tice. While in the minority during the last sixteen years it has dominated public opinion and coerced the republican party into accepting many of its ideas. It is the only great party today with a policy and purpose and an enthusiastic membership. The republican party is divided between the staudpat element and the progressive element, and the progressive ele ment is divided into two factions. Each branch of the republican party would rather see the democratic party win than to see the other branch of the party triumph. The policy of the present administration is only an indication oi what would happen if either of the three fac tions in the republican party obtain control of tho executive office. Until the republican party passes through the struggle in which it is now engaged and is unified along some line of action, it can not hope to administer the government with satisfaction to the public. The demo cratic party passed through its regeneration six teen years ago and is now in position to leaci tho progressive forces of the country.' ' ' rwa? h,n notified of Mb nomination, Presl. dent Taft is now very much in the position of SSn,imal at thUSt its paw int0 urn and didn't know how to let go. Yet, may not Theodore Roosevelt beas badly Eo'nwm ab?U Mb Wn ability as he was about the ability of the man he foisted upon the coun try as his successor? If the "Bull Moosers" and "Steam 'Rollers" I wlnUG A0 te" what kn concerning one get m?sry PStmCe authoriti will have "o to Il.eqllired 10'000 words from President Taft by hSSi RoT pVevi0Usly eipted fp" hG indlcatins are that this is one year wherein the people will not be deceived bv "Political hysteria" upon the one side and "calm political poise" upon the other ' 0q000 WANTED--A DEMOCRATIC CAM PAIGN FUND BY POPULAR ) CONTRIBUTION Governor Wilson has announced that ' no campajgn contributions will be re ceived from corporations. This act S ' the democratic candidate for the presi in'I.W1.1 be a?P y democrats who TrTnll Party Kbe free from the con trol of the special interests. The na tional committee must, however, ha money with which to carry on the cam paign and this money must come from the people. The Commoner will assiS m the collection of this fund and it will receive contributions, acknowledging The Smf to AtS ?lumns and silvering e fund to the treasurer of the democratic . nauonal committee, Every dempcVat nSA Ba7e Somo part ln thls work. S?b?,?fni asj!amed 1 m0 a small con ation. Give what you can afford , and eery penny will be acceptable. 1 Hnn WV1 hint: Circulate a subscrip 2 WjJ once among the democrats of . your precinct and send the proceeds to ,pfat9ner offiqe without delay. The democratic national committee must , be supplied with funds immediately HAVING FUN WITH "MARSE HENRY" The newspaper boys are having fun with "Marse Henry." The veteran editor of the Courier-Journal insists that he feels very com fortable and is "resting easy," but his hysteri cal actions belie his words and "the boys" are unkind enough to remind "Marse Henry" of the fact. Referring to one of Mr. ,Watterson's ill natured criticisms of Mr. Bryan, the Sioux City (Iowa) Journal says: "It is true that in 1904 Mr. Bryan missed a cog and failed to get tho nomination. His misfortune extended to denial of absolutism in writing the platform. But Mr. Bryan did not bolt. He took his medicine, though the faces he made on the stump gave him tho reputation of a contortionist. But ho did not bolt. His method of speech- suggested the disquietude of his mind, it. is true. But ho did not bolt. He held to it that the democratic party had a future, and he looked forward to being a part of it. The spirit, pf; prophecy was upon him, He was able to demonstrate in the democratic national convention of 1908 that in 1904 the democratic party had made an egregi ous blunder.- Mr.. Bryan was rehabilitated and again made the leader of his party. The result of the election inil908 did not make Mr. Bryan president, but reproduced the figures to prove that Mr. Bryan was a better man than Judge Parker. Mr. Bryan did not care-if or .himself (if that is the suspicion that is in Colonel Watter son's mind)', but he was moved by ambition to save the democratic party to the people. It is worth while to note with what courage he placed himself in subordination at Baltimore. He hit some of Colonel Watterson's friends hard, and lodged his Louisville friend in the hole from whence there was nothing for him to do but to cry out that he would support 'Satan.' The reference, to be sure, was to Governor Wood row Wilson. Ifi Mr. Bryan did not have his way altogether at Baltimore, he had enough of it to save him from nervous prostration. 'As the case stands, Mr. Bryan is a national hero. The proof is presented in the rush to use both hands in exchanging greetings. Mr. Bryan is for Wil son this year beyond a doubt. He is enthusias tically so. If the New Jersey governor is elected we can thank Mr. Bryan for it, and Mr. Bryan can continue to point with pride to his faithful ness to the democratic party, at whatever per sonal sacrifice, all for the uplift,, the disenthrall ment and the glory of the common people. It ill becomes Colonel Watterson to exhibit envy." THERE ARE OTHERS An Associated Press dispatch from Washing ton says: "One hundred and twenty million dollars was filched from the American people during the last' fiscal year by swindlers who operated largely through the United States mails, according to a statement just made public in a formal report to Postmaster General Hitch cock. This is an increase of $50,000,000 in tho aggregate of the ' previous year. Of those who are alleged tov have operated the fraudulent schemes, 1,003 were arrested by postoffice in spectors. During the year which ended June 30 last, 452 persons were convicted and sen tenced nd 571 cases are awaiting final disposi tion. Postmaster General Hitchcock's order to inspectors to collect evidence that would war rant criminal prosecution of tho swindlers gradually, is building a wall of protection against such frauds around tho American people." This, however, is not a mark compared to the amount filched from tho pockets of the people through tho trust system and other highly pro tected republican party policies. If the federal authorities would only prosecute the influen zal men who conspire against the lives of the people, with Tjialf the zeal th.ey employ in tho prosecution of the ordinary violators of the law, the results would be Immediately notice able in the cost of living. nw&wQnif& '7"' I1 EMM. Vm Mim MMtMM4lMi irnkma