(,T?!WJW?'Pt?(BJff 6 The Commoner. , "9T.- B'."PWR V w; . ii i ', The Five Passions of Ollie James It is hard to concoivo that a man with tho namo of Ollie should have any passions worth mentioning. But it Is also hard to realize that any ono of that name can be six feet six inches in height and weigh 275 pounds. Ono could understand it if the namo were turned round. James (or Jim) Ollio could well bo big and bouncing and go into politics; but Ollie James! Woll, it simply shows how lavish Kentucky Is In raising big men when even an Ollie is made on such a generous scale. Even Kentucldans, however, couldn't quite reconcile themselves to that name as tho youngster who bore it began to expand in all directions. So down in his home town of Marion they long ago began to call him "Whltoy" James and they keep it up to this day. "Ollie," says a writer in the Saturday Evening Post, "a tender diminutive rhyming with Cholly and Molly, and you expect to see a slender and bandboxy person, perfumed and pompadoured. You expect to seo that, but do you? You do not; take it from me, you do not. What you do see is a large and robust Kentucky citizen, half a foot over six feet, with shoulders a yard across, weighing two hundred and seventy-five pounds, with a big head on a big neck, with arms that look as if they could out-squeeze a cotton com press and with legs that weigh, apiece more than any Cholly over cholled, concluding in pedestals amply constructed to bear their bur den. Tis he Ollie; the pride and joy of the Blue Grass, the mighty mountain of Marion, the peerless peak of tho Pennyrilo." Ho is not only big but he seems even bigger than ho is. Another writer Insists that he is seven feet high and six feet wide. "To say that he is as big as tho side of a house does not describe him at all," we are told; 'Jhe is as big as the side of a sky-scraper." "He is not fat, he is just broad and big. He has the face of a prize-fighter and a voice that, when ho lets it out to the last notoh, sounds like the battle of Bunker Hill. He is probably the best stump-speaker in the democratic party. As an orator he Is a cross between Bryan as he was when he delivered the Cross of Gold speech, and Robert G. Ingersoll as ho was when he de livered the Plumed Knight, speech. That is, he has Ingersoll's way of bringing out a felicitous phrase coupled with Bryan's tricks of manner of voice not the Bryan of today, but the Bryan of 1896." A. big man like that has to have big paBslons of some kind to keep him going. Otherwise he Just lolls around in the house and makes a nuisance of himself. Ollie James is credited with five passions by his numerous biographers. One Is for baseball. He no longer runs bases, and he never did run them very well. All he did was to take three steps and then slide, and there he was. But even that he has long since cut out. Now he roots, and he does it with his arms and legs as well as his megaphone voice. He is said on good authority to be the noisiest rooter in Marion, if not in Washington. His second passion developed about the same time as the first. It is a passion for sorghum molasses and smoked hams. He once carried a tin-pail of tho molasses all the way from his home in Kentucky to Washington to present it to Mrs. Champ Clark, and we don't know how many Kentucky haras ho has sent to friends in Washington. His father who is still living Attends personally to the smoking of these hams find uses, it is said, sassafras wood instead of hickory, thus giving the meat a peculiar aro matic flavor. The third of "Ollie's" passions is for a horse race. As he is a Kentuckian, you would, of course, have guessed that. He not only loves a horse-race, but he loves to bet on it, "Loves to," wo say; whether ho does actually bet, de ponent saith not. Passion number four is an affection for the Methodist church. A Kentucky correspondent for the Nashville American even places this pas sion of the senator's ahead of all others. He says of James: "It's at a prayer-meeting in the Methodist church on Wednesday night that he Is supremely happy. In truth, I think ho would rather participate in a lively protracted meeting than engage in a rough and tumble stumping political campaign, though It must bo admitted that 'Whltoy loveB politics next to his God. But ho believes in the religion of the old-school Methodism and lines up for it on every occasion. He married a Methodist preacher's daughter, Miss Ruth Thomas, and took her as his bride to Washington when he first went there as con gressman. Passion number five is, of course, a love for politics or rather love for the democratic party. He is a partisan or he is nothing. Ho is as "regular" as Champ Clark, and it was because of the latter's regularity that James was such a stout advocate of his nomination for presi dent. He is also a Bryan man, and when the latter made his violent assault upon the Clark forces at Baltimore, Ollie James, presiding over the convention, presented a pitiful, perspiring spectacle of divided affection. He began his political career as a school boy by perusing the pages of the Congressional Record, learning some of the speeches by heart and thundering them forth at audiences in the schoolroom when his turn came to declaim. Ho continued his political education, when sweet sixteen, by acting as a page in the state legis lature, studying law in between times. When he was thirty-two, having developed into a good lawyer and a good stump-speaker, he announced his candidacy for congress. He won by an enor mous vote, and kept on going to congress until, last year, he expressed a desire to become a senator. Considered from the house gallery, says Alfred Honry Lewis, writing in the Cos mopolitan, Mr. James is an impozing spectacle: "Well built, shoulders squared, good eyes, good nose, good mouth, a jaw that tells of iron resolution, the impression he creates is alto gether in his favor. Smooth of face, thought fully full forehead, there is that in the atmos phere of Mr. James which never fails to enlist one's notice. You may not know who he is, but you know he is somebody. Even his pro found baldness might be said to assist. For as to that matter of hair, Mr. James must be listed among the utterly bald. His scalp has been, in deed, most grimly weeded. There is a thin sown fringe even with the ears which still holds the field like some forlorn hope of the capillary. But that is tho hirsute most and best that can be said for Mr. James." Current Literature. PASS IT ALONG In one of his admirable speeches in the house of representatives, Representative Sulzer said: "The next president of the United States must be a democrat! "The next congress must be democratic in both branches! "The campaigns of 1910 and 1911 are history. "The national campaign of 1912 is now under way. "In the last two campaigns the democratic forces were organized and united. Everywhere democratic clubs were organized by the young men of the country, and these clubs, acting through tho various state leagues or federa tions of democratic clubs, and with the regular party organizations, conducted active, aggres sive and systematic campaigns; did very effec tive work, with gratifying results. In some states there was a change of fully 50 per cent in the vote, due to the influence of these organi zations; while In other states the result of the election in some instances was attributed largely to their efforts. These organizations are potent factors and powerful influences for democratic success. This Is the age of the young man, and the results of these two campaigns prove con clusively what can be accomplished through organization and unity of effort. "It should be constantly borne in mind that while the distribution of literature and enthus iastic democratic meetings, addressed by able and earnest speakers, are valuable contributions to a successful campaign, by far the most im portant work is the reaching of the Individual voter who will not attend public meetings and is not likely to read our campaign literature Other things being equal, the party which makes the most thorough canvass of voters by capable workers will certainly win, and the contribu tion which the clubs of the league can make to the efficiency of this work, while it may be weak in ostentation, is of the greatest value. "The campaign committee, therefore, urgent ly recommends that the committee pf each indi vidual club, having each a canvass of voters should bo composed of experienced, energetic workers, who are "willing and able to give time to tho canvass, and we further urge that what- VOLUME 12, NUMBER 39 ever work may be undertaken by each club direct effort shall bo made to reach voters in their homes. "The recommendations of the committee am therefore as follows: "First Organization of appropriate campaign committees. "Second Special attention to new voters and to the poll or registration of voters. "Third The reaching of as many indepen dent voters as possible, and the placing in their hands of carefully selected campaign literature as a supplement of earnest personal appeal." These are good suggestions. Pass them along. GOOD WORK F. A. Coyle Enclosed find draft to pay for tho enclosed club of 14 subscribers to Tho Com. moner, each for thrco months. B. M. Hoffcr, Springvillo, Iowa I enclose herewith list of 111 subscribers to whom please fiend The Commoner during the campaign. Find enclosed my check to pay for same. Judson E. Richardson, Evart, Mich. En closed T hand you check in payment for the enclosed 1G2 campaign subscriptions to The Commoner. Unfortunately my unavoidable absence has delayed me in securing these sub scriptions for The Commoner; but I will get others without delay. J.' D. Burdick, .M. D., Ft. Gibson, Okla. -Replying to your favor of recent date I would state that I have been making up a club of sub scribers to The Commoner and enclose you here with a draft to pay for tho accompanying 100 subscribers. I have been invited by tho chair man of our county committee to take tho mat ter up with tho democrats in Muskogee. I shall try to show them that this plan of campaigning is the easiest, logical and most feasible; that it appeals direct to the intelligence of the people tho only rational way and renders tho old stereotyped regime of flamboyant parades and hounding tho brush to get tho people out to hear tho uspeakin" obsolete. J. H. Cushenbcrry, Secretary and Treasurer, Democratic Headquarters, Girard, Kan. I en closo check for $100 to apply on campaign sub scriptions. Wo are going to secure ono thous and Commoner subscribers in this county and are sending you under separate cover about 700 the list will follow in a few days. J. T. McGraw, W. Va. Enclosed find check for $15.00 for which send 100 copies of Tho Commoner each week to Jos. Wehrle, Jr., presi dent McGraw Marching Club, Charleston, W. Va. I want to send The Commoner to clubs closely identified with Mr. Bryan in the great fight he has made for the past sixteen years. J. McClellan, Chairman County Committee, liansing, Mich. I enclose herewith list of 109 campaign subscribers for The Commoner, sub scriptions to run until after election. Wm. Van Stcenbcrgcr, la. Herewith And money order to pay for tho enclosed club of 37 campaign subscribers to Tho Commoner. J. P. Cain, Dickinson, N. D. Tho following is a list of 100 campaign subscribers to The Commoner with check to cover the same en closed. Col. A. E. Brackett, Bremen, O. Starting from my home Friday while waiting to take the train I secured ono subscriber for Tho Com moner and then on different trains and while waiting for trains, I have secured the enclosed list of 35 campaign subscribers to The Com moner. W. M. Englohart, Encampment, Wyo. I enclose herewith draft for the enclosed club of 40 subscribers, names and addresses herewith. Tho political situation in this locality seems to be growing toward Roosevelt he is drawing his support practically all from tho Taft ranks. E. R. Week, Spokane, Wash. Herewith An" draft to pay for tho enclosed club of 200 cam paign subscribers to The Commoner. If elected again will Mr. Roosevelt resume prosecution for libel of that Indianapolis news paper thatwas rash enough to tell a few truths about that Panama deal? We gather from the evidence that Air. Roose velt didn't care a hooter who contributed just so he wasn't informed as to the identity of the contributor. Considering the fact that Mr.' Roosevelt never held an elective office except those received at tho hands of the Wall street "bosses" it would seem proper for him to turn state's evidence and become the star witness against them but he is not the man to select for prosecuting attorney. '