"vyiFW it fc' j "jr 10 f The Commoner, VOLUME 13, NUMBER 21 ' TJIE GIIASTY DINNER AT y IIAfTIMOIlH Wtjy (Continued from Pago 7.) thon tho roal question boforo this government was a govornmont oy tho podplo and for tho peoplo; not a govornmont by tho few, for tho fow and against tho many. (Applause.) And many who wore against tho real question would have been with us had thoy understood that issue. It is plain that thoy did not understand It. Tho timo was not ripe. "1 can not complain tnat tnoy ctia t t i I If You Want Service- every daywinter and summerand over all roads then you will be delighted with the excellent Cartercar. This is the simplest car made so simple it is practically trouble proof. Unlimited speeds one lever control power to climb 50 hills and many other features make the sat wh the ?ef r,ess &. i 1 m Ham. m. m .A. ha the best value on the market from a real service standpoint. No jerks nor jars about half the usual tire and upkeep bills. 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"l or clsnton tho noedlo in chuck, as Is necoa- tearitkoTn Tun P or a A Limited Special Offer BondiInSBt&Vocfe rVate?rt0o,?jfrth,s raordlnary offer tlon to The vmoiiriidVl&iS7JitJ' ubacrfp: and household monthly) and wwiii W mestead itho Popular farm MU SeW AI without TddlUonal ncoat0LdnnrAne80lnne AS both Papora ono full year and the Awl for oniv i iS'T.11 Remember, lor all three Is $2.25? but If you m nrnmS l!.!'15, ho. regular price ??1foforo fc VttwSwnf Open now tonJwyo A&J&L baFa 2f now a subscriber to oltMer publlcMlon nr7i?nt?T&VF 8ubscribers. be advanced one year. Send at nc? Prejent expiration date will Addrew, THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Nebrwk. not understand mo, for why should they havo understood me? I think my nomination lent itself to mis understanding. Many peoplo thought that I was nominated because I was an emotional orator, that I had swept the convention off its feet and was nominated before it could regain its senses. "That was tho idea which pre dominated. They did not give weight to what I said. They did not stop to think of the reasons I had for saying what I said. They could not believe that one from the west could bo building upon a solid rock, and during that campaign there wore many good men who actually thought that my election would be a disaster to tho country. They honestly thought so. "I, remember a man in Nebraska told me of his father. Out in Ne braska he had caught the spirit of that country and had joined with us, but his father did nnt nnr1ortnnfl Hm subject as wo did, and so when I was defeated his father knelt down and thanked God that the country J.a'd been saved from the dangerous man. You need not tell me that a' man who thanks God that the country is de livered frpm me is not an honest man. You need not tell me that he is not living up to the life he should. And that was the condition of men. "I rejoice that I have lived to see a uuange caice place. (Applause.) And I speak of that change without boastintr. for T hnvo nrf lioon sponsible for it. It may bo pleasant to havo enthusiastic friends exag gerate my part, but they do not de ceive me. No one man, no few men, claim credit for what has been done. No one man, no group of men, could stir a nation as this nation has been stirred. And even if we had any one in our midst who was so superior to all the rest of us that he could claim to be the author and the cause of this marvelous transformation, he could not explain how in other na tions the same spirit has prevailed. "This is no local movement; it is no reform springing up in the west; it is not even an American reform. It is a world-wide movement and we are but part of it. "I owe my office to tho generosity of the president of the United States. He led us in our last fight, and if any one thinks that I was disappointed because the leadership fell to an other, let him disabuse his mind of that thought. I rejoiced tnat there wub uue wuo coum win where I lost And I was so much more interested In the cause than in any title that could come with it that I am sure that the president himself was no happier than I was. '(Long con tinued applause.) "I think it was easier for the people to vote for him than it would ?haJ een or them t0 reconcile themselves to voting for me. For when they voted for him they did not have to censure themselves for not The.v0S5 S f0re- '(Sater?) ,uheyidId not have t0 flave a war within themselves. It was a new man and it did not bring up old memories. And I think he may be Sll ??gB taat I couldVo? t uUUB, umi jl Know i can n , him as much as he could ever he n me. (Applause.) eip n?0 has won a Placo n history and i am sure from what he has done that we shall not be disappointed ?n Wn?0l?P f ?at wMch he bus yet before him And yet the president ike myself, is not a creator, for he La ?reaturo- Wo are creatures aU th s time. We aro the product of this ago, and it matters little whn pXhthVat nhowleadershIP of the to?- leaner will Vop to criHciflted who have been backward ir L P80 a start. (ApptaSK) makIn Th. whole world is moving along three lines. Tf f ...., " tolllgcnce; there is nc 3 t It fa growing toward "a" ft brotherhood you can i. , l ot that. And it 2nnSSSita50d tag'S? ernment as our forefather L5 V stood it, and our ideas of govermn are triumphing the world L aroun "And the income tax! I qnnnn have been criticised for S K tho income tax more than for Zv one thing I have ever favored I have had them tell me that I wal Hnying th T th P00r gainst TK rich. I had them fpii u.i. r lue S"7inJ ?&. thl ?a?si?n ot the mob -t iuo .luuxwiuae. I believed then, as I do now, that it is the most just tax that there is, and tho day when I have an income that will be taxed I myself will be as much n ?Pn0fi? asnen I ud an income that could not be taxed. (Applause.) "But it is not strange that one should not change. The strange thine is that men who oppose the income tax because they do not want to bear that share of the burden of the gov ernment are men who well could bear it, while those not so well situ ated Welcomo it as n fMticr ,. . just and are willing to pay their share. Isn't it worth while to wait for such a victory as this? (An plause.) "I think one of the glories of our civil war was that those who fought for the union held those within the union who would have separated from it held them nnHl Miov ,M glad that tho union was not dis solved. There was no such other war in history. Races have fought races, people have fought people, and centuries of anger and animosity followed the wars. But here was a great struggle over a root of discord that has been removed, and now the people who fought it themselves are rivals in the effort to see who can oest prove that patriotism is the most loyal attribute of life, of those who wore the gray and those who wore 'the blue. (Applause.) "And so tho glory of our struggle is that we have not conquered an enemy. We have all come together as friends to understand what we did not then understand. Let me give you some illustrations. It is now 23 years since a fight began in the house " of representatives for the direct el.ection of a United States senator. I can remember how some honest men looked upon it as a destructive thing. I can understand how patriotic men said that if we rttujmiuea to cnange tne constitu tion in this respect we would lower tho dignity of the senate and that we might even menace our institu tions. "Yet I havo seen that reform mako progress step by step, until now we have seen it submitted by a two thirds vote of the two houses. We have seen it indorsed by 36 states and I am waiting for just one more state to send its notice to Washing ton, when I shall proudly attach my signature to a statement that an nounces that this epoch-making re form has .at last arrived. (Ap plause.) "And if you look over the country today you will find that nine-tenths of the people of all parties now be- " tutu, cms is not oniy wise uw necessary. And this -senate that they were afraid would degenerate if tho peoplo controlled it will prove that tho nearer you bring the government to th people not only the .stronger it is but th better it is in its quali ties. Th United States senate in stead of losing power will increase its power, and it will become, be cause a people's body, the highest legislative body in th world. (Ap plause.) "Wo will find that, Instead of hav ing th aenat filled up with repre sentative of uradatoiy wealth who us their power to oppose the .things