MORXIXG OREGOXIAX.' WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1908. n , , , . . . - " rOBTLASD, UMCOX. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postottice aa S-ton.l-c!lss Maiwr. bobcrlptB Kates Invariably la Advaaea. By Kail.) Dellr. Funday included, cm yew- S-Jn I.al,. humisy Inciuaed. SI month.... -a Isily Sunday lm-lud.0. three mon;M.. r 5 Iailv. hunoay inciun. uno ...... . Iliy. altnout Sunday, ont year.... Daily, without Sunday. sis months... Ilty. mllaout Sunday. tnree m'lnttip. Dany. without sjnday, one month... We-k;y. Dili yar Sunday, ont year ."unday and Weekly, ons year (By Carrier.) a j . . .. .4 r nrtm vMr. ... . too . t IS . .1.71 . .80 . 1 50 . :.5 . aw 00 1 ' Ji 1 J . nUDU.7 , . . . - . , li:y. Sunday included, one montn How to Remit Fend po.iomr,: oriT expresn order or p-rtonal cneclc on your loca. bank. Stamps, coin or currency r. at I ha Iflid'r'l rlk. Give pnatntflcs ad dress In full, including county and state. ro.tje Rates 10 to 1 parea. 1 cent: 1 to p-,it-s. 1 cents; S to 44 !''. cents; 46 io OJ pages. 4 cents. Foreign postage double rate. rateta Business trice The S. C. Bk with Fpeclai Airency New Tork. room 4S f Tribune building. Chicago, room uiu-ai-Tribune building. PORTLAND. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 14. 190a. FARKXR-BRYAJf-ROOSEVEXT-TArr. After Bryan himself. Judge Parker la the leading campaigner for Mr. Brjaa. Judge Parker, though support ed by Tammany and by the whole force of plutocracy of the Democratic party four years ago, couldn't be elected; and now ho devotes the greater part of his speeches to Insinuations or at tacks upon Roosevelt. But it was not Roosevelt -who beat him so much as It was Bryan himself, who held up Judge Parker to the country as a tool of plutocrat and monopolists. June 20. 1S04. after It had become known that Parker's supporters had (fathered In the votes, so they prob ably would be able to control the National Democratic Convention, nominate Parker and defeat Bryan, the latter, vlaltlng New York for tha purpose, made a speech at Cooper Union, which was reported by tele graph and published In The Ore gonlan of June 21. Here are extracts: Ky protest today agalnat Belmont. Cleveland ana tha rt la that they ara raking the party back to Wall street. I am oppoaad to Parker because he is a weak man. and If elected would prove a disappointment to tha brave Democratic Boat. Ha i weak because afraid to ex press hla opinion on questions of publlo policy: In fact, hu weakness amounts to cowardice. Money la not tho great Issue.; It la a question of plutocracy agalnat de mocracy. Tha Parker men claim many states, but had It not been for bribery they would hare had but few delegations It has been a fraudulent campaign. They have opsnry bought men and con ventions, and any man who countenances that work does not deserve tha office of President. In Connecticut men were bought at tha conventions In Pasker's In terest. I denounce Parker's candidacy as nna carried on by trampling on the rights of Democrats Were I to express my opinion of Parker and his mentor. Hill. I would ba compelled to use unparliamentary language, and this I desire to avoid. Cowards and etraddlers ran find no place In the Democratic ranks, and Hill. Parker and the New Tork State Democratic, cowardly, straddling platform will find but little respect when they reach St. Louis. The demands of this country are for brave mn. It required brave men to stand up for the Democracy In X knew Ir. that year that In every stste we were threatened with bankruptcy for being Iemocrts. What does the state platform (of New Tork) stand for? It stales that It is op noted to unnecessary duties. Whoever ad vocated an unnecessary duty? Wtiers does Parker stand on Imperialism? Wa don't know. Where does he stand on the money question? Is he for gold? Wa don't know. Is he for silver Wa esnnot jelL Maybe he Is for radium who can teU? I object to playing with loaded dice. We don't know Parker's views, but I am nfrald that soma men do. Friends, don't trust him. I charge that while Parker has con cealed his views from tha people, he has made them known to the men behind him. What Is Mr. Helmont's consideration In tha Parker candidacy? He Is too shrewd a financier to Invest his money without being sure of tha goods It Mr. Parker deals honestly be would say to Mr. Bel mont what ha says to others, that his lips are sealed, and if he did so ha would not be Mr. Belmont's candidate. Remembering thia speech The Ore gonlan. when Judge Parker was here, searched Its files, but missed finding t- The Baltimore Sun now supplies the date. It would have been an ex cellent thing to have greeted Judge Parker with this speech, when he was here. The' Sun, quoting from the speech, supplies some parts not In cluded la The Oregonlan's report. Wa quote this a fling at President Cleveland: We have had one President of that kind recently. God forbid that we ahould hava another of this kind a man who dragged tha Democratic party through the mlra of Wall street and stained It so thoroughly that the stain has not yet been removed entirely. But Judge Parker is a man of very forgiving disposition In appearance only. What he Is trying to do Is to rut himself In position to be the lead er of his party again. It Is apparent that he doesn't expect Bryan to be elected, and, moreover, that he doesn't desire It. Human nature always tells a story. But In every speech Parker breaks out on Roosevelt, because Koosevelt solicited the aid of Hariiman for the State of New Tork In 1904, and Haniman and his friends put up a sum of money to help out the state campaign. Roosevelt didn't reed it himself; he carried New York by far the greatest majority ever given a Presidential candidate, and it was manifest he would do so money or no money for the campaign. It la evident that even without Harrl man's contribution the result would have been substantially the same. But Is Parker, who. according to the greatest of all Democratic author ities, was backed by a money syndi cate headed by Belmont, who bought delegates, forced with their money the nomination of Parker, and ex pected to control him after his elec tion is Parker the man to assail Koosevelt nowT For In any matter whatever has Koosevelt shown that he was In the list under the Influence of "the in terests?" On the contrary, has he not ppoed and checked them at every step? Has Haniman. or have the llarrtman interests, had the least fa vor or protection from the Adminis tration? Well. then, they say. Roose velt was an ingrate. Nobody, howaver. ever bough: hi. . or had any "strings on him." The charge of being an In grate may pass. It comes only from those who are corrupt or corrupted through and through. From Mr. try an we know what Judge Parker Is. Is Judge Parker, then, the man to attack President Roosevelt for cor rupt alliance with plutocracy? More than all other men put to gether Theodore Roosevelt is the one man who has dore most to awaken the public conscience en the enormity of the evil produced by those who are Intrenched in privilege and plutocracy. "No one will deny that political cor ruption had reached a state that was most deplorable. But now the ques tion arises as to who was mainly re sponsible for arousing a public senti ment that Insisted upon a change. Who stirred the public conscience un til It was thoroughly awake to the evil? Who preached the doctrine of decency In public life until there was developed a semi-hysterical revolt against corporation activity In politics and election debauchery? Even those who do not approve of many things the President does must admit that he more than any other one man or all other men put together Is to be credited with this moral re-olution." We quote from another entirely In dependent and non-partisan Journal, the Baltimore News. Parker, smirched as he is by the highest authority in his party, asks us to vote asinst Taft because Roose velt urged Harriman to give financial assistance to the Republican ticket In New York. Judge Parker evidently does not realize what a poor creature be Is. Has Mr. Harriman received any consideration on account of his efrort or liberality? What would the Administration have been these four years had Parker controlled It? Read Bryan's Cooper Union speech for the answer. The great effort for Bryan now is In the states of New York and Indiana. Funds are necessary, Who Is sup plying them? The gambling and race track Interests In New York and the liquor Interests in Indiana. It Is open; It Is notorious;. It Is patent to every body. Hughes is to be beaten In New York, and local option is to be turned down In Indiana, If the Bryan party l. tl ..(. fhusA ri a t li a 1 nr. 0 1 COT1 1 filltUJ A1. J 1 1 - -J U . u ...W . . ( sequences. From a National point of view there Is reason for apprehen sion of the consequences of the pos sible election of Bryan on the course of business and the general progress; none from the election of Taft. Even now there Is general waiting. Every one sees and feels It and knows it. Bryan, all know. Is erratic. When the country may go on 1a a safe course, "why should It try an uncer tain one? ROCKS TO BE 6BXNXED. 'The Oregonlan made proclamation that It would be an Independent pa per. But note how It supports Taft and opposes Bryan." Thus a Bryan organ. But when The Oregonlan said It would be In dependent it did not say It wpuld be neutral. Observe that almost every Independent paper In the whole coun try opposes Bryan. . They do this be cause, from his career and history, they profoundly distrust him. Their Judgment Is that a man of his erratic nature, however honest he may be, may do endless things to disorder the finances, to keep business affairs in turmoil and to maintain throughout his term general conditions of sus pense and uncertainty. When the country might Just as well avoid ail this as not. why shouldn't it? In the nature of things there will be apprehension; for the nature and composition and cast of the Bryan mind Is well understood. The coun try will still have In mind his vaga ries about money, his free-silver ideas, his government ownership notions, his bank guarantee scheme, his trust busting vagaries, his Initiative and ref erendum propositions, his purpose of limiting the power of the courts for propagation of semi-socialistic schemes; and the apprehensions nat urally arising will produce hestitation In business undertakings. It will be useless to argue that the fears are groundless; people will not think so, and the fact must be reckoned with. The country never was ruined yet by anything not even by the silver craze or the great rebellion. But It has had many a setback and many a trouble; and It ought to avoid those which can be foreseen. NORMAL BOARD AVD NORMAL SCHOOLS, When the law was enacted creat ing one board of regents to have con trol of all the Normal schools of the Btate it was hoped that the Normal school question would find speedy set tlement through the recommendations of the board. This governing body. It was argued, would be thoroughly familiar with the needs of the state end with the condition and efficiency of the Normal schools, which knowl edge would enable the boart1 to make recommendations which the I glsla ture could safely follow. And, believ ing that the Legislature would act upon good advice, people had pictured In their minds the strange spectacle of a Legislature passing a Normal school appropriation bill without any trading and almost without any dis cussion. But the fond hope has been dispelled. The board of trustees has been In session at Salem formulating Its report to the Legislature, and it develops that the members of the board are In Irreconcilable conflict over the question which always agi tated the Legislature, how many Nor mals shall be maintained? Five of the seven members have agreed that there should be three State Normal schools, while the other two Insist that the number' should be reduced to two or one. This division among the members of the board must necessarily throw the question into the Legislature again, where all the pernicious Influ ence of local self -Interest will again be displayed. We shall again see the Normal school bills made the basis for trades upon all other classes of legislation. This has been the expe rience of the past, and we may rea sonably expect it to be the experience of the future so long as the question as to number an ' location of Normals Is left entirely to the Legislature. And this ii quite natural. The Normals were not created In the Interest of education." They were founded be cause some private Institution needed state aid dr because some member of the Legislature felt that he should get some sort of a state appropriation for his home community, and a Normal school furnished the best excuse for perversion of public funds from pub lic to private Interests. The needs of the educational system were of sec ondary consideration. The people of Oregon have de manded a reform In the Normal school policy of the state, and have expected that such a reformation would take the Normals out' of the list of trading stock in the Legisla ture. Some reform has been accom plished, but apparently the trading will ko on. The people are not op posed to State Normal schools, but they have vigorously protested against waste and misapplication of public funds. The press of the state has not 'knocked' the Normals, as one member of the board falsely Insinu ated, but the newspapers, as leaders of pubHc opinion, have hammered at a system which required the state at large to maintain as Normals certain institutions which were not Normals In fact. The people and the press have objected to maintenance of so called Normal schools, not upon their merits, but upon the local Interests which are able to bring pressure to bear in the Legislature, Evidence that this Is true is not lacking. At the meeting of the board In Salem Monday it was stated that out of the 3000 teachers employed in the state not over 300 are Normal graduates. This was set forth as a reason why a number of Normals should be maintained. But scarcity of Normals or graduates Is not the cause for the scarcity of teachers who are Normal graduates. The schools have turned out thousands of graduates, and the principal reason why they are not employed In the schools is that they were not fitted for that kind of work, and they sought employment elsewhere. With poor grace an advo cate of Normal schools comes before the people asking for appropriations, when he must say that after all t'.iese years of training of teachers by four State Normals and by half a dozen private Institutions whose Normal courses were recognized by the state, only S00 out of the 3000 teachers are Normal graduates. If the figures are correct, and we must assume that they are, the friends of the Normals furnish the best possible Justification for the hammering the schools have received. At the meeting of the Normal Bchool board It was stated that the appro priations recommended for purely op erating expenses amount to 1250 per student per year. Then the money paid in by the students as tuition fees is to be added to this, making some thing like 3275 per student per year for instruction and other operating expenses alone. New buildings and de terioration of buildings are additional expenses. It Is scarcely to be dis puted that this expense Is too high for 'ihe results attained. There will be little protest against expenses if desired results can be attained, but there will be vigorous complaint If the' normal system requires such a large per capita expenditure, and then the normal advocates come back with the complaint that there are few normal graduates at work in the publlo schools. It ought not to be necessary for the press of the state to point out the rem edy. The normal school board was appointed to Investigate conditions and to manage the schools In such a manner that satisfactory results will be secured. The people look to the leaders of our educational system to the presidents of normal schools to shape the normal'school work so that It will provide us with the needed teachers for the schools. The people look to the normal school board for financial management of the schools which will give- us teachers at a rea sonable cost of instruction. Some progress has apparently been made in this direction by the action of the board In eliminating all but normal school work in the several Institutions. But the people had a right to expect that by the time the Legislature of 1909 . should meet the board would have devised a settled normal school policy which it could recommend to the Legislature for adoption and which it could support with good rea son. Instead we are to have majority and minority reports, with apparently the best of the argument on the side of the minority report. And the whole question Is to be fought out again In the Legislature. CAPITAL AND LABOR. The part which labor has assumed in the current Presidential campaign Is a new and perhaps an ominous phe nomenon In. American politics. Here tofore workingmen, like other citizens, have voted with one party or the other for general reasons. Class feel ing and class Interest have always ex isted, naturally, but If they have ex erted an Influence in politics It has been clandestine. They have not ven tured to flaunt themselves as the pre dominant motives in voting. Up to the present. In fact, the labor unions have rather made it the rule, much as the Oddfellows do, to exclude politics from their society affairs. Now all this is changed, and we see the unions, as unions, not only participating in party warfare, but doing it openly for the advantage of their class. The era of class politics, as distinct from old fashioned party politics, seems to have dawned In America as it did in Ger many and France years ago. Jack London, in his "Iron Heel," prophesies a preliminary victory for property which he says will rule with pitiless sway, like Satan In the Book of Revelations, for about 700 years. Then the turn of labor will come, and after that the earth will behold noth ing but happiness and peace. Unfor tunately, Jack London's lips, melliflu ous as they are, have not been sealed with the divine assurance of veracity, and it is quite possible that his pre dictions may fall of fulfillment. Still there is no denying the fact that even in the current campaign something very much like a struggle for predom inance is on between labor, or certain representatives of labor, and capital. Neither Mr. Taft nor his party wishes to stand for capital as against labor. Mr. Bryan doubtless does not wish to stand far labor as against cap ital. Both candidates would Include all men and all interests under their banners if circumstances permitted. But it seems as if circumstances did not permit. There are .indications that Mr. Taft in spite of himself will be made the champion of civilization as It has crystallized in property, while Mr. Bryan and his party are forced into the position of those who attack civilization. The attack is as yet veiled, and Is perhaps not consciously made. But on the face of things Mr. Bryan is a reactionary. He stands for a dead system of thought and exploits an army of economic ghosts In his speeches, but for all that labor sees In him a sympathetic figure and has made him its champion, or a consider able fraction of the labor element is trying to do so. This is all the stranger when we re member how much Mr. Taft has done for labor, both as a Judge and as an administrator. Toward those who toil his personal feeling has Invariably been profoundly sympathetic. He has upheld the unqualified right of the unions to exist, to strike and to spread their influence In all lawful ways. The only desire of theirs that he has thwarted is the privilege of boycot ting. On the other hand. Mr. Bryan never has had an opportunity 'to do anything for labor, and if he had had ever so many his party would not have permitted him to use them. One or two pretty sentences in his orations sum up the entire mass of his services to the toilers. But. although every body confesses that this is so, never theless we behold the amazing specta cle of labor holding meetings all over the land to acclaim Bryan and de nounce Taft. The phenomenon Is in stinctive and evolutionary. Most of those who take part in it do not know what they are doing. They are has tening the dissolution of the Demo cratic party, which will almost cer tainly be succeeded by another much more socialistic, while the propertied elements which now support Bryan will move perforce Into the Republi can ranks. Labor unions are not really fighting Taft. They or their active heads and agents are fighting for the con trol of the Government. They are be ginning a long struggle for the con quest of the Presidency, the courts, the Army, the schools and the church. The turmoil and "blind uncertainty of Interests In this campaign will pres ently give way to perfect clearness and a definite array of combatants. It Is Just as well that we should face the facts and reconcile ourselves to the expectation of a political contest which may perhaps be obscured for a time but cannot be extinguished until it has been fought out and decided. We have read so much about the great precautions taken by the for eign railroads to prevent accidents that the Impression has become general that loss of life on a British railroad is an unusual occurrence. That this is an error is plainly shown in a re port Just issued by the British Board of Trade, showing that In 1907 in the United Kingdom there were 1117 per sons killed and 8811 injured, com pared with a ten-year average of 1160 killed and 8765 injured. This slaugh ter all took place on 23,101 miles of road, about one-tenth the mileage op erated In this country. As the British lines are practically all double track, while the American lines are mostly single track, it is not improbable that in the circumstances the Americans, with their heavy trains and high speed for long distances, make nearly as good a showing for safety as the for eigners make with their light "car riages" and diminutive engines. Mr. Bryan is quite likely honest in the sense that he would not rob or de frajid another of his property. But that is only one form of honesty. To be Intellectually honest is, in public men, no less Important than to be honest in business relations. The strength of Mr. Roosevelt before the people of this country today lies largely in his Intellectual honesty his faithful adherence to what he believes to be right and best for his country. The weakness of Mr. Bryan lies large ly In his readiness to give up his polit ical beliefs whenever he finds them unpopular. He believes in Govern ment ownership of railroads, but Is willing to keep still about It for fear he will lose votes. At least he Is an ad vocate of the free coinage of silver, but abandoned that issue because he found that it was unpopular. In the advocacy of political principles he is not true to himself, hence he cannot be true to others. If the Grand Trunk Pacific main tains the stringent regulations -with which it has hedged in its new seaport at Prince Rupert, the most westerly seaport In Canada may become the model city of the continent. The pro vincial government has refused to grant licenses for the sale of liquor within 100 miles of the townsite, and a Dominion immigration official is permanently stationed there to pre vent any one from landing who is not possessed of 310 cash and a good char acter. These regulations ought to make Prince Rupert a city without paupers and drunkards, something un usual In seaports, especially those of the Far West. Mrs. Mary Kelly, whose death oc curred at Watsonville, Cal., a few days ago, was for many years a resident of the East Side. She was a devout member of Centenary Church, a nurse of the old-fashioned order, who was ever ready to respond to the call of suffering and a woman upon whom the more severe vicissitudes of life often pressed heavily. Many to whom, through her long lifetime she had ministered will recall her kindness and helpfulness and drop a tear to her memory. The Democrats are strong in their denunciation of the use of stolen let ters in a political campaign. They evidently hope to win sympathy and weaken the effect of the letters. But even if the letters were stolen, does the guilt of the thief lessen the wrong the letters disclose? If the Demo cratic campaign managers came into possession of stolen letters that tend ed to discredit Hearst, would they fall to use them? It makes a difference whose ox Is gored. A trial Judge Is quoted as saying that he will not grant a divorce where the parties do not deem it of sufficient Importance to grace the court- with their presence. Perhaps he will say at another time that he will not grant a divorce where the parties disgrace the court with their presence. Senator Lodge, at Boston, declares this counry needs a Navy for protec tion of the Pacific as well as the At lantic. He says it is the policy of the Republican party to maintain such Navy. The Bryan party objects to it as "imperialism." Tammany Hall will give 110,000 to the Bryan fund. Tammany's name will then lead all the rest, which In clude Belmont, Taggart, Roger Sulli van and Haskell. That Democratic publicity list needs a lot of Judicious blue-penciling. One enthusiastic Taft man, home from New York, took straw votes all the way across the continent, and re ports that the results were always for Taft. Good; but we hope those Taft men won't forget to quit traveling on election day. Common reputation is competent evidence against an inmate of a house of ill fame. Why, then, should it not be competent evidence against a man who frequents such a place? A. St. Paul man has invented a cheap motor car. But who will want to ride -In It? Most of the fun of au toraobiling is to own a car a little bet ter than your neighbor's. Certainly the man who "can't get work" will vote for Bryan. He doesn't want work. Apparently he wants to fix things so that nobody else can get work. The Quakers are the latest to go after the Speaker, but wooden guns cannot hurt an old smooth bore. The weather man, knowing there is a deficiency of 2.72 inches of rainfall, got into action yesterday. Americans will yet conquer the air, when two of the.m can fall 4000 feet without injury. WHT SOT GUARANTEE CROPS ALSO? Mr. Brraa ot Mlndfnl of the Risks the Farmera Take. PORTLAND. Oct. 13. (To the Edi tor.) I have been reading your paper so many years it lias almost become a habit and while the profit to you has not been great, I believe my time has not been wasted. In common with others who devote some thought to economics, I have al ways entertained a profound respect for the able Oregonlan whose leading articles upon this and kindred subjects may safely be taken as authoritative. But It Is with something of a shock, that I learn that the problems which have required so much deep study and labored thought for solution are after all so very simple, and I am almost constrained to give over reading The Oregonlan and hereafter seek enlight enment in the pages of the Commoner. ) From a casual reading on the sub ject of Trusts, I had formed the opin ion that it was one of the most com plex and deeply involved of both ancient and modern law, but I learn from the peerless editor of the Com moner that a simple enactment of Con gress that no corporation shall be al lowed to control more than 50 per cent of any commodlty entering into trade will settle the Trust Question. Why. not try this simple remedy of the "Old Doctor:" Instead of one giant corporation like the Standard Oil Com pany, let us have only two companies; Instead of the American Tobacco Com pany, let us have two tobacco com panies, and, then you will see the fet ters fall from our Industries. Then will the people rule. It Is so simple and easy that I am surprised that with all your years of study you never thought of It. And. again, to avert panics why stop nt having the Government guar antee bank deposits? Why not guarantee the crops. The country loses more every year from crop failures than from bank failures, and surely the farmer who takes his money and buys seed tr. put In the ground is as worthy of consideration as the man who puts his money In the bank. Why should our farmers take a greater chance than the bank deposi tors? Mr. Bryan tells us when the Govern ment guarantees bank deposits, there will be no more bank failures and reasoning by analogy if the Govern ment guarantees the crops there will be no more crop failures. These remedies ars all simple and easy to take and I would respectfully ask why we should not try them. L NEWTON. EXTREMES OF INTOLERANCE. The Effort to Drag Religious Questions Into the Campalsrn. . The Independent (New York), The Appeal to Reason is a Journal which represents the Socialist party. It declares that it will distribute 1,000, 000 copies of an issue devoted to show ing that the Republican party is in league with the Catholic Church, that tha Catholic Church is the foe of all liberty, that the settlement of the friars' land dispute in the Philippines was a bribe for Catholic votes, and that Mr. Taft's mission to Rome to settle the question with the Vatican was a shocking and servile betrayal of public trust. AH this does not seem much to disturb Mr. Taft. In an ad dress last Sunday before the Young Men's Christian Association in St. Paul he takes pleasure in his part in this business, and says: I went to Roma and effected a general understanding as to what was to be done, and waa prepared when the Apostolic Dele gate came to the Philippines to close with him, after a great deal of negotiation, tha contracts of settlement which, I do not think it too much to say, brought about a result which was both Just to tha church and to the people of the Islands and to the Government of tho United States in that Jurisdiction. I venture to think that but for the spirit of tolerance both on the part of the Pro testant denominations and the Roman Cath olic Church that now prevails in this coun try such a result could not have been ob tained. It Is due to the spirit of Christian tolerance, and It is a condition In which we should all rejoice. We stand by Mr. Taft's action In the friars' land matter. It was his business to go to Rome, to headquarters, to set tle the troubles. The attitude of Prot estants and Catholics was creditable to both. It is amusing to see these bitter attacks on the one side for his good will to Catholics, and from Illinois and North Carolina almost equal opposition because he has followed his father's Unitarian faith. There Is equal Intol erance from the most extreme opposltes of faith. WHY WH NEED THE PHILIPPINES In the Chinese Boxer War, Where Would the United States Have Been f PORTLAND. Oct. - 12. (To the Ed itor.) This is how one man sees the Philippines. What would Mr. W. J. Bryan have done without them? The estimated cost of the Philippines to the United States Is about $200,000, 000 and $5,000,000 per year. Mr. Bryan makes the average man believe that this is a dead loss to the United States proper. But here is a very great error. When the Chinese Boxer trouble started it was the opinion of every posted man that when the allied army would get to China that that would De the last of the Chinese Empire and that it would be divided between the Euro pean powers, because France, England, Germany and Russia already had pos sessions which would be enlarged to suit, and as the United States had al ready promised the world that the United States did not want any posses sions in China, and was only to protect her citizens and Consulate. Secretary Hay In his terse demand notified the powers that whoever took any Chinese possessions must recognize the open, door. Who is this that says must to "the powers of the world? It was Uncle Sam, with 50,000 tried men In the Philippines, within 20 hours of China, which was Just three months better than any of them could do. And why did the powers leave as did the United States? Because- they thought that if they must give the open doo. they would not be benefited themselves, but In the effort to make the United States pay them duty for every pound of trade that must go over their pos sessions to 350.000.000 people who will shortly waken from their long sleep. In what" shape would the United States have been In to protect its In terests against the conspiracy without the Philippines, Mr. Bryan? I, myself, do not think that the United State's should sell, trade or give away any of the Philippines, as they have paid for themselves and do not owe the United States one cent. E. W. DYERS. Influence of Mountains. London Evening Standard. The Influence of the mountain is pure and holy, giving strength and simplicity, encouraging the older virtues, discourag ing the newer vices. In the hlllmen of Walea we see this clearly enough. Go where you will among the wilder and more mountainous parts of Wales and you find that rare Independence and self reliance which are not marred by a curi ously defiant discourtesy. You find there those" who are truly "Nature's gentle- Mr. Hsrrlmts'i Ncpkcvr, Timekeeper. Baltimore News. Henry A. Harriman. nephew of Ed ward H. Harriman, refused the aid of his uncle and has obtained a place as timekeeper at $75 a month on a rail road In Colorado. TAFT ON LABOR Fulr and Candid Explanation of His Action as Jadsre In Various Cases Op posed the Secondary Boycott. Bat Upheld tee Rigrht of Men 'to Strike How He Broke Ip the Iron Pipe Combine Why He Sent Phelan to Jail. From aa AdireBs by Judse Taft before S00O Railroad Employes in Chicago. September 24. 1908. I am glad to meet so many members of organized railroad labor. I have accepted this opportunity to address an audience of members of the brotherhoods in order that I may take up a question which has been given great prominence In this cam paign and in which I must say that every effort has been made unjustly to arouse the prejudice of organized labor against the Republican party and its cananiate. In the first place, I wish to afnrm, without fear of contradiction, that the Republican party haa done vastly more than the Democratic party, both on state and National regtslntion, for the protection and In the Interest of labor. It passed In General Harrison's admin istration the1 eight-hour law for Govern ment workmen and gave an impetus to a reduction of hours in other employment. The safety appliance acts, by which rail roads engaged in interstate commerce were required to make provision for the safety of their employes and thus to re duce the shocking loss of life and limb among railroad employes, were passed in the same administration. Amendments to this act making more detailed specifi cations for improvements in safety ap pliances, including especially the fire pan, have been passed in the present admin istration. Arbitration Also Aided. An act for the promotion of arbitration between the railways and their employes in interstate commerce is also one of those acts of beneficence to both employer and employe. The last Congress enacted a law winch was declared unconstitutional, and then in its second session re-enacted the law to avoid the constitutional objections. By this act a railway employe who brings suit for damages against the company cannot now be defeated on the ground ,that the negligence was the neglignece of a fellow-servant. If he Is shown to be guilty of negligence himself in a slight degree he does not forfeit his right of action, but it is left to the Jury to apportion the damages and reduce them as equity shall justlty. In addition to this, a law limiting the hours of labor of interstate railway em ployes has been passed. A bill was also passed by the last session of Consress providing for injuries received in tne Government employ. It is an inadequate law, and will doubtless be Improved by coming Congresses. Taft Explains Own Relation. An issue, however, has arisen as to the attitude of the two parties on the subject of injunctions In labor disputes. I propose first to take up my personal relation to this question. It fell to my lot to be a Judge of the Superior Court of Cincinnati for three years ana a Judge of the United States Circuit Court for tha Sixth District, Including Michigan, Ohio. Kentucky and Tennessee for eight years, and during that time I had to consider a number of Important cases involving tlis rights of labor and the rights of the em ployer, as well as the practice In equity with reference to the issuing of Injunc tions in such cases. The first case was not an injunction suit at all. A boss bricklayer quarreled with the union and its members who were in his employ struck. In order to em barrass him the union notified all the local dealers In materials that they would boycott any firm which furnished him with material. Moores & Co. had a con tract to deliver to this boss bricklayer a lot of lime. In order to avoid trouble they secured from him a release from the contract, but he sent his wagon to the freight station and bought lime out of the car where Moores & Co. soid lime to any one who applied. The walking delegate of the union discovered it and a boycott was begun. Moores & Co. were prevented from sell ing to their usual customers any lime or other material for a great number of months and suffered a severe financial loss to their business. They sued for damages and the case was tried before a Jury. The Jury returned a verdict for $2500. Now, K-entlemen, In that case I held and decided, with two colleagues, that a secondary boycott waa an unlawful Injury whether It waa perpetrated by laborer men or otherwise. That la the law today, and, my friends, It on&ht to be the law. I know that this is not the view of Mr. Gompers, but I am glad to know that there is a difference In organized labor upon this question. Takes Up the Ann Arbor Case. The Toledo and Ann Arbor railroad was in a dispute with its employes, who were members of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and a strike by the engineers followed. It was understood by the Toledo and Ann Arbor road that the Brotherhood of Engineers on the Lake Shore were going to refuse to haul their cars and that the Lake Shore road for that rea son would acquiesce in this action. Ac cordingly the Toledo and Ann Arbor road applied to Judge Ricks to enjoin the Lake Shore Railroad Company, its officers and employes from refusing to haul Toledo and Ann Arbor cars. He did so in accordance with the inter state commerce law. After that, Mr. Arthur, the head of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engi neers, complying with a secret rule 12 then in force in the order which forbade the engineers on . one road, members of the order, to haul the cars of another road when the order had a strike on the latter road, issued a no tice to the engineers of the Lake Shore that the strike on the Toledo and Ann Arbor was approved as required by the rules of the order and that they should proceed to enforce rule ' 12, which meant that they should refuse to haul the cars of the Toledo and Ann Arbor railroad. It was a secondary boycott and it was a direct violation of the Federal statute which Imposed a punishment by fine and Imprisonment for its violation. I required Mr. Arthur to withdraw the telegram which he had issued to his men in respect to rule 12 and with in a short period I gave him a hearing. Mr. Arthur had promptly complied with my order and never did disobey it. The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers then repealed the rule and it has never been enforced since so far as I know. Punishes Boycott's Instlgntor. The third case was the Phelan case. It grew out of the attempt of the American Railway Union and Eugene Debs to starve the country by stopping all the railroads and thus compel the Pullman company to pay higher wages to its employes. Neither the starving country nor the railroads has control over Mr. Pullman. Some railroads had contracts with him for carrying his cars. They were not Justified In break ing those contracts. In other words the action against the railroad companies by Debs and by his lieutenant Phelan, was a secondary boycott. At this time the Cincinnati Southern railroad was being operated by a receiver under my orders as United States Circuit Judge. Phelan knew this and was warned of it. He held meetings of the Cincinnati Southern railroad employes and ad vised them to strike and tie up the road and by hints and winks and side remarks he instigated them to violence. On an affidavit charging him with contempt In attempting by such meth ods to defeat the order of the court di recting the receiver to run the road he was brought into court. The evidence clearly established his guiit. I there- j AND INJUNCTIONS fore sentences him to Jail for six months. Injunction Works Both Ways. There waa one snore Injunction aalt to which I have made reference, but in which the operation of the Injunction wns not ua-nlnat laboring; people, but against a combination of Iron plpe manufacturers, who, residing la noma 11 stntes, divided up the territory and by their agreements maintained tha prices of Iron pipe nt an exorbltaat figure, monopolising the whole produc tion within those states, and divided the profits of thta arraagement between the naembera of the combination. A suit was brought in the Circuit Court and an application made by the United States for an Injunction to en join the combination from proceeding and to break it up. The circuit judge held that there was no power to Issue such an Injunction and no jurisdiction in the court to grant such a remedy. I sat la the Court of Appeals to en tertain nn appeal by the 4overnment from the decision of the Circuit Court and rendered the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appenls. We there decided that an Injunction would Issue, and the combination was broken up. The case waa subsequently carried to the Supreme Court of the United Stntes and the judgment was affirmed. I merely instance this to thaw that the Injunction works both waya, and that It Is useful both In keeping; laiv less lnborlns; men nnd lawless capital ists within the law. Taft Simply Fulfills Duty. Mr. Bryan says I am the father of injunctions in industrial causes. This is not true. The use of the Injunction was in accordance with precedence In ' a number of cases which I cited, both in the Arthur case and In the Phelan case. I am not apologizing for what I did In these cases, for they were in ac cordance with my duty as a judge. Another point which I distinctly' de cided in these esses waa that no tempo rary restraining; order or Injunction could Issue to prevent a man's lenvlug; the employ of a railway and therefore that no Injunction could issue to re strain men from acting In concert aad going on strike.. Objection Is made to the use of the injunction In such disputes. All I have to say on that point is that precedent Justifies it, and that the man whose business is injured by unlawful action of former employes frequently has no other remedy which is at all adequate The owner of a business, whether railroad business or any other. Is en titled to be protected In his pursuit of it, and to Immunity from unlawful in jury to it. To take away from him the remedy by injunction which has al ways been his, merely because it some times leads to the punishment of those who violate the injunction without trial by Jury is to introduce Into the law class legislation In favor of em ployes and laboring men, and is to take them out of the ordinary opera tion of the civil remedies because they are laborers. 1 say that that kind of class legislation is pernicious. Quick Hearing; Is Gunrnntred. Objection is made to the issuing of injunctions without notice. There is opportunity for abuse in such a prac tice, though there are cases where no other remedy seems adequate. I have been wllllno-. nevertheless, to ndopt a rule by which notice shnll be required before the lssufnc- of any Injunction temporary r otherwise. The Republi can convention, however, thought it wiser that the best present practice should be embodied in a statute in or der to bring the matter to the attention of the court, and that in that' way fu ture abuses could be avoided. I hope and believe that this Is true. L'nder the Republican platform a statute ran pass, and ought to pass, which shall not allow a temporary' re straining order to Issue and have effect for more thnn 4S hours, unless a benr Ing can be bad during ihe 48 hours ex tending the operation of the injunction. The Democratic platform does not give any remedy with respect to notice It merely resolves that injunctions ought not to be issued in industrial dis putes where they would not Issue in other disputes. This is either mean ingless or deceitful. The provision In the Democratic plat form that a trial by Jury should be al lowed In all cases in which a charge of contempt is made for violation of the orders of the court outside of the pres ence of the judge would greatly weaken the power of the court. To introduce a Jury trial between a final order and Its enforcement and between the routine orders bringing witnesses and jurors Into court would so hamper the ad ministration of justice as to make the courts a laughing-stock. It may be popular to suggest such a change. It may attract the support and approval of those who do not un derstand its real effect; but so long as I have power of expression, and with out regard to how It may affect me po litically, I shall lift my voice in protest against such a destructive step in our Judicial procedure. , Regards Laborers aa Friends. It has been sought to give the Im pression that this record of mine as a judge shows that I am unfriendly to labor. Nothing could be farther from the fact. As the executive in charge of the work on the Pnnama Canal I have had under ine for four years upwards of 30,000 laborers. It hns given me pleasure to devote a great deal of my time to the consideration of the welfare aa well as of the pay of the men em ployed under the Government la that great enterprise. Regulation, Not Persecution. 'We are interested in that legislation against the railroad should be Just and only properly restrictive. We are in terested that there should not be un just and drastic legislation preventing their earning proper income. We are all interestea. of course, that they should charge only proper rates, but we are also interested that they should not be made to do business on less than Just rates. I have noticed with a great deal of interest that the railroad laboring men are beginning to realize that the pros perity of the railroads is as much In their interest as it is in the interest of the stockholders and the officers ol the road, and that they propose here after to be heard upon the political Is sue as to the character of the legisla tion that shall be passed with reference to the regulation of railroads. The whole country Is dependent upon the prosoerity of the railroads. The truth is, that the railroads are the greatest single market that we have for manufactured products. We are all interested, therefore, that the credit of the railroads should be such as to en able them to borrow the money with which to carry on constructive work. Is It not apparent to you, therefore, that the election of Mr. Brynn to the powerful office of President, with his unstnble finunclal theories nnd his un certain economic propositions will con vince every one having; capital to In vest that the business future of the country Is uncertain and that it la safer to withhold thrlr money r I submit to those most Interestea. to this intelligent audience, that this is the issue of the full dinner pall that ougnc to make them for a third time reject Mr. Bryan's claim to be elected to the Presidency as a helpful friend tf the workingman. 'fa r