LET PEOPLE RULE, SAYS ROOSEVELT OPPOSES PRESIDENT'S ATTITUDE ON POPULAR GOVERNMENT. People's Voice Must Prevail Cheered forSpeech In Opening Active Campaign for Nomination Quotes Taft as Opposed to the Majority. Stands Squarely on His Columbus, Ohio, Address. The salient passages in Colonel Roosevelt's forceful campaign speech, delivered in Carnegie Hall, New York, Wednesday evening, is given below: The great fundamental issue now before the republican party and be fore our people can be stated briefly. It is, are the American people-fit to govern themselves, to rule them selves, to control themselves? I believe they are. My opponents do not. I believe in the fight of the people to rule. I believe that the ma jority of the plain people in the Unit ed States will, do, day in and day out, make fewer mistakes in govern ing themselves than any similar class or body of men, no matter what their training, will make in trying to govern them. I believe again that the Amer ican people as a whole, are capable of self control and of learning by their mistakes. Our opponents pay lip loy alty to this doctrine, but they show their real beliefs by the way in which they champion every device to make the nominal rule of the people a sham. I have scant patience with this talk of the tyranny of the majority. When ever there is tyranny of the majority I shall protest against it with all my heart and soul. But we are today suffering. from the tyranny of the mi norities. It is a small minority that is grabbing our coal deposits, our water powers and our harbor fronts. A small minority is fattening on the sale of adulterated foods and drugs. It is a small minority that lies behind monopolies and trusts. It is a small minority that stands behind the pres ent law of master and servant, the sweatshops and the whole calendar of social and industrial injustice. It is a small minority that is today using our convention system to defeat the will of a majority of the people in the choice of delegates to the Chicago convention. My opponents charge that two things in my program are wrong be cause they intrude into the sanctuary of the judiciary. The first is the recall of judges and the second the review by the people of judicial decisions on certain excep tional questions. I have said again and again that I do not advocate the recall of judges in all states and in all communities. The integrity of our judges, from Marshall to White and Holmes and to Cullen and many oth ers in our state is a fine page of American history. But I say it so berly democracy has a right to ap- . proach the sanctuary of the courts when a special interest has corruptly found sanctuary, and this is exactly what has happened in some of the states where the recall of the judges is a living issue. Is it not equally plain that the questionwhether a giv 5 jj Working lor the other fellow an 1 Get Busy for Yourself Yours for the asking To sHmulare Interest in the voting and opive each one a chance fo profit by their work we will give a prize every ten days. These prizes will not 'affect. thefino1 . ' ' ' " count in any way as all votes will count on , THE GRAND SUTOMO These prizes will be very ten days. en social. puacy is for the public good is not of a judicial nature, but should 5na unworthy and improper construc be settled by the legislature or in the Uon of our form of government to see' final instance, by the people them selves? The president of the United States, Mr. Taft, devoted most of a recent speech to criticise some of this prop osition. He says that "it is utterly without merit or utility and, instead of being in the interest of all the peo ple and of the stability of popular government, is sowing the seeds of confusion and tyranny." By this he of course meant the tyranny of the majority that is the tyranny of the American people as a whole. He also says that my proposal, (which as he rightly sees it, is merely a proposal to give the people a real Instead of only a nominal chance to construe and amend state legislation with reasonable rapidity) would, make such amendment and interpretation "depend on the feverish, uncertain and unstable determinations of suc cessive votes on different laws by temporary and changing majorities,", and that "it lays the axe at the foot of the tree of well ordered freedom and subjects the guarantees of lite, liberty and prosperity without remedy, to the fitful impulse of temporary majority of an electorate." This criticism is really less a crit icism of my proposal than a criticism of all popular government. It is whol ly unfounded, unless it is founded on the belief that the people are funda mentally untrustworthy. This is the question that I propose to submit to the people. How can the prevailing morality or a preponderant opinion be better and more exactly ascer tained than by a vote of the people? The people must know better than the court what their own morality and their own opinion is. I ask that you here, you and others like you, you, the people, be given the chance to state your own views of justice and public morality and not sit meekly by and have your views announced for you by well meaning adherents of outworn philosophies, who exalt the .pedantry of formulas above the vital needs of human life. Mr. Taft's position is the position that has been held from the beginning of our government, although not al ways so openly held, by a large num Ver of reputable Md honorable men Who down at the bottom distrust pop ular government and when they must accept it, accept it with reluctance and hedge around it with every spe cies of restriction and check and bal ance so as to make the power pf the -people as limited and ineffective as possible. Mr. Taft fairly defines the Issue when he says that our govern ment is and should be a government of all the people by a republican part of the people. This is an excellent and moderate description of an olig archy. It defines our government as a government for a few of the people. I am not speaking critically nor do I mean to be unkind, for I believe that many honorable and well meaning men of high character take this view and have taken it from the time of the formation of the nation. Essen tially this view is that the constitu tion is a strait jacket to be used for the control of an unruly patient the people. Now I hold that this view is not only false, but mischievous, that our constitutions are instruments de signed to secure justice by securing tne courts the shleld of Privilege the deliberate but effective expression asalnst Popular rights. Naturally, ev of the popular will, that the checks ! erv upholder and beneficiary of crcok and balances are valuable as far and ! ed Prlvilese loudly applauds the doc iraly so far as they accomplish that trine" 11 is behm(i tne snieli of that deliberation and that it is a warped ' doctrine tMt. crooked clarses creep given to the one that hands n the largest number MORNING ENTERPRISE. TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1912. in it oniy a means or mwarung me popular will and of preventing justice.. Mr. Taft says that "every . class" should have a "voice" in the govern ment. That seems to me a very ser ious misconception of the American political situation. .- The real trouble with us is that some classes have had too much voice. One of the most im portant of all the lessons to be taught and to be learned is that a man should vote not as a representative of a clasa, but merely as a good citizen, whose prime interests are the same as those of all other good citizens. Taft's "Disbelief in the People." Mr. Taft again and again in quota tions I have given and elsewhere in this speech expresses his disbelief in the people when they vote at the polls. in one sentence ne says tnat tne proposition gives "powerful effect to the momentary impulse of a majority of an electorate and prepares the way for the positive exercise of the gross est tyranny." Elsewhere he speaks of the "feverish uncertainty" and "un stable determination of laws" by tem porary and changing majorities, and again he says that the system I pro pose, "would result in suspension or application of constitutional guaran tees according to popular whim," whfch would destroy "all possible con sistency" in constitutional interpreta tion. I should much like to know the exact distinction that is to be made between . what Mr. - Taft calls "the fitful impulse of a temporary majority" when applied to a question such as that I raise and any other question. Remember that under my proposal to review a rule of decision by popular vote, amending or con struing to that extent the constitu tion could certainly take at least two vlyears from the time or tne election I of the legislature which passed the act. Now, only four months elapse between the nomination and the elec tion of a man as president to fill for four years the most important office in the land. In one of Mr. Taft's speeches he speaks of "the voice of the people as coming next to the voice of God." Apparently, then, the de cision of the people about the presi dency, after four more years of delib eration, is to be treated as "next to the voice of God," but if after two years of sober thought they decide that women and children shall be protected n industry, or men protect ed from excessive hours of labor un der unhygienic conditions, or wage workers compensated when they lose life or limb in the service of others, then their decision forthwith becomes a "whim" and feverish "and unstable" and an exercise of the "grossest tyran ny" and the "laying of the axe at the foot of the tree of freedom." That is the old, old doctrine which has been acted upon for thousandsNof years abroad and which here in Amer ica has been acted upon sometimes openly, sometimes secretly, for forty Sears by many men in public and in private life, and I am sorry to say by many judges, a doctrine which has in fact tended to create a bulwark for privileges, a bulwark unjustly protect ing special interests against the rights of the people as a whole. This doc trine is to me a dreadful doctrine, for its effect is, and can only be, to make What can be won with work a fine p?ie every SSfrttr"'' ' : ) L --" ft - - f v ' - - x -3 BILE into laws that men of wealth control legislation. , - Remember, I am not discussing the recall of judges although I wish it distinctly understood that the recall Is a mere piece of machinery to take the place of the unworkable impeach ment which Mr. Taft in effect defends and that if the days of Maynard ever came back again' in the state of New York I should favor it. I have no wish to come to it, but our opponents when they object to all efforts to secure real justice from the courts are strengthen ing the hands of those who demand the recall. In a great many states there has treen for many years a real recall of judges as regards appoint ments, promotions, re-appointments And re-elections. And this recall was through the turn of a thumbscrew at the end of a long distance rod in the hands of great interests. I believe that a just judge would feel far safer In the hands of the people than in the hands of those interests. My remedy is not the result of a library study of constitutional law, but of actua and long continued experience in the use of governmental power to re.lress ociai and industrial evils. Again and again earnest workers for social Just Ice have said to me that the most seri ous obstacles that they have encoun tered during the many years that they have been trying to save American women ajid children from destruction in American industry have been the courts. That is the judgment of al most all the social workers I know and of dozens of parish priests and clergymen and of every executive and legislator who has been seriously at tempting to use the government as an agency for social and industrial bet terment What is the result of this system of judicial nullification? It was accurately stated by the court of appeals, New York, in the employ ers' liability case, where it was calmly and judicially declared that the peo ple under our republican government are less free to correct the evils that oppress them than are the people of the monarchies of Europe. To any man with vision, to any man with broad and real social sympathies, to any man who believes with all his heart in this great democratic ' re public of ours, such a condition is in tolerable. It is not government by the people, but mere sham government in which the will of the people is con stantly defeated. It is out of this ex perience that my ' remedy has come, and let it be tried in this field. When as the result of years of edu cation and debate a majority of the people have decided upon a remedy for an evil from which they suffer and have chosen a legislature, a legis lature pledged to embody that remedy in law, and the law has been finally passed and approved, I regard lt as monstrous that a bench of judges shall then say to the people: "You must begin all over again. First, amend . your constitution (which will take four years) ; -second, secure the passage of a new law (which will take two years more) ; third, carry that new law over its weary course of liti gation, which will take no human be-' ing knows how long; fourth, submit the whole matter over again to the very same judges who have rendered the decision to which you object. Then, if your patience holds out and you finally prevail, the will of the ma jority of the people may have its way." Such a system is not popular govern ment, but a mere mockery of popular government. .. The decisions of which we complain are, as a rule, based upon the con- THE of votes stirutlonal pfovisioh'that ho "person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law. The terms "life, liberty and property," have . been used in the constitutions of the English speaking people since Magna Charta. Until within the last sixty years they were treated as hav ing specific meanings "property" means tangible property; "Liberty" meant freedom --from personal re straint, or in other words, from im prisonment in its ""largest definition. About 1870 our courts began to attach to these terms new meaning. Now "property" has come to mean every right of value which a person could enjoy, and "liberty" has been made to include the right to make contracts. As a result, when the state limits the hours for which women may labor, it Is told by the courts that thisw de prives them of their "liberty," and when it restricts the manufacture of tobacco in a tenement it is told that the law deprives the landlord of his property. Now, I do not believe that any people, and especially our free American people, will long consent that the term "liberty" shall be de fined for them by a bench of judges. Every people has defined that term for itself in the course of its develop ment. The Task is To Strive For Justice. Friends, our task as Americans is to strive for social and industrial just Ice, achieved through the genuine rule of tha people. This is our end, our purpose. The methods for achieving the end are merely expedients to be finally accepted or rejected according as actual experience chows that they work well or ill. But, in our hearts we must have this lofty purpose, and we must strive for it in til earncrt ness and sincerity or our work, v.i:i come to nci-hing.- Incrd-r to -succeed we need leaders of ins-'iir ideaiii.-a. leaders to whom are jrr med srvat visions, who Cream snr.lly md ctriro to make their dreams come i.rue, ? to can kindle the people liiu i ;v from their ovn burning eol'.s. '"ho leader, for the time belnj. wfccv.cv he may be, is but an iratrsi.-.-jtil to be used until broken and then to ts c. : t aside, and Sf he is v.crlli h.r. -.-M t.S will care no mora when l:e :c brci.cj than a soldier cares vhr.i lie is s?e..t where his life is forfe;;;J in ovrtu that the victory may be won. In C-3 long fight for righteousness the watch word for all of us -is speud and fce spent.. It is of little ciiticr whether any one man fails or succeeds, "l.ut the cause shall not fail, for it is tt? cause of mankind. We, here in Amer ica, hold in our hands the hepe of the world, the late of the coming years, and shame and disgrace will be ours jf, in our eyes, the light of high re solve is dimmed, if we trail in the dust the golden hopes of men.. If, on thi3 new continent, we merely build an other country of great but unjustly divided material prosperity, we shall have done nothing, and we shall do as little if we merely set the greed of envy against the greed of arrogance and thereby destroy the material well being of all of us. To turn this gov ernment either into government by plutocracy or governent by a mob would be to repeat on a larger scale the lamentable failures of a world that is dead. We stand against all tytanny, by the few or by the many. We stand for the rule of the many In the interest of all of us, for the rule of the many in a spirit of courage, of common sense, of high purpose, above all in a spirit of kindly justice toward every man and every woman. T7 a little 10 days The Fourth Special Prize for the best 1 0 days showing will be an order on some local merchant. This order is good for anything in his store worth up toil 5.00 or can be applied on a larger account. This order had ought to be worth every effort you can put forth. FLOWER THIEVES ARE . ACTIVE IN HILL SECTION Many of the residents of the city are complaining that flowers are be ing stolen from their yards. One man who recently beautified his yard, and prided himself upon having the hand somest hyacinths in the city, discov ered Monday morning that all his blossoms were missing. The street in front of his home was recently im proved and he had decided not " to erect another fence in front of his home. He says, however, he will have to build one in order to protect his flowers. CANEMAH CEMETERY IS GIVEN GOOD CLEANING In accordance with a proclamation issued a few days ago by the Canemah Progressive Club designating Sunday as the day to clean the cemetery at that place, early that day many per sons were on hand with rakes and hoes to do the Decessary work, and by evening the cemetery presented a much, different appearance than on Saturday. Many pioneers are buried in this place and grass and weeds had grown so that the graves of many were iot visible. Hotel Arrivals The following are registered at the Electric Hotel: A. Lowry, Portland; Mr. and Mrs. Doff it, J. U Ashton and wife Canby; M. A. Miller, Lebanon; Robert Snodgrass, Molalla; D. Jones, Oregon City; C. T. Lomas, Oregon City; A. Hoffin, H. H. McDonald, Rob ert Wyrick, H. D. Knght, W. J. Roth land and wife, A. Deford, C. E. Baty, F. Shank, Gus Nelson, Carl Palmer, H E. Noble and son, Portland, H. H. MacDonald, D. V. Meaghn, Portland, J. W. Duncan. Watch the automobile contest. The Morning Enterprise is the best breakfast food you can have. Plan Your Vacation Now to the EastSeashore or Mountains Southern Pacific Will place on sale low round trip tickets to all the principal cities of the East, going or returning through California or via Porland with go ng limit 15 days. Final return limit Oct. 31st. Sale Dates April, 25, 26, 27 May, 2, 3, 4, 9, Jo, 11,14, 15, 17, 18, 24, 29 June J 6 7 8 131415 17 18 19 20 21 2425 27 28 29 Imperial Council Mystic Shrine, Los Angeles, April 30 to May 4th Ncwport-Yaquina Bay Offers Many advantages for a seashore outing. Low fares from all points in Oregon, reasonable hotel rates, outdoor amusements and all the delights of the seashore. The New P. R. & N. Beaches Tillamook, Garibaidl (Bayocean), . Tillamook, Garibaldi (Bayocean), take Lytle, Ocean Lake Park, Twin Rocks, Tillamook Beach and Bay - City will open a new field for a summer outing. Low round trip fares from all points in Oregon. Call on our nearest Agent for full information as to East Bound Ex cursion fares, routes, stop-overs, etc., or write to JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent. - Portland, Oregon Eat Californa Raisins. Raisin Day April 30th. O To what people ate saying and yo will see how popular yo ate THEN GET IN AND WIN Don't it look tobu ELKS ARRAUDE FOR BIG BALL APRIL !2 One o:" the big social events of the season 'will be- the grand ball by the Order of Elks April 12 when many of the Portland Jodge .will be in attend ance. A car for Portland will leave here at the close of the dance. The music will be furnished by Fox's or chestra of seven pieces. The hall is to be elaborately decorated with Elks' colors, purple and white. Henry CMalley.who has the reputation of being an artistic decorator, has been placed at the head of the decorating committee. The, other committees are a3 follows: General Committee Henry O'Mak ley, ' chairman, Harry Draper, M. D. Latourette. Floor T. P. Randall, E. C. Warren, of Oak Grove, W. B. Stokes, Harry Young, Jerry Beatie, W. B. Howell, Harry Moody, John Bond, of Milwauk ie, J. W. Barr, of Estacada. Reception Dr. Clyde Mount, B. T. McBain, W. H. Howell, J. E. Hedges, Dr. M. C. Strickland, George C. Brow nell, W. H. Bair, of Canby; Charles W. Risley, of Milwaukie; Frank Busch, Sr. - Refreshments consisting of ice cream and cake, coffee and sandwich es will be served in the dining room, and C W. Evans will be in charge Punch will .be served at a prettily decorated punch booth. - W. C. T. U. TO MEET The Womens Christian Temperance Union of Oregon City will hold its meeting at the Presbyterian church this Afternoon at 2 : 30 o'clock. The time to read the Morning En terprise is at the breakfast table or a little before. The July, 2, 3, 6, 7, 11, 12, 15, 16, 20, 22, 23, 26, 29, 30, 31 August 1, 2, 3, 6, 7 12 15 16 22 23 29 30 31 ' Sept.4 5 6 7 8 11 12 30 5 good