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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 9, 1908)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, FEBRUARY 9, T90S. M ETIZ EM - . Mffm TIEHlTElfllOUSE f' 'Mill I HI III u nil inn iih.wji.hh , nnmiWMJXIl miihw VVV --fe? 5t---,-lL ?MT' Ss' JXiSStoT""'. "V , l I : .immmmn i r . i -: . -, ; -. v v - .-ml I ov . -ri, . fc : mmm i ? . . rsx.4 ": drH Is - " - r f' ' 'dig : i ' . JyZ Jx j v - Hwrj- S i -:' ' ill -T.?- Af C'r "'n Liila L-uJ . iff f - J V? 4 - j Remarkable Symposium of Opinions As to His Future Place jin the World's Act ivities by His Fellow Makers of History. By Brought on Brandenburg. Copyright. 1B08, by the New York HeraM Company. BV BROl'OHTOSr HnADKBtHti. The people of the United States are pravely concerned as to who the next President of the United States will be. The men of affairs of the whole world as well as the people of the United States are profoundly interested as to what the next oceupatibn of Roosevelt will be. This topic is coming to be one of intense discussion and the widest speculation. There are herewitji presented the expressions of opinion thereon and the suggestions of eminent men as to what he should do, which matter I have collected with but few excep tions since Mr. Roosevelt's ultimatum on the question of a third term, and also, of course, since the late financial distur bance, which is considered by some to have had great bearing on the complexion of the American political situation, though others contend that it has merely drawn the lines of contest between reform and reaction all the more sharply. IT is folly to underestimate the place Theodore. Roosevelt holds In the nilnd of the American public, . and It is commonly admitted that there never has been a man who could lead so preponderating a body of hi coun trymen In any given direction. He Is unique among our Presidents In a dozen ways, and tfce most consplcufcus of these Is that 'at the age of BO ho will have spent nearly eight years In the presidential chair, will have left an Impression on our history as deep as that of Washington, Jackson, Lincoln and McKinley, and yet leaves his post in the prime of health, vigor and potency. i What ...111 U An iliirlnir tVia nort OA . IIU L I. 11. lie uw l-i u I ' C ...v ..was years, for common sense says that he must be reckoned with as a National figure? There can be no' one who be lieves that he will remain inactive. To what will he lay his hand? . A solution of the problem already has been offered to Congress in a bill instroduced by Senator -McCreary, of Kentucky;, whose proposal to make former Presidents permanent commis sioners to represent this Government In The Hague Peace Congress, at $10. 000 a year and all expenses. There is a current superstition that our former Presidents do not live long a'fter leaving the Presidential chair. The computation of this record is inter esting Indeed. Of the 25 predecessors of Theodore Roosevelt, William H. Harv rison. Zacharr Taylor, Abraham Lin coln, James A. Garfield and William McKinley died in office. Grover Cleve land is the only living former Presi dent. The average- number of years that the 18 others lived. 1 11 years. The average age of retirement or death of all is 61, and Theodore' "Roosevelt will be but SO on his retirement, three years younger than either Fillmore or Pierce, the youngest two on the com pletion of Presidential .service except James A. Garfield, who- was assassinated. The record: Age at Re- Age Terms tire- at Name. Served, meitt Death. ence to this obligation, which can hardly he avoided, limits one who was once President in his choice of an occupation and prescribes for him only such work as Is In popular Judgment not undignified. The American people are the best peo ple in the world, and the honor and re spect with which, they follow to his re tirement one who has served them In tho highest office within their gift illustrates the lnnnte nobility of the American char acter. The truth Is that our people, so fur from treating their retired Presidents simply as relics of past honors, seem dis posed not only to bestow upon them honor and respect, but to continue them In service so far as to not interfere seriously with the untrammeled attention to pri vate citizenship and their unrestrained- resumption of the occupation of everyday life. THOMAS W. LAWS ON George Washington.. 2 John Adams 1 Thomas Jefferson.... 2' James Madison. 2 James Monroe. ...... 2 John Quincy Adams. 1 Andrew Jackson 2 Martin Van Burerr. . . 1 William H. Harrison. 1 John Tyler 1 James K. Polk. ...... 1 . ... 1 65 6(i 66 66 67 66 70. 69" 68 R4 54 6.5 S3 at TO (.6 60 Zachary Taylor. Millard FHlmore. ... 1 Franklin Pierce. . 1 James Buchanan 1 Abraham Lincoln. .. . 2 Andrew Johnson 1 1 lyases B. Grant.. 2 55 Rutherford B. Hayes. -1 61 James A. Garfield..,. 1 - 49 Chester A, Arthur... 1 55 Grover Cleveland. ... 2 6ft Benjamin Harrison,.. 1 59 67 Grover Cleveland.... William McKinley. . . 2 68 S8 There are some suggestions which 1 cannot use directly. A European Anj bassador told me that he was. glad the old colonel of the Rough Riders, the once Assistant Secretary of the Navy, would still bo able to take the field In case we have a war with Japan. "You will not need to go through a mauling to find a Grant to win your war." . A great Southern Democratic Senat or said to me: "If things go wrong in the next four years the 'Solid South will see that Theodore Roosevelt puts them right again. The American people will toler ate no 'shenanigan' unless they are helpless, and they know they are not helpless, as long as Theodore Roosevelt Is sound in mind and body." GROVER CLEVELAND THE attitude of a President the day he leaves his high office and be comes a plain citizen of the United States is one so peculiar that it requires serious contemplation in the perspective to get his proper relations to the people at large. There js a vague but none the less im perative feeling abroad In the land that one who has occupied the great office of President holds In truBt for his fellow citizens a certain dignity which in his conduct and manner of life he is hound to'pro.tect against deterioration. Obedi- THB next Job for Theodore Roosevelt? What a question to ask of intelligent Americans! Are there other Theodore Roosevelts than the one who during the last six years has stood' in. the calm and the storm on the deck of the old ship Republic, with her precious cargo of hu man soulq, and with uncomplaining forti tude and dauntless ' courage has steered her course through the treacherous seas and h.as made all the habors of America's rugged shores, repelling piratical board-, ers and avoiding all decoy beacons? No! Only one Theodore Roosevelt. Then the question Incubates Its own answer. The next Job for Theodore Roosevelt after March. 4, 1!)9, Is helmsman still for the old ship until she readies tue harbor she starred for on her present voyage. Every state in the Union can furnish a dozen ideal Governor Generals of the Philippines, a score of presidents of Har vard College, heads of peace movements or .Secretaries of the Navy, but In none of them is there a man who can hold tho old ship to her course. In calm and gale alike, In this critical passage none but Theodore Roosevelt. In none of them Is there a man to whom the passengers of the old ship would Intrust the finishing of this perilous, voyage If they but knew the mines and false harbor lights she must weather. God forbid that the .American people should allow Pilot Roosevelt to hunt .a new Job until he has berthed the Repub lic at her destination. Old sailors will tell you there is in the career of every stanch ship some one particular voyage which decides her fate for weal or woe, and with horror they would listen to the suggestion that such ship's skipper be changed after she had started on such a voyage. As an -Intense American, who reverences the very dirt of his country, one who knows the history! his forefathers wrote with blood upon their raw flesh, and one who .knows his country's sons and daugh ters, I cannot believe the American people are going to allow the raping of her traditions. -.. History, that horny-handed styluser of the past, left upon no tablet a single tale of a people of any nation taking from the middle of his gloriously successful task one of their heroes and depositing him by the roadside." History tells of many peo ples, now dead, who In spells of temp orary insanity arising from Joy at their heroes' victories, who in temporary mad ness at his defeats. In the temporary be wilderment at his inactivities, killed him, but never have any people in the tally ing of their heroes' on-sweeping successes deliberately, In the middle of a vital campaign, plucked him from the saddle and laid him upon the roadside grass. The degeneracy sogged Roman aristoc racy upon whom Caesar had shed an eter nity of glorious radiance drained th-lr flagons of green Jealousy until their mad Caesar-hating brains visloned all things scarlet, but even then they, the glorified of human beasts, allowed the greatest hero of them all to complete the conquer ing of the whole world ere they plunged their daggers beneath his imperial ribs to the royal heart beyond. TUat inex orable strumpet, Fate, stayed her hand until the sainted Lincoln's task was fin ished, ere she hurled him to that rest which comes to thoe whose fight has not been In vain. There was nothing fur ther for Grant to do when the people dis missed him. Shame everlasting, damnable shame be the heritage of the system-oppressed peo ple If they allow Theodore Roosevelt to hunt another Job while the grand work he has so superbly begun and so bodly carried along with the speed of a Mer cury, the strength of a Samson and the honesty of the man Diogenes unsuccess fully sought, is yet In the blue print stage. The question should not be, "What will be Theodore Roosevelt's next job?" but who In the name of all that is sacred to a free and Intelligent people is there In all the land who can complete the Job he began? -He is working overtime, 'but It cannot possibly be finished by .March, 1909. Who Is there of all the giant Ameri cans who possibly could get the hang of Theodore Roosevelt's uncompleted Job nutil long after all his grand work for the people had been syndicated Into a new people's skinning trust. Who would uare accept' 'Theodore Roosevelt's unfinished task with the fact confronting him that the people are wholly In earnest In their demands to have It finished? 'Who Is there of all the midget Americans who would dare take any public crib-feeding Job that could survive the first fierce bellow of the people as they' watched .the midget wrestle with the tools which the great Roosevelt will lay down, as they watched the pigmy sweat and, tug and tug and sweat at the Job which called for the full exercise of all the magnificent physique, all the splendid mentality, all the grand morality, all the simple honesty and unequally experience combined with the fondest coddling of Mother Fate witn which Theodore Roosevelt has been en dowed: as they watched him struggling with the 'job to prevent the turning of which Into a Punch- and Judy show re quired all the tireless efforts of one of those human giants wjilch God In his Infinite wisdom sends to a people only when the people's dire necessities cry to heaven for it? " , - Truly I cannot conceive of the American people allowing Theodore Roosevelt to hunt another job on March 4, 1909. If the American people should commit such a monstrous error, I have clear vision of the next Job of President Roosevelt pallbearer for the constitution of the d est fool people who have ever been allowed to turn an eagle hatcnery Into a mud poke Incubator. EMPEROR WILLIAM PROFESSOR SCHISM AN, eminent sci entist and intimate friend of the Em peror of Germany, is permitted to quote his distinguished sovereign as follows: The mastery of the problems of his coun try and the oomprehensiun of their propor tion in the world scheme .marks President Roosevelt as far too treat to be sacrificed to any misunderstanding of his alma and usefulness on either side of the Atlantic, If he Is not to continue in his present relation to his people It Is to be hoped that he will return to It after the constitutional period, and In the meantime be accorded the sup port of his successor In the coinDletloa of those far-reaching- reforms on which he has set out. Prince Alexander Sourkan, Engineer and and Explorer The people of the United States are more alert than the people of any other nation, but they know less of the surge of life in other parts of the world tnan either the French, Russians, Germans or English. The Englishman goes everywhere on the globe, and always takes home something for the good of Great 'Britain, a new medical herb, the location of a new mineral field, the data of some archaeological find, the new trade possibilities in some undeveloped region, and he reports it all to his society or writes to the papers about 4t. The Amer ican makes a yearly trip to Europe, rlco. chets about in an automobile or with a tourist party till his pockets are empty and his wife's trunks are full, and then he goes home with but little more welt polilik In his narrow, hard head than he had. Theodore Roosevelt is the first President the United States has ever had. with the possible exception of General Grant, who ever had a . grasp on the great world game, and his failure to enter Into some pursuit that would give the benefit of his grasp enersy and foreign popularity to his pountrymen would be a distinct mis fortune. i If it be permitted to suggest, the writer C?f&?2r' svpyctr jZ&C SOCZfy&?r. would say that he should seek that par ticular Cabinet portfolio which has to do with his country's foreign trade. If a na tion has the second navy In the world, has such enormous manufacturing ca pacity, why not build up the first foreign trade in importance? Do the importers and exporters of the United States even dream what would happen to American trade if Great Britain and Germany were to go to war and the Scandinavian coun tries were to become German allies, something which has never been improb able) in the last 15 years? .There would be a grand suppression of trade In ships under the five flags and there would not be enough neutral cargo carrying ships afloat to carry into and out of American ports in a year the present tonnage of a fortnight. The United States, though entirely neutral and at peace, would suffer the most frightful business ca lamity. All because her great importing trade and small but important exporting trade is carried in foreign ships. There is no good reason why the United States should not have a huge exporting trade and a fleet of cargo carriers to