T T L T1TE SUNDAY OREGONTAN, P0R1XATTD, OCTOBER 1, 1916. 1 11 SAYS WILSON POLICYIS INFAMOUS Sacrifice of National Honor Is Charged Against Demo V, cratic Administration. ADAMSON LAW. ATTACKED Hope and. Fear -of Political ProIH Seen Colonel Admits He Tried for 1 8 ,Months to Support i Executive In Crises. ( Continued From Firat Pag.) PITHY POINTS FROM THEODORE ROOSEVELT'S SPEECH AT BATTLE CREEK, MICH., LAST NIGHT. I ask you to test the character and courage of Mr. Hughes and Wilson by comparing- their attitudes as regards the demands of Mr. .A damson bill Colonel - Roosevelt de clared that an increase of wages and not the eight-hour day was the real issue. "Let President "Wilson apply this sacred eight-hour law to the servants In the White House and see how far he will get." said Mr. Roosevelt. "I be lieve In the eight-hour day as the gen eral rule toward which we mut strive, but I recognize that special needs must be met in special industries and that in all such cases there must be a very careful consideration of all the condi tions before final action is taken." Election of Hughes Urged. Roosevelt closed his address with a plea for the election of Charles E. Hughes. He urged the voters to "re pudiate Mr. Wilson because only by so doing ean they save America from that taint of gross selfishness and cowardice which we owe to Mr. Wilson's substitu tions of adroit elocution for straight forward action." The circus tent was crowded and thousands were massed around it long before Colonel Roosevelt, who started speaking at 4:1ft o'clock, arrived. Sev eral speakers preceded the Colonel. Ex Senator Lafayette Young, of Iowa, dis cuBsed National politics, but broke off his speech sharply when the crowd, seemingly restless, began to cry "We want Teddy." Colonel Roosevelt declared that fear and hope of political profit caused President Wilson to force the passage of the Adamson eight-hour-day bill. Wilson Yields to Labor Leaders. "President Wilson yielded to the dic tation, of the heads of the brotherhoods and made no effort to find out whether the demand was right or wrong," ne added. "He took his orders from that one of the parties interested which he most feared. The question at issue was not one of the hours of labor. It was one of wages. The settlement was due partly to fear and partly to hope of political profit. "I believe in labor unions. But I be lieve first and foremost in liberty and justice obtained through the "Union to which ali of us belong the Union of all the people of the United States. I believe in the eight-hour day as the general rule toward which wo must strive; hut I recognize that special needs must be met in special Industries, and that in all such cases there must be very careful consideration of all the conditions before final action is taken. , In this case,, however, the eight-hour day is not the Issue. The issue is an increase of wages, given by law, with- ! out previous investigation, or knowl edge. The principle of the eight-hour day is not at issue and is adroitly in voked merely to cloak the real issue. Careful Examination Favored. "Eight hours may be the outside limit of proper work time in Mr. Ford's factory, where the man is all the time working at just one thing Intensively and without vacation; but eight hours that includes periods of doing nothing but sit around, and also change of oc- cupatlon. may not he long enough. Moreover, there are occupations of in termittent activity, where to limit the total time on duty in any one day to eight hours would be an ahsurdity; and there are others where excessive activ ity on one day is compensated for by complete leisure on the next day. "The case at issue is pre-eminently one that comes In the category of those that can be settled only after careful investigation and full consideration of many Important conflicting elements. I believe in the eight-hour day, on moral and sociological grounds, as being the ideal towards which we should strive. I believe in wages being just as high in any business as is compatible with square treatment to the other parties in interest. But if the Government is to intervene in order te secure shorter hours and better wages, it must do so only after full knowledge, and not merely under the duress of threats. Public Bights Upheld. "When any labor trouble becomes of such ize as to involve the public, the public has a. right to interfere, to in sist that there shall be no interference with the welfare and safety of the pub lic, and therefore to insist on arbitra tion, that is, for just decision by the Government, after an investigation con ducted through a commission which will get all the facts and lay them be fore the executive and legislative rep resentatives of the public for what ac tion they deem necessary. These were the principles which by actual deed when I was President, I upheld in the teeth of violent opposition from the most powerful corporations in the land representing the employers interest. "The opposition of these great em ploying corporations was asserted in every possible way against me through ; out the period when I held public of fice or was a candidate for public of fice. I absolutely disregarded it, be cause I thought that only by disre garding it could I do my duty to the country. In just the same way, and from just the same motives. I shall now disregard any opposition by the repre sentatives of misguided labor unions to the principles which I then put into effect, and which they then applauded roe for putting into effect. Welfare of Labor Important. "As I said when I was President, ' I believe that the welfare of the labor ing man, with the sole exception of the welfare of the farmer, is more important to this country than the welfare of any other citizen; I shall do all I can to secure his permanent welfare; I shall do everything in my power for the working man. except what is wrong; but I will do wrong neither for him nor for any other man. "The question at issue was not that of an eight-hour day at all. The ques tion was whether the President and ' ' Congress should enact a law, without inT-jstigation and without knowledge. to give increased wages to a certain portion of the body or wage earners. Thelcbor leaders on this issue, with out regard to the right or wrong Of the mattr, first coerced the President, and then, with his aid. coerced Congress. "The question at issue was not one of the hours of labor. It was one of wages. And it was settled by the Pres ident and Congress without investiga tion and without knowledge. - The set tlement was due partly to fear and partly to hope of political profit. - Popular Side Favored. "President Wilson, in his speech on the 23d OT this month, sought to explain and Justrfiy hisj action- He stated his the railway brotherhoods, which culminated recently la the miscalled elght-hour-legrislation at Washington. The question at issue was not that of an eight-hour day at all. The question was whether the President and Congress should enact a law, without investigation and without knowledge, to give increased wages to a certain portion of the body of wage earners. I believe in labor unions. But I believe, first and foremost, in the liberty and justice obtained through the Union to which all of us be long the union of all the people of the United States. I believe in the eight-hour day as the general rule toward which we must strive; but I recognize that special needs must be met in spe cial industries; and that in all such cases there must be very careful consideration of all the conditions before final action is taken. The principle of the eight-hour day is not at issue and is adroitly invoked merely to cloak the real issue. I believe in wages being just as high In any business as is com patible with square treatment to the other parties in interest. When any labor trouble becomes of such size as to involve the pub lic, the public has a right to interfere, to Insist that there shall be no interference with the welfare and safety of the public, and, therefore, to insist on arbitration that is, for just decision by the Government, after an investigation conducted through a commission which will get all-the facts and lay them before the executive and legislative rep resentatives of the public for what action they may deem necessary. There is grave reason to believe that the course the President fol lowed was directly opposed to his convictions. The President is now a candidate for office, and speaks well of labor. Until he became a can dldate for office, and as long as he was president of a University, he, with entire safety, ignored or assailed the labor unions. The course actually followed by the President and the majority of Congress put the Interests of the oountry second to considerations of unhealthy political expediency. We of the United States lavite disaster, we sacrifice every princi ple of manhood if we raise a breed of men in this country who deter mine vital issues in such fashion. If our people follow the President who has kept them In the easy path of temporary comfort and material ease at the sacrifice of Na tional honor and of Americanism and of the Immutable principles of righteousness, then as a people we shall lose all moral greatness in the present and most assuredly we shall see this loss followed by the loss of material greatness in the future. President Wilson was cowed by the big labor leaders, exactly as he had already been cowed by Germany and by Mexico. And President Wilson let the public pay. I appeal to my fellow citizens that they shall elect Mr. Hughes and repudiate Mr. Wilson because only by so doing can they save America from that taint of gross selfishness and cowardice which we owe to Mr. Wilson's substitution of adroit elocution for straightforward action. When I was President I never complained of any attack on me un less it was fclse, and if it was false, and the man making It was im portant enough, I clearly showed its falsity. I apply to others only the standard by which I ask that I myself be treated. I never uttered one word of criticism of President Wilson until one year and a half after he was elected President. When once I became convinced, as I am convinced, that the conscience of this people has been seared and its moral sense dulled by the lead ership of the Administration and of Congress in the last three years, then I say these false servants of the people have betrayed the soul of the Nation. President Wilson, by his policy of tame submission to Insult and injury from all he feared, has Invited the murder of our men, women and children by Mexican bandits on land and by German submarines on the sea. effort to stand by him was Incom patible with standing by the interests of mankind, and the honor of this na tion. But in my view there was no alternative for any honorable man. when once I became convinced, as I am convinced, that the conscience of this people has been seared, and its moral sense dulled by the leadership of the administration and of Congress during the last three- years. These false servants of the people have taught us to enjoy soft ease and swol len wealth in the present without tak ing one effective step to ward off ruin ous disaster in the future. These false servants of the people hive, betrayed the soul of the nation." Mr. Roosevelt's closing words were a plea for Mr. Hughes election. "I appeal to my fellow citizens that they elect Mr. Hughes and repudiate Mr. Wilson, because only by so doing can they save America from the taint of gross selfishness." he said. GUARDSMAN IS SUICIDE Temporary Insanity Believed loe to Bite of Scorpion. BEACON. N. Y., Sept. 30. Temporary Insanity induced by illness following the bite of a scorpion while on the way with his regiment to McAllen. Texas. In July. Is believed to have caused the suicide here yesterday of Sergeant William Santee. of Company K. Third Infantry, New York National Guard. Santee was a veteran of the Spanish American war. ' accuracy when he said that before he undertook to settle the controversy he had "learned that the whole temper of the legislative bodies of the United States was in favor" of what one siae announced to be its contention. In oth er words, he had made up his mind in advance; and he had made it up because he believed the majority of the Con gressmen (for the most part pure poli ticians) were on what they deemed to be the popular side. "In this speech he explicitly admitted that in this controversy the main part ner was left out of the reckoning," be cause the two parties declined to con sider "what rights had the hundred million people of the United StatesT And President Wilson eagerly joined with these men in refusing to consider the rights of these hundred millions of people. "If the Improper course which the President followed had been due to mistaken conviction, to erroneous prin ciple, its effect would nevertheless have been evil. As it is, the effect is far worse, because there is grave rea son to believe that the course he fol lowed was directly opposed to his real convictions. Wilson Once Foe of Labor. "The President is now a candidate for office and speaks well of labor. Un til he became -a candidate for office, and as long as he was president of a university, he, with entire safety, ig nored or assailed the labor unions. In deed, he was then their bitter, ungen erous, and often unjust, critic At the People's Forum, on February 25. 1905, he said: 'Labor unions drag the high est man to the level of the lowest.' In an address at a dinner in the Waldorf- Astoria on March 18. 1907, in speak ing of the capitalists, he said: "There is another equally formidable enemy to equality and betterment of oppor tunity, and that is the class formed by the labor organizations and leaders of this country. In a letter written Jan uary 12, 1909, he said: 'I am a fierce partisan of the open shop." In June of the same year, speaking at Prince ton, he said: 'The usual standard of the employe in our day is to give us as little as he may for his wages. Labor is standardized by the trades unions and this is the standard to which, it is made to confess. I need not point out how economically disastrous such a regulation of labor is. The labor of America is rapidly becoming unprofit able under this regulation. Our eco nomic supremacy may be lost because the country grows more and more full of unprofitable servants. "I have no question that when Mr. Wilson thus spoke he expressed his sin cere convictions. Less than two years later he was in public life and immedi ately his attitude changed. There is no reason to believe that his convic tions changed. "The course actually followed by the President and the majority of Congress put the interest of the country second to considerations of unhealthy political expediency. It appealed to timid and short-sighted men outside of Congress no less than to those within Congress. It la upheld now by certain men, who say. 'Thank God, President Wilson averted a strike. just exactly as they and those like them say. Thank God, President Wilson has kept us out of war. "These persons do not ask whether he averted the strike honorably or dis honorably, any more than they ask whether he averted a war honorably or dishonorably. They have not con sidered in either case whether tempor ary safety was to be ignobly purchased at the cost of future disaster. All that they have demanded was- that war should be averted in one case, and a strike averted in the other case, in or der that they might not have to under go risk or temporary material discom fort. They have been too timid and too short-sighted to make any sacrifice for the sake of right and justice, or to un dergo any risk in order to preserve the foundations of Democracy and of free government in America. "These men have shown entire will ingness to submit to organized tyranny both from outside our borders and from inside our borders, if only at the mo ment they could avoid inconvenience and financial loss. These men are not the heirs of the Americans who brought the Revolutionary War to a successful close; nor of the men who wore the blue and the gray for four long years in the great struggle of the Civil War. If the American people of today are willing to accept such leader ship, they will give justification for the belief that they prize ease and com fort above the principles for which their forefathers suffered and died. Disaster Is Invited. "We of the United States invite dis aster, we sacrifice every principle of manhood, if we raise a breed of men in this country who determine vital is sues in such fasmon. Such men, when they face any issue, merely ask if it is difficult to meet it hon estly and bravely; and if it Is. they Instantly proceed to meet it dishonestly and timidly. They meas ure the acts of their public men in terms of Immediate material content and ease. They do not require them to act in terms of right and justice. They say that they stand for the ad ministration because it has kept us out of war, and has averted a strike. They refuse seriously, to consider, as all high-minded Americans ought to con sider, the Presidents refusal to do his plain and honest duty by meeting great crises honorably and courageously. "I never uttered one word of crlti cism oi president Wilson until a year and a half after he was elected Presi dent. If he had stood by the honor and interest of the American people. 1 would have thrown up my hat for him, and would have supported him heart and soul. I not merely kept silent during the first 18 months or two years. I tried actively to support him. The only errors I have made in con nection with Mr. Wilson were due to incautiously accepting his statements and supporting his policies in the ef fort to 'stand by the President." - Nation Declared Betrayed. "It was with deep reluctance that was forced to the conclusion that the MOST IMPORTANT THEATRICAL A WOTTVr,'rTFVT OP THK YEAR ( udrey unson World-famous Art Model in PURITY One Week, Starting Sunday, Oct. 8. PEOPLES 0 A 1 THEATER FUN INCREASES STUDY University Discovers AH Work and No Play Idea Fails. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. Eutrene. Sept. SO. The School of Education, through the co-operation of the high schools over the state, has been able to estimate the average number of hours required for study In the high schools. The average time required for studv is 2 hours and 43 minutes. An average of 1 hour and 3 minutes of this time is LEATHER IS REAL TEST In the selling of shoes the value of the leather in them is of greatest importance. While 6hoe men may boast, "with just pride or for advertising purposes, of the 6tyle and finish of their shoes, -get the real test of the merit of shoes is the durability of ' the leathex in them. A pair of shoes that wears well la kept in service long: after fine finish has been kicked off and the new style has been forgotten. If the leather wear; well, the wearer calls for a pair of shoe like them. When you figure the wearing qualities, EXCLUSIVE STYLE, comfort and lasting satisfaction to be obtained on'jr in Haaan Shoes, you will find, as we haf e found, that they are really the cheapest shoe to buy in the end. ' T? AOA-nflinl'o Portland's Best Shoe Store iXOSentliai S 129 10th St., Bet. Wash, and Alder SOLE AGENTS FOR THESE CELEBRATED SHOES We Give S. & H. Green1 Stamps Hi utilized at home and the remainder is done in the class or assembly-room. The students of Oregon study about one hour a day less than the Eastern ers. A question as to whether these con ditions could be improved or not brought forth various answers. About 50 high school principals replied that they had tried to get more studying done but had failed, while 13 replied that by having the co-operation of the parents and the business people, in niacin all forms of entertainment on week-ends, the was Increased. amount of studying Cottage Grove Strong for Hughes. COTTAGE GROVE. Or., Sept. 30. (Special.) Officers of the Local Hughes Club are really being embar rassed by the numerous requests for buttons, which they are unable to fill. Several supplies received from state headquarters were exhausted quickly and watch fobs, etc. put on sale at the stores, bearing the Republican stan dard bearer's picture, have been quick ly bought up. Elbert Eede. president, and Mrs. Clara Burkholder. vice-preri-dent, expect to attend the big rally at Portland next Friday. There prob ably will be several other delegates. Leader of Auto Thieves Guilty. CHICAGO. Sept. 30. Earl Deer was found guilty by a jury as being at the head of a band of automobile thieves, was fined 11000 and sentenced to serve a year In prison by Judge Sab bath todsy. - Assets $10,400,000.00. Ottawa. Kansas, June 2T, 1916. Mr. W. C. Wilson, President Old Une Bank ers Ut Ins. Co.. Lincoln. Nebraska. Dear Sir: I am very much pleased to have the privilege of acknowledstac receipt of your draft handed me by Mr. C. N. Tertat xneyer. your agent at Ottawa. Kansas, for $903.47. in settlement of my policy No. 4022. matured todsy on the Twenty-Pay Life plan. I paid you $595 In premiums during the 20 years and you ret nr. to me $903.47. being $308.4T more than my total premiums, be sides having my life Insured for $1000 for 20 yeara I am mora than pleased with this very fine settlement and I wish to express my appreciation and satisfaction in the com pany's -liberality and financial ability dem onstrated in this settlement, and I shall takA pleasure in recommending your com pany to alt who may desir. to buy good life Insurance. Very truly yours. 430 C. T. LAMB. Twenty Payment life Policy Matured in the Old Line Bankers Life Insur ance Company of Lincoln, Nebraska Name of insured. .Charles F. Lamb Residence. ....... .Ottawa, Kansas Amount of policy $1000.00 Total premiums paid Co,. . 595.00 SETTLEMENT Total cash paid Mr. Lamb. .$903.47 And 20 Years Insurance for Nothing. 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