The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, October 22, 1916, Section One, Page 11, Image 11

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    11
K
ROOSEVELT CONTRASTS RAILROAD
AND ANTHRACITE SETTLEMENTS
Labor Warned Against Giving Up Principle of Arbitration President's Admission of Wrong Quoted in Own
Words Mr. Hughes Declared Incapable of Yielding to Threats Mr. Wilson's Utterances on Labor Cited.
TfiisSgaiifM
TITE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, POIiTXAyP, OCTOBER 22, .1?16.
WILKESBARRE. Pa Oct. 21.
Colonel Roosevelt In his speech
here last Saturday, In which he
discussed the Adamson law. said:
"At the outset I wish to express my
Very hearty admiration for the broth
erhoods. I am proud of the fact that I
am an honorary member of one of
them. I have usually been in entire
sympathy with them. While I held pub
lic office I found myself In the vast
majority of cases able to support them
In their demands, because these de
mands were right. But now they have
demanded legislation raising their
wages to be taken without investiga
tion and without the exercise of that
form of Judgment shown by a compe
tent arbitration commission; and such
a demand is wrong, and I stand against
It because It is wrong, exactly as I
have stood against the demands of
, bankers and lawyers, and mine owners
and railroad presidents when they
were wrong. I believe In labor unions.
I am proud that I am myself an hon
orary member of a labor union. But
I believe first of all in the Union to
which all of us belong, the union of
all the .people of the whole United.
6tates.
Wilson Wrong by Own Statement
"In the case of the settlement of the
anthracite strike, the action-1 took was
cf precisely the kind which President
Wilson now says the law should make
obligatory in all similar cases in the
future. But Mr. Wilson himself ad-
mits that his own action was so bad
that it ought never to be repeated, for
he has assured the public that al
though Congress has adjourned with
out doing anything, it is his intention
when Congress meets to see that it
does something to render It impossible
for another President ever to repeat
exactly what he has Just done. In other
words, I stood and stand by my action
aa the proper action, constituting the
proper precedent for future action. Mr.
Wilson himself confesses that his ac
tion was wrongand that the precedent
thereby set is so evil that legislation
must be enacted rendering It impossible
- tor another President ever to repeat
the action.
"Thfcre is another point of difference
and a vital point. The action I took
was intended to meet the situation at
once. The action that Mr. Wilson took
has been, deferred so that It shall not
take place until- considerably after
election.
"Fourteen years ago the great an
traelte strike had occurred in this
region. From the beginning I put the
" Governmental agents in touch with the
situation and kept myself thoroughly
Informed, so that I should be able to
act immediately if It became neces
sary for me to act. I hoped that It
would not be necessary, and that the
parties themselves would come to an
agreement; for I was very loath to in
terfere if it could be avoided. But cold
weather approached, a coal famine
menaced the entire eastern section of
the United States, and there was not
the slightest symptom of an agree
ment being reached by the contending
parties. I felt that the time had come
(or me to act.
miners "Willing; to Arbitrate.
"On the one side were the greatest
and wealthiest mine owners of the
country, intimately oonnected with the
wealthiest and most powerful indus
trial and railroad corporations in the
country. The financial strength of
Wall street was behind them. These
men absolutely refused to arbitrate.
They said there was nothing to arbi
trate, that I had no power under the
Constitution to act, and that the public
could not Interfere, nor the representa
tives of the public, with the way in
which they managed their business.
The representatives of tha mine work-
ers, of labor, on the contrary, ex
pressed their entire willingness to ar
bitrate and demanded nothing except
that as one of the conditions of arbi
tration there should be some repre
sentative of organized labor to sit to
Kether with the representatives of cap
ital and of the public at large. I made
every effort to get the two sides to
agree. When I failed, I decided that 1
would act myself. I held that where
the public necessity was National and
imperative it became the duty of the
Chief of the Nation to act. I held that
in any such gigantic controversy be
tween labor and capital, containing
Fuch a threat. to the welfare of the
preat body of our people, there were
three parties in interest: viz., the cap
italists, the workingmen, and the people
bs a whole; and that where the public
need was vital that need must control.
"I held, moreover, that in any case
of such importance and such Interest
we must have full knowledge before
final action on any of the. points at
Issue was taken and that this knowl
edge must be obtained by an unbiased
body of arbitrators after a thorough
ftudy of the i situation. I held that
the power of the Government must be
used t6 make effective the findings of
this body and that pending the findings
the work of mining must go on be
cause the publio need demanded it.
Entire Power of Nation Used.
"Therefore I decided that I would
use the entire power of the Nation to
see that there was an arbitration by
dispassionate experts and that the con-
elusions of that arbitration were ac
cepted by both sides and that until
their decision was rendered the work
of mining should go on in the interests
of the people as a whole. When the
mine owners, backed by and represent
ing the most powerful financial lnter-
ests of the country, positively refused
to arbitrate, I proceeded to appoint an
arbitration committee without regard
to them, securing the consent of a po
litical opponent, ex-President Grover
Cleveland, to serve at the head of that
commission. I saw the Lieutenant
General of the Army and arranged
with him that if necessary I would put
the Army in possession of the mines
and would treat him as a receiver to
run the mines and to see that neither
side interfered with the running. When
It became evident that I meant what I
said, that both sides could count on
my endeavor to do strict Justice- and
that they could also count on my in
sisting that th public needs be imme
diately met, the capitalists yielded and
the commission was appointed.
"The arbitration was .successful. I
understand that with slight modifica
tions you have continued to operate
the mines under its terms up to the
present day. More important still, it
set the precedent for the course that
ought to be followed In all disputes of
this nature hereafter. Mr. Wilson, on
the contrary, has set a precedent which
he himself admits must never hereaf
ter be followed if Justice is to be done.
This is a vital point of difference be-
tween the conduct of the Chief Execu
tive in one case and in the other.
. President's Own Words Quoted.
"President Wilson in his speeches of
August 29 and September 23 has fur
nished his own condemnation out of his
own mouth. In them he explicitly con
demns exactly what he has done and
actually demands legislation which will
make impossible the repetition of such
a proceeding! This is so extraordinary
an attitude that I quote his own words.
He said he wished 'to provide' against
'the recurrence of such unhappy situa
tions in the future' by securing 'the
calm, and fair arbitration of all indus
trial disputes in the days to come.'
This Is an explicit assertion that arbi
tration of all industrial disputes is the
right method of action; and therefore
that he had adopted the wrong method
of action although in the case of the
anthracite coal strike he had an exact
precedent in point, by following which
he would have enforced the right
method.
"President Wilson further says: 'This
is assuredly the best way of vindi
cating a principle, namely, having
failed to make certain of its observance
in the present to make certain of Its
observance in the future.
On the contrary, this is the very
worst way of vindicating a principle.
Indeed, it is Impossible to devise a
worse way of vindicating a principle
than to flinch ignominiously from en
forcing it in the case at issue and at
the same time to seek to cover the ig
nominy by vociferous protestations
about applying it in the nebulous future.
Evil Precedent Established.
'All that he did was to establish the
most evil of all precedents for a democ
racy, the precedent of violating a prin
ciple under the duress of threat and
menace. It is a precedent which will
return to plague us throughout all fu
ture time whenever we have in the
White House a President who is timid
in the face of threat of physical vio
lence or who subordinates duty to the
hope of personal political profit.
President Wilson further said, while
trying to gloss over his timidity in the
present by assuming an attitude of
frowning defiance as regards the neb
ulous future, that the American people
must be made 'a partner in the settle
ment of disputes that interrupt the life
of the Nation,' that it must 'enforcer
the partnership and see to it that no
organization is stronger than that or
ganization to which we all belong, our
own Government, and that we, the
people, must say to any outside organ
ization that It 'must not Interrupt the
National life without consulting ub."
"These are fine words about the fu
ture. They are Intended to cover up,
but as a matter of fact they furnish
the strongest condemnation of Mr.
Wilson's deed in the present. In these
words Mr. Wilson exactly describes
what he ought to have done with the
brotherhoods and explictly condemns
the action which he in fact took. If
the principles he laid down were good
for the future, they were good for the
present. Do it now, Mr. Wilson! Do
not use fine words about what some
body else ought to do In the future In
order to cover your own shameful
abandonment of duty In the present.
Eiarbt-Honr Day Ideal.
"I believe in the eight-hour day. It
is the ideal toward which we should
tend. But I believe that there must
be common sense as well as common
honesty in achieving the" ideal. Mr.
Wilson has laid down the principle
that there is something sacred about
the eight-hour day which makes it
improper even to discuss it. If this is
so, if it is applied universally, then
Mr. Wilson is not to be excused for
not applying it immediately where he
has complete power, and that is in his
own household. If the principle of
the eight-hour day is sacred and not
to be changed under any circumstances,
then the housemaid, who in Mr. Wil
son's house arises at 7, must be let oft
at 3 in the afternoon; and if Mr. Wll
son's butler is kept up after a state
dinner until 10, he must not come on
until 2 of the following afternoon, and
no hired man on a farm must get up
RUB YOUR
STOPS
BACK
LUMBAGO
Don't Drug Kidneys! Rub the
Pain Right Out With Old
"St. Jacobs Oil."
Back hffrts youT Can't straighten
up without feeling sudden pains, sharp
aches and twinges i now listen i
That's lumbago, sciatica, or maybe
from a 6traln, and you'll get blessed
relief the moment you rub your back
with soothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs
Oil." Nothing else takes "out sore
ness, lameness and stiffness so quickly
You simply rub It on and out comes
the pain. It is perfectly harmless and
doesn't burn or discolor the skin.
Limber up! Don't suffer! Get
small trial bottle from any drug store
and after using it Just once, you'll
foriret that you ever had backache
lumbago or sciatica, because your back
will never hurt or cause any more
misery. It never disappfllnts and has
been recommended for 60 years. Stop
drugging kidneys! They don't cause
backaohe. because they have no nerves,
ibarafox s&ooot cause jain iAdv,
to milk the cows in the morning unless
he quits work before milking time ar
rives that same evening. Of course,
the simple truth is that under one set
of conditions an eight-hour law may
be too long or at least may represent
tne very maximum of proper work
whereas there may be other conditions
under which a man working more than
eight hours one day gets one or two
days of complete leisure following, or
where the work is Intermittent
throughout the day, or IS of so easy
or varied a type that no exhaustion ac
companies it, or where a rush of work
for a few days will be compensated by
complete leisure on certain other days.
"It is ridiculous to say that an en
gineer of a high-speed train under es
pecially difficult conditions, an en
gineer of a low-speed train under very
much easier conditions, a farm laborer
in harvest time, a man engaged as a
watchman through the qule,t work of
the night, or a man engaged in the
exhausting work of a steel puddler in
a continous seven-days-a-week, nlght-and-day
industry, should be governed
by precisely the same rule or by the
same rigid application In detail of a
sound general, principle.
Should Be Limited.
"I heartily believe in a proper limi
tation by law of hours of work in the
railroad service, and I recommended
legislation to that effect when I was
President. I believe in the wages in
any industry being Just as high as it
is possible to make them wlthbut in
justice to the capital Invested and to
the public which is served. But it is
a mere truism Ito say that it is im
possible to get this ideal achieved un
less an honest and dispassionate ef
fort is first made by the proper com
mission to ascertain the full facts in
the particular case. As regards -the
railroads,- we .have to consider the
wages paid to the different classes of
employes, the Interest on the invest
ment, the earning power of trhe road.
and the kind of service that must be
rendered to the public. It is Impossible
to secure a proper solution of the- prob
lem unless all these factors are con
sidered. Mr. Wilson absolutely de
clined to consider any of them. He de
clined even to ask what they were. We
nave not at this moment one particle of
trustworthy information, which will
enable us to decide whether the de
mands of the men were Just or not.
I wish it distinctlv understood that
I am not trying to pass Judgment upon
the Justice of the case. I regard the en
gineers, firemen and enginemen and
trainmen generally as doing peculiarly
responsible and arduous work, and en
titled to particular consideration as re
gards both hours of labor and pay. I
hope that they are fully entitled as a
matter of Justice to what they will re
ceive under the Adamson bill and if it
so appears I shall heartily support it.
out l protest against the far-reachinir
evil of the precedent set in the method
which has been followed.
Pmbllc Must Pay In End, '
"Remember it is the publio that In
the end will pay. You do not have to
take my assertion for this. Take the
assertion of Mr. Wilson's master in
this matter. The union leaders,
through their chairman, Mr. Garretson,
announced that 'they would steadily
refuse to arbitrate and that in their
action they were supported by the
President of the United States.' They
stated the case in a nutshell as fol
lows: In times like this, men go back
to primal instinct to the day of the
caveman with his half-gnawed bone.
snarling at the other caveman who
wanted to lake his bona away. We
leaders are fighting for our men. The
ranroaas are fighting for their stock
holders; and the shippers for them
selves. Ana the public will pay.' Mr
Garretson is right.lthe publio will civ!
And it will pay without having had
the chance to know whether It ought
or ought not to pay. Mr. Wilson be
trayed the public when he refused to
insist mat the contest should be de
cided on principle of Justice, and when
he permitted It to; be decided in defer
ence to greed and fear.
"He says, that It would havS been
futile' to show courage and stand up
for the right. From the standpoint of
the Nation, the worst kind of futility
in a President Is to fall to stand up
for the right. President Wilson felt
ii was ruine to oppose these men, ex
actly as President Buchanan hi. .i,.
itual forbear, felt in 1860 that it was
futile to oppose secession. That type
of futility gives the real measure of
the man who practices it. What Bu
chanan considered futile Lincoln made
nuroic
SATIOXAL LECTURER COMES
TO TALK TO MODERN
WOODMEX.
iWOODMEX. t
. - i
K " , 1 1
t "i ' ' i
- - H
I 4 I
v it
'; i s -
to
Edward F. Burns, of Brooklyn.
Edward F. Burns, of Brooklyn,
N. Y., National lecturer of the
Modern Woodmen of America,
will arrive in the city today from
Seattle. Mr. Burns is making a
tour of the Pacifio Coast states
in the Interests of that society,
having spent the last 30 days In
Montana, Idaho, Washington and
Eastern Oregon.
He will address a large open
meeting next Wednesday evening
In the new Modern Woodmen
Hall, at 8 Eleventh street, under
the auspices of all Modern Wood
men camps of the city. Visitors
from all nearby camps will be
present, and it Is expected to
make this one of the largest
meetings of Its kind ever held In
the city. Mr. Burns is an orator
of National repute, having held
the position of National lecturer
of the society for 16 years. He Is
accompanied by Mrs. Burns.
In addition to the Portland
meeting he will also deliver ad
dresses at the following points in
Western Oregon, en route to Cal
ifornia. Astoria, October 24; Sa
lem. October 26, and Grants Pass.
October 27. Mr. Burns is accom
panied on this trip by J. W. Sim
mons, state deputy of the society.
Mr, Hughes Incapable of Yleldl
Threats.
"ITShaml1Sn Mr' H"f-hes as against
Air. v Uson because in every such cri
sis Mr. Wilson, by his publio acts has
shown that he will yield to fear, that
u l,?ot yleld to Justice, whereas
the publio acts of Mr. Hughes have
proved him to be Incapable of yielding
in such a crisis to any threat, whether
made by politicians, corporations or
labor leaders.
"I have always stood for the rights
of labor. You miners before me know
"-"""-V " oy you and I incurred
mo nosiimy or tne greatest financial
powers of the land by so doing, and I
have felt that hostility in public life
sue. cut i aid not care, because
I knew that my course was right. If
I had been the type of man who was
willing to stand by you when you were
wrong. I would never have dared to
stand by yon when you were right,
against such opposition as at that time
4. cucuuniBreo. i nave stood for
shorter hours of labor.. I have stood
for a better wage for the laborer, for
better housing conditions, for giving
the laboring wage worker better living
conditions and better and safer work
ing conditions. I have stood to give
him and his wife and his children the
chance to make of themselves all that
American citizens should make of
memseives. i nave stood, and always
oiin.li Binno, ior eveiytning in the in
terest of Justice for the laboring- mar.
But I have always stood and always
shall stand against yielding anything
luruuBu ior or Because or threats,
believe In the great principle of arbl
tration. I believe in invoking the
action of the Government to help labor;
but I also believe that to InvnkA nrh
action will in the end be ruinous to
labor, as well as to the country. If it
is not exercised witn wisdom and fear
lessness and in the spirit of exact Jus
tice to an the panties concerned. If
these questions are not settled right.
men some time tney win nave to be
unsettled, and infinite trouble is there
by laid up for us in the future.
Labor Should Be Farstghted.
"Labor leaders who are shortsighted
may at the moment get from a man in
publio office who is not actuated by
Justice, more than from a man who is
actuated by Justice. But the laboring
people as a whole cannot afford to ac
cept such pains. If unjust legislation
is given them for improper reasons,
then unjust legislation against them
may be enacted for improper reasons.
More than any other people In the
country the. wageworkers should insist
on Just and fair action. There is grave
reason to believe that In the course
President Wilson has followed he did
violence to his own real convictions.
Until he became a candidate for office,
he was a bitter, ungenerous and often
unjust critic of labor unions. I have
before me speeches and letters of his
made and written In 1905, 1907 and
1S09, In which Mf Wilson says among
other things that 'labor unions drag
the highest man down to the level of
the lowest,' Mid in paklng of the
rials, construction and finish are first-class
m HE Suite, illustrated' above, is made
expressly to our order, and it cannot in every respect. We can furnish this splen
Dresser, Chiffonier, Dressing Table and
Chair, Bed, Chaii and JRocker. The mate-
did Suite in Satin Walnut, Mahogany, Ivory,
or French Gray. At a slight increase in price,
the Suite can be handsomely decorated.
Call and See This Fine Suite. Price $116.50 $10 Down, $10 a Month Liberal Discount for Cash
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$2S House Desks reduced to: . . .819
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d.50 1 abourets reduced to S 4
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Henry Jenning & Sons
One Biff Store
"The Home of Good Furniture'
Washington street at Fifth
Nine Floors
capitalistic class, ho says that "there Is
another equally formidable enemv and
It Is that class formed by the labor
leaders of this country,' and again "I
am a fierce partisan of the open shop,'
and again "the usual standard of the
employe in our day Is to give as lime
aa he can for his wages. Labor Is
standardized by trade unions and this
is the standard to which It is made to
conform. I need not point out how
economically disastrous such regula
tion of labor la. Our economic suprem
acy may be lost because the country
(trows more and more full of unprofit
able servants.' These were the utter
ances of llr. Wilson when he was
president of a university and had
neither fear of nor desire to profit by
the labor vote. In Mr. Wilson's
'History of the American . People' he
explicitly stated that the ' Chinese
ought not to be excluded from this
country because it is better to have
them here than It la to have the Im
migrants we now gret from Europe. His
words were: 'The Chinese are more to
be desired as workmen than moat of
the coarse crew that come crowding In
everywhere at the Eastern ports.' Now
he turns round and Eays: 'Our gates
must be kept open' to those whom he
thus denominated a 'coarse crew.' Since
he went Into politics he has again and
a(Tin, Incessantly and continuously,
reversed himself on what he had pro
fessed to be his deepest convictions
prior to entering' politics, and in each
case the announced change of convic
tion agreed with what at the moment
seemed to be his political Interest.
"It is alleged that President Wilson
has been actuated only by principle In
connection with the Adamson law.
then J ask why he haa failed to apply
the same principle to the railway postal
clerks, where he has full power. Esti
mating six days to the week, these
postal clerks, operating between New
lork and Pittsburg, are required to
run 205 miles per day Ifor the
present Administration has reduced
the number of tha crews from
six to five), whereas the present
trainmen's agreement requires only 155
miles a day, which is to be reduced etlil
further by the Adamson law. The only
possible explanation of Mr. Wilson's
action In one case and Inaction In the
other la that only 400 men are affected
lrcsthat case where the Government has
full control of the boura of labor,
xv rm n m Ann ftAA mam ba nnM.A . n
fbe affected by the Adamson bill."
rOPULiAR PORTLAND MUSICIAN
WILL f I O AT RELIEF
MEETl.VO FRIDAY, .
r
i -
mima Yonnc
On Friday night at the Lincoln
High School, Broadway and Mar
ket streets. Dr. E. V. Moscow will
give his illustrated lecture on the
war as seen by him while serving
as chief surgeon of the American
Medical Corps with the Belgian
army.
This lecture has been arranged
by the British Benevolent Society
and the proceeds are to be turned
over to the British Red Cross.
An additional feature of tha
evening's entertainment will be
the singing of F. DeBruln, oper
atic baritone, of Amsterdam, Hol
land, and Miss Wllma Young, a
well-known and popular singer,
of Portland.
sv?aiisV
MONDAY CLUB'S SEASON ON
First Concert Is Given by Mr. Llnd
and Mrs. Reed.
The Monday Musical Club rave the
first concert of the club season last
Monday at the club home. Eilers build
ing. An unusually fine programme was
offered, Waldemar Lind and Mrs. Rose
Couraen Reed appearing. Mr. Llnd ren
dered a- Bach programme, the first
number being a concerto for two vio
lins. Albert Crelts played the second
violin and Fldrldge Trayle was at tha
piano for all Mr. Llnd s numbers. Mr.
Llnd's warmth and depth of tone color
was particularly noted.
Mrs. Rose Coursen Reed sang a group
of five songs that showed to advantage
the fresh, liquid quality of her voice.
The numbers themselves were beauti
ful, , and her splendid Interpretation
brought out all their Inherent beauty.
Luclen E. Becker was Mrs. Reed's accompanist.
STUDENTS TOJSIVE PLAYS
"The Romancers" and . 'Trench
Without Blaster" Billed.
Edmund Rostand's "The Romancers
and Tristand Bernard's "French With
out a Master." will be tha first plays
given by the Reed College Drama Club.
The date will probably be during the
last week of November.
Both plays are translations from the
French. Trlstrand Bernard, the George
Cohan of France, is found In one of
his most humorous veins In the one-act
curtain-raiser. "French Without
master," deals with the escapades
of an English Interpreter who knows
no French. Rostand, who is known to
the world by his "Chanticleer," has
again become justly famous through
his 'Tlte Romancer's." in which he de
plcts the fortunes and misfortunes of a
romantic young couple.
Mexico has two official tiams, "Egtados
TJnldo MsTtoanos" A& "Republic
Lone lived and livening. SprinR Steps
last longer than hard leather heels twice
as lone. And their livening lift leaves
you without lead in your heels. The Red
Plng.is yonr protection against wet and
slippery sidewalks
AH aires urcf of fan aoe mttafhrrl at
&lucniura wm iiepair AAopa tverymhere
Save 20c: For the name of your dealer and 80s
wevills-nd too pr-pald 2 packs of Tally-ho
quality I'larlng Cards that would cost you
DOo elsewhere.
"Spring-step," 105 Federal St., Boston
NO INDIGESTION,
FIVE MINUTES!
NO GAS OR ANY STOMACH
Don't Suffer! Here's the Quickest, Surest Relief Known for
Dyspepsia, Sourness, Heartburn or an Upset Stomach Try it!
MBERY
FAPE'S
.22 GRAIN TRI ANGULE9 OF
STOPS INDIGESTION
I N FIVE MINUTES.
SETTLES UPSET STOMACHS
ML
Wonder what upset your stomach
which portion of the food did the dam
age -do you? Well, don't bother. If
your stomach is in a revolt; if sour,
gassy and upset, and what you Just
ate has fermented into stubborn lumps;
your head dizzy and ache?; belch gases
and acids and eructate undigested food:
breath foul, tongue coated just take a
little Diapepsln and in five minutes
you will wonder what became of the
indigestion and distress.
Millions of men and women today
know that it Is needless to have a bad
stomach. JL ilttla Dlapepsla auaaUo
ally keeps the stomach regulated and
they eat their favorite foods without
fear.
If your stomach doesn't take car
of your liberal limit without rebellion;
If your food is a damage Instead of a
help, remember the quickest, surest,
most harmless relief Is Pape'a Diapep
sln. which costs only fifty cents for a
large case at drug stores. It's truly
wonderful it digests food and set
things straight, so gently and easily
that it Is astonishing. Please don't go
on and on with a weak, disordered
stomach.! is a annooeaswry.