r ME CORVALLIS GAZETTE .in iRHFYIHG l?l .... ; r - ... FT" , : T" ! "" J Published Tuesdays and Fridays by the Gazette Publishing Co., for $2.00 per annum, or zo per cent discount if cash is paid in advance. ELECTIONS FOR 1908. Closes for election Oct. 20. Presidential election Nov. 3 . Republican National Ticket. FOR PRESIDENT WILLIAM H. TAFT of Ohio. ' FOR VICE PRESIDENT JAMES S. SHERMAN of New York. For Presidential Electors J. D. LEE, of Multnomah County F. J. M ILLER, of Linn County A. C. MARSTERS, of Douglass County R. R BUTLER, of Gilliam County REPUBLICAN RALLY. The , more Jabor studies the treatment which labor has 're ceived at the hands of William H. Taft, both on and off the benzh; the more evident it becomes to every fair-minded worker that Judge Taft has not only been just and impartial in dealing with the interests of workingman, but that his decisions, followed as prece dents by other courts, has been of inestimable value to labor in upholding the rights of railway workmen to leave their employ-1 ment where theysee fit, irrespeet- i ive of the consent of the em ployer. It is well known that even in England, where labor possesses more rights than in any other country of Europe, a differ- .. m 0F;!S Impracticable 1 Democratic Pr'oposU . iiop!Jor .Ttust.-Coatral..-. Convincing Exposition of Fallacy of ('' Bryan's Panacea for Solving ; Problems of Modern Business. (From Got. Toungstown ITnhes . .speech.) When we consider remedies that are proposed for the trusts, we find our selves journeying In a land of dreams. Again the magician of IS96 waves his wand. ! At a' stroke difficulties disao- ent rule prevails, and the crew of ;Pear and the complex problems of mod a train quitting without giving !ern business, are forgotten in the fas- vnuiinm vi ijc siiupie panacea. : .AD1, as the free eoinnsre of silver In tho ecuted criminally. - Some Amer-I ratio of 16 to l was to destroy the ican railways sought to maintain curse of sld- so tbe Dew fnnd specific a similar rule, but Judge Tafc, in Vl J, T77, . remTe the L, . ' . " curse of industrial oppression. The de- tne xoieao ana Ann Aroor rail- lusion of 1908 is comparable onlv to I J - L I J il i i) 1 . : . a i Tim li; j iuau case, neiu mat me relation llI- 1 iweive years ago. 11xrI"",B """ of employees to railwav comna-1 Tne first tion is that the law Benton county will be addressed . ,eraPIoyees to railway compa ghoud pevent a d llcatjon of at the court house on Wednesday l1" 1S un7 Iree coniracc, anaj rectors among competing corporations. evening, October 28. by Hon. C. IS n0 ana'a20US - tnat Of Sea-i However advisable it may be to have rl Fulton TT ? natni- Thic men in tne maritime service, Who uireciorares or competing n. ruiton, u. a. senator. inisl . . i corDorations it would m hh gentleman is a speaker of nation- l? a ,certaln. e3"enc, surrender j ,mportant to have tadepenaent stock- al reputation. All voters of cneir llDercy in tneir employment ; holders, for. a majority or the stoek- hatever nolitiVal faith fnlW and are Punishable for desertion, holders of a corporation choose the di- students and ladies are invitedTo The employment, therefore, in j SSK hear Senator Fultoh speak. COL- MILLER'S SPEFCH. the case of railway service, waSj would easily be evaded in the selection terminable by either party. The' of men who would represent the same court COUld not Compel the en-1 ,nterests- . The most ordinary exper- forcement of nersonal RPrviVWa' le?ce sIl0WS that " ,8 pot Pnr.to iorcement oi personal services as gerve on f A,rik0tnra r. Col. Robt. A. Miller expounded aSa,nst either the employer or the to control its proceedings. Whatever democratic doctrine at the court- employed, against the will of tbe JnJage, of such a law 88 18 Pr- mi . , , I eiLnPr i'vocui . "aiuij nora iu cue aienirv or nouse on ihursday night andr"" ... . . ! a "remedy." or vindicates its title tn a done himself great credit in the wa! 'n1 afclf,on wnic.n place ln an llnposing 8cheme of reform pleasing manner of his address. Prmpted the head of one of the outlined m a national platform. He admitted he had often been ' ' wuu? . ! tht 7 . Jw l4Ttr" . ! greatly humiliated by his repub- wri.ce 10 lat corporal eto tZZ lican friends poking fun at him 8t bL L0U1S m 8 SUDseluenfc merce shall be required to take out a over the bank failures and een rauway controversy tne railway reaerai license before it shall be per eral disarrano-mpnf- f k,j,- employees had found "you had "ted. ? .contr,I ,f .. i interests during the last 7e aid down the Mna CharT a nV'1 cratic- administration and turned upon wnicn we couia aepena or the remedy is not to regulate large a vprw u for the protection Of Our rights." , businesses, buf to destroy trusts. Hence . a very nice point by saying that when the republican panic came last fall "we simply declared a legal holiday." He did not deem it necessary, Labor can always depend upon ! ZTZJ ls.to Mr. Taft for the protection of its trol by any such corooration "of morp rights, both because he is in sym- than 50 per cent of the total amount of pathy with labar, and because it tny product wn8nined ,n the united oiuies. x his is anotner npinsion of for his purpose, to call the atten- is. !"3 nature to do r,ght b every; ratio. tion of his hearers to the entire four years of misery under that democratic administration, in which not only banks failed, but everv hnsinpsa inroroaf- rf f Vit. country was comnletelv Dara I Magna Charta upon which every lyzed, for he fully realized that ALmer?can can depend for equit Citizen, and CO see, as tar as in I It might be interesting to inquire his power lies, that no .one is what is the meaning of "any product wrnno-Prl j consumed ln the United States." Does The election of Mr. Taft to the And, if so, how shall the clasps Presidency will in ' itself be a fined? Or does it refer to each sepa rate article of commerce? And, if so, what account does this proposal take From the Baltimore American. THE SENTINEL STANDS FIRMLY IN DEFENSE OF HIS FLAG. HOW TAFT WAS SOTJGHT BY the heart-strings of many men. in the audience were still bleeding from wounds received. He did not deem it wise to tell of the marvelous prosperity that has followed 'that democratic ad ministration ever since the people buried them under an avalanche of votes ; nor. did he point to the wisdom, on the part of the repub- .President and congress, when confronted with the most pecu liar condition that ever existed in, governmental affairs, in de claring a legal holiday that the , businessmen of the country might take a calm and dispassionate view of the situation ; nor did he tell you that by this prompt at- tion by the party in power every condition had been met and con fidence fully restored. He also failed to tell his audi ence that never," in the history of the country have our people been more prosperous and happy; nor did he add the further fact that the people will make a sad mis take if they should vote a change hy electing Bryan, While eulogizing Bryan as a citizen and orator he did not take pains to enlarge on his acrobatic feats on every public question in each succeeding campaign ; nor how he could straddle the fence four years hence. It was indeed funny to think Judge Lowell would object to Bryan's presidential aspirations on account of oratorical powers, when in fact, the Judge conceded v thi3 point as his principal qualifi cation as a presidential condi-date. able, just and generous treatment by the chosen head of the gov ernment. of the skill and initiative of manufac turers who have .built up a more or less exclusive trade in particular ar ticles, often protected by trade-marks, although in most active competition with other articles designed; for the same general purpose and seeking the same market?. In a desire to correct THE YOUNG REPUBLICAN. In a business sense the young voters who have come forward since 1904 have the . evils of business are we to place more at stake than any other class in : an embargo upon honest endeavor rendering a right decision. Their ac- j whose activities present none of tho tive lives are ahead. They have more abuses , requiring remedies? And, if years to live, and are now laying the . not, what, statutory definitions shall be foundations of .tneir business careers. round to ue adequate and just If we National policies and conditions are of iay down our, prohibition in terms of exceptions to coyer such cases, and we have learned that it is equally "binding as to what it omits." cbfVmaSir,S.UCh a crude i Manner in Which the Republl prohibition to be enacted into law, and 00 r,..Jo. . to be regarded a, valid, what would be t Candidate Was Called to a the effect? Mr. Bryan, with his nsnal 5"$' Sphere of Actionr- viiu uiiciiiuuu. eariy ia rjuu, wnen Judge William H. Taft was dictating a. decision" of the United States Court the highest consequence to them. Per haps they are farmers. If so, let them ask the older generation how farmers fared under the last Democratic admiu lstrationj Let them take the market volume or ratio of business and not in terms' of right - and wrong? If we adopt Mr. Bryan's proposal, to what pe riod of production is the prohibition to apply? is the excess for a day or readiness, suggests that the concern may sell as much of its plants as are not TlfwlPfT tn TV(wl Itil fha amminf T lowed by law. He speaks as though ! la "!e FederaI Bull""S Cincinnati, every manufacturing concern had as . teIeram was placed in his hands, many fully equipped units of produc- ' . to,re "ff the aad suc tion as would correspond to anv given ' T. ? tel" frn Presi percentage of trade which it might be j dent Wllliam Mckinley, reading: required to lop off. Plants are not so ! "I shall take it as a great favor if you easily dismembered. Reduction in out- i will call on me some time next week." J Judge Taft guessed at the meaning of the summons and guessed wrouu. reports of to-day and compare them for a month to be considered? Or is the average production for a year to be taken? And what system shall be de vised by which suitable information may be furnished in the nature of dan ger signals along the routes of trade so that the manufacturer may know when he is about to exceed the pre scribed ratio? He may Justly be re- with the prices that prevailed when Mr: Bryan made his crusade for free silver and hurled defiance at President Cleve land because he stood by tbe gold standard. At the same time Bryan de nounced the Republican party for its protectionist as well as sound money position. Perhaps the first voter is to engage in manufacturing or mining, ia ( quired to govern his own conduct, but wage-earner or otherwise. Does he how shall he be apprised of the con duct of. others upon which is to depend want his American rate of wages and the Industry he chooses reasonably pro tected against foreign competition? If he does Mr. Bryan's leadership will take him in the opposite direction. St Louis Globe-Democrat. Mr. Bryan challenges Mr. Taft to take the people into his confi dence. It isn't necessary. The people long ago took Mr. Taft in to theirs. The Tide of Prosperity. The tide of prosperity may ebb and flow, but the great waves of industrial wealth will continue to grow in vol ume with ever-Increasing comfort and happiness to our contented people, who will soon number 100,000,000. And be cause of our Intelligent and skillful labor, made so because of good wages and good living, we shall make better fabrics and build stronger structures that ln spite of their higher cost in tbe beginning will be eheaper in the end and will be wanted by the people in every corner of the earth. So that we shall capture the markets of the world in greater volume without ever sacri ficing our home market, the foundation of our national wealth and progress. Hon. James S. Sherman. 5 Henry Gassaway Davis, who was de feated with Parker four years ago, is wiser as well as older. He says he sees no hope for the Democracy, and thinks Parker is again wasting valu able time in making speeches. St Louis Globe-Democrat. his guilt or innocence? The patent laws confer . a true monopoly in the exclusive right to man ufacture and sell. Are these laws to be repealed because a "private mon opoly is indefensible and intolerable?" Bryan's Crude Reasoning. An example of Mr. Bryan's reason ing is found in his statement that "when a corporation controls 50 per cent of the total product it supplies forty millions of people with that prod uct." There are, of course, specialties which have a limited market and are used by a relatively smaU number of rne people or the United States. More than 50 per cent, and Indeed even as much as 100 per cent of the trade in such articles may be in the control of a particular corporation. This may, in ract, be relatively a small corpora tion. It may never have aspired to the unsavory renown of a "trust." . But by prosecuting Its particular line with fidelity and meeting satisfactorily a limited want; or by reason of some secret processes or advantage of experi ence, it may control the trade in a giv en article of commerce. Or, suppose a concern controls the whole trade In some useful byproduct which it has round it advantageous to make, is the trade to be prohibited? The Democratic platform makes no put means reduction in work, reduction in the number of men employed and curtailment of the efficiency of a going concern. Let us suppose a. concern which controls 80 per cent of a given product that is to say, makes and sells $S,000,000 In value out of a total trade In the product amounting, to $10, 000,000. Is it to be compelled to reduce its output to $2,000,000 because only $2,000,000 In value are made by others? Then, If it could sell a part of its plant on Mr. Bryan's theory, what should it sell? Should It sell off enough to re duce . Its capacity to $5,000,000, and allow three-fifths of its plant to remain idle until others developed a capacity for . handling the other $5,000,000? Should it assume that the total trade will increase and is; not always to re main at $10,000,000, and hence retain a larger portion of its plant in idle ness? Or suppose a concern controls 100 per cent of the trade in some arti cle, what plants' shall it retain? It can produce nothing until others pro duce;, but ft may produce an amount equal to the production of others, and it hopes.-he trade will grow. What a vision of business uncertainty and con fusion, of idle and impaired plants, of the. ruin of workingmen whose lives have clustered around particular indus tries and who depend upon their con tinued efficiency, is presented by this fanciful remedy for the destruction of trusts! Apart from this, if the dissolution were effected In the manner desired and portions of plants could be sold and were sold as suggested, to whom would the sale be made? Would it be necessarily to foes or to those ambi tious to be competitors and anxious to take advantage of its plight? This proposal in its utter disregard of the facts of business, in its substi tution of the phantasies of the imagin ation for the realities of life; stamps the Democratic platform with the fatal stamp of 1896. The commerce and In dustry of this country, the interests of its wage earners and of its interdepend ent masses, who must rely upon the stability of business, cannot afford to give license to such vagaries. In the solemnity with which this proposal has been declared, and the In sistence with which it is advocated, we find an appropriate test of the capacity, of our opponents to deal wisely with' the problems of the day. He went to Washington and was shown into a room at the White House, where he met the President and Secretary Long of the Navy. Later, Elihu Root, the Secretary of War, came In. Then, to use Mr. Taft's own words: "Mr, McKinley said that he wanted to send me to the Philippines to help in the work of establishing civil government as the army moved on. I thought of my place on the bench and hesitated. Be sides, I believed and said we could get along without the Philippines. ' " 'But we have them and must take care of them,' the President replied. " 'You are at the turning of the ways in your life,' Mr. Root then observed. 'The bench is the easy road. You can stay there and be comfortable. On the contrary, the Philippines will demand per sonal sacrifices and risks and much hard work, but you will have an opportunity of doing your country a very great ser vice.' I went home, and argued the mat ter for two weeks." The telegram to Cincinnati opened the door of American history to Wil liam H. Taft and made him the Repub lican candidate for President of the United States. Obllsatlons of Civil War. Money indebtedness is not the only obligation we incurred and assumed in the great civil war. There was a still greater debt, an everlasting obli gation that could never be paid in full. But in the years that have followed, j what further back, there was Captain tne KepuDiican party has inaugurated TAFT COMES FROM GOOD STOCK. Family Ranted Among the Plain People for Many Years. The Tafts those who at present ara the Tafts hail ancestrally from Ux bridge, Mass. They say that Tafts are so thick in Uxbridge that even a wom an can't throw a stone without hitting one. Some years ago in 1874, to be exact there was a Taft reunion in Ux bridge, to which descendants of tho original Robert Taft came flocking from all parts of the country. One of the conspicuous features of the affair was a historical address by Alphonso Taft, father of the present Republican candidate. He traced the history of various branches of the family, and when he came to the one to which he and his children belonged he said: "Our family have not embarked much upon national politics, except that they have shared In the battles of the coun try when national independence was to be won, and also when the Union was at stake. But brilliant political careers have not been characteristic of the Tafts in the past It is not safe to say what may be in store for them. There is a tide in the affairs of men and also of families." This' is taken from the account of the reunion published at the time. Al phonso Tal't would perhaps have beeu somewhat dazzled if he could have fore seen how quickly and brilliantly the family would proceed to "embark upon national politics." He himself started the turn of the tide which he predict ed. It seems to be reaching its flood in the career of the son who that year was entering Yale. As Alphonso Taft described his im mediate ancestors one sees where his son got certain characteristics. Peter Taft (1715) was "a large, good-looking man of magnanimous disposition." He had four sons. Aarou, the candidate's ancestor, was also so magnanimous that he lost money by indorsing a friend's notes; he was a man "of great Intelligence and integrity." And then, going somc- and developed pension laws under which over three and one-half billion dollars have been paid to disabled veterans or to the survivors of those who gave their lives for their country and their flag. This pension system, a product of the policy of the Republican party, has no precedent in history and no equal in justice and generosity among the nations of the earth. Hon., James S. Sherman. Colonel Bryan laments the "discrimi nation that has been going on against the farmer" ln electing so few tillers of the soil- to Congress and the Senate. What troubles him chiefly, however, is the discrimination which the whole American nation . exercises against a certain farmer of Lincoln, Neb., in de- 'House. New York Tribune. William Taft, who took Blarney Cas tle in the sixteenth century "by blar ney quite as much as by military prowess." Good stock was Captain William from which to make a twen tieth century Secretary of War William. A Grand Record. The Republican party is not only rich In men, but rich in practical and beneficial principles! it is rich too In its record, in promises performed and pledges fulfilled, and so we are for party and party principles first and will acquiesce in the choice of the ma jority, rallying around the standard bearer who will carry us again to vic tory. Hon. James S. 'Sherman. Mr. Bryan might make a hit ln the Kocky" Mountain States by' proposing a federal guaranty , of mining stock de posits. Omaha Bee. . .