" '"1 , mm mnm iwrwwwwH!PPwpi . B't,;"WW"3g""T' P?WlVt $ The Commoner. VOLUME 8, NUMBER 45 Jtfiit "" ' i-n tii, i Mi- ' I JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, president of the Standard Oil company, was, on the witness stand recently in the city of ,Kew York. , He appeared ns a witness for the defense in the. gov ernment's suit to dissolve the Standard Oil com pany. The proceedings wero held before Judge Franklin Ferris referee. Rockefeller was ex amined for two days by John G. Milburn, attor ney for the Standard Oil company. He said he began in the oil business in Cleveland' in I860 or 18 G2, he could not remember the exact date. With a capital of only $4,000 he continued for ten years When he laid the foundation, for the great trust of which he is now, the, head. lie denied that he had any connection with the riots and crimes attributed to the Standard, .Oil trust 'by oil historians. Ho admitted .that the fail road companies had given the Stantard"tlOil trust rebates. ' O ON ,'THB THIRD day of John D. Rockefeller's ' testimony the oil king was cr,oss7exdniined by the government counsel,, Frank B. Kellogg. Mr. Rockefeller stated that, the Standard Oil ,paid, dividends in 1007 amounting to, $.40,000,- 0,0.0. an.d that it had earned as much, more, but that' 'tyis was added to the company's, ;sur plus. Mrn Kellogg. stated that the company's' surplus now amounts to $300,000,000. Mr.'&eUo.gg addd that during" the last year the, Standard had earned half a billion dollars, In-his testi njonui ,, Rockefeller said -that: the business was "hazardous." Mr. Kellogg asked ife rpgard--ed as "hazardous" a business that on.au origi nal Investment of $07,000,000 paid dividends amounting to $591,000,000 and had.lqft a sur plus of $300,000,000. Mr, Rockefeller replied that he did not consider the, amount -.of', money made, to determine whether the business was hazardous or not. He .admitted that; he .. had heard .that the Pennsylvania railroad paiiftithe Standard a rebate of twenty cents on each bar rel of oil and he said that he may have known of the fact at the time but that he had had nothing to do with the contract." YNB .STORY. ,-of, the hearing,. is told;.byrtthe V , Associated' . press . in this. , , way: , "Mr. Rockefeller asked bno ot the ,a'rtistV-ho h'ad been sketching liim to let him ;sea Oio. picture. 'I wish I had your talent,', said the richest mail in the world, gazing earnestly at the .portrait of himself. 'I wish I had yours,' quickly re sponded, the artist. Mr. Rockefeller laughed 'heartily and extended his hand, which the artist .8htioti,.t'he Standard Oil man saying: ' 'We ought xo pooi issues. " O- TTN HIS TESTIMONY John D. Rockefeller said JL that in all its dealings' with its rivals the Standard Oil trust had treated them "kindly but fairly." From testimony given under oath in various proceedings, the New York World com piles a statement of the "kind" and "fair" way in which the great oil trust has treated its rivals. For instance: "The South Improve ment company got a rebate from the railroads, not only on its own oil, but also on the oil of other shippers transported by the roads, In one locality the railroads charged all oil ship pers $1.50 a barrel and turned $1.06 of that sum over to the South Improvement company. Under this deal the Standard actually paid 44 cents a barrel freight and its rivals $1.50 "a barrel. Though the Rockefeller group con trolled at that time but a small part of the shipments, they collected as high as $3,500,000 a year from their rivals, through the railroads, In the shape of freight rebates. As, early as 1875 nearly all the- interior petroleum refineries had been thus driven out or forced to sell. Ac cording to the late George Rice, of Marietta, O., the oil trust ruined him through a 'secret agreement with the railroads by whjeh the trust paid 10 cents freight a barrel While ho was paying 35. The railroads paid 25 cents out of the 35 to the trust. According tp William O. Bishop, of San Francisco, the Standard got ah 'emergency' rate; in the. far Wesfc of 90 cents barrel on' oil, as rigaihst $1.25 paid "by 'its rivals' Charle'WrtghtorCofcleskill, tf, Y- peddled-oil- that he bought from the Standard for eight cents a gallon. When he bought from the in dependents for, seven cents a gallon, the Stand ard sent out its own peddler, who distributed the oil on Wright's route for 5 cents a' gal lon. The Standard forced the Manhattan Oil company to sell out by buying iip the visible supply and boosting the price so that -the rival tost millions in carrying out its contracts." i rpHE MUCH talked-of "labQr conference din : X ne"v at the White Hpuse has been held, tho date set being Noyeniber , 17. , The Asso ciated Press report gave the following' as the guest list: "From the supreme court there were Justices Holmes and Moody The cabinet was 'represented, by Scret'ry James R. Garfield of the interior department and, formerly cbm . mis-sioner' of, corporation?, and, Secretary Ospar S. Straus o the i .department of. commerce and labor. Others present, were; Representative Herbert Parsons, Assistant' Secretary4 of State Bacon, $fajc)'r General Leonard Wood, Inter state Commerce Commissioner Clarke, Commis sioner Of Labor Neill, Forester Gilford )?inchot, Henry L'. Sthispn, tyhited, States attorney;', t. V. Powderly, forrherly. at the "Wad of the Knights of Labor; WaVren S, tbrie grad 'chief ,of the Brotherhood Of Lqcpmbt'fyb Engineers; John J. Haimahari, grand master pL.the Brotherhood of LocOmotlye Firemen!; Ws. ,S. Carter, grand, sec retary and. treasurer of the Brptherhopd of Lo comotive firemen; p. H. Mprrissey, grand mas ter of thef,Rattwayr Trainmen;; T. J. Dpban, gen eral secretary-treasurer, tldf, ".the". International Brotherhood' o.f Steam Shovel and Dredgemien; A. L. Faulkner, president pi the National Win dow ..Glass Workers; David', -Klackay, president of the Building Trades' .organization; John T. Towers, secretary-treasurer of the . New Xork State Council Of Carpenters; George W. Xlger, attorney for labor u'nibiid and writer on labor subjects; Edward J. Gavegan, attorney for labor unions; Robert P. Bell, attorney for iabor unions, New York; James Bronson Reynolds and Charles H, ScHerrill, attorneys; Dr. Lyman Abbott of the. Outlook, Lawrence S. Abbott of the Outlook' and Ernest H. Abbott of the Out look." ' O OF THE LABOR leaders present, four, Stone of the Engineers, Hannahan and Carter of the Firemen, and Mpriisey of the Trainmen, represent organizations tjiat. are. not affiliated with theAmqri9an Federation of. Labor. , It has been a long time gince Mr. Powderly, who has held a government position for a decade, was considered in any sense a ''labor leader." Dplan is the general secretary-treasurer of the union which admitted William H. Taft to member ship because of his help to the comparatively few dredgemen engaged upon the Panama canal. Commissioner Clarice Is a member of the Order of Railway Conductors, which organ ization is not affiliated, with the American Fed eration of Labor, The attorneys present out numbered the labor men present, and the at torneys and Outlook editors together formed a majority of the "conference." The fact that this "conference" should have been called at a date when the convention of the American Fed eration of Labor was in session 1,500 miles from Washington has given rise, to considerable com ment. Samuel Gompers, president of the Fed eration was not invited to the dinner, and this caused considerable discussion among the dele gates to the Federation convention at Denver John Mitchell of the Mine Worlds James M Lynch of the printers, Frank SKniSSSte of tho Federation, and ether well known and success ul labor leaders were cons SSs ?y their absence from tho White House function. take, no matter how heated was the controversy with him during the campaign,, and the asso ciates of the excluded, labor leader will probably decline to attend. If it was intended to be a genuine conference with labor leaders Mr Gompers should hav.e been invited. If it was Intended merely to square himself with union labor, a slight to the foremost labor leader of the country was at the least ill advised. The president had not sufficiently cooled off from the heat of the battlp to use good judgment in such a- matter, or, on the assumption that Loeb tried to tell him what was right, to accept ad vice. Impulse is not as unerring as calmly con sidered judgment, and in that-respect there will be a change for. the better at the, White House next March." T'-IE NEW YORK Evening Post, which under , no stretch of the imagination could be con sistently charged with favoring trades unionism, comments thus on the "snub" of Gompers: "That' the president is nettled by the attitude of the Gompers-Bryah labor leader' appears clearly from Mr. Lodb's latest bulletin frbhi the White House. The president, it seeing, never Intended tp, ask all the prominent labprv leaders, only six or eight and, above all the public will please take notice that this is1 in ho sense to as' to who should or! should not' be Invited to dinner by the president.' Then why dignify the discussion' by till' this pother? 'The truth is that the president is angry because'' John Mitchell, James Dhn'can, and .Daniel J.,Keeie have de clined to din; at'th.e White HoUseby rpyal com mand. Mr. Roosevelt perceives1 that the whole dinner has come to be regarded as a blow at Mr. Gompers' control of the Federation of La bor. 'Labor insists, too, that 'if the president wishes to plot for labor's welfare, he should plot through the president and other leaders of the Federation The fundamental principle of union labor is working through the union; It id the same principle of being regular that Mr. Roosevelt has illustrated In politics and preached all his life. Why should he complain if the chalice is now commendeftto his own lips?" THE MILWAUKEE Sentinel, republican, which strenuously denounced Gompers and his allies for what it called their effort to "de liver tlie labor vote," expresses the candid opin ion that Gompers has turned the tables on the president. The Sentinel says: "We fully ex pected, and in fact predicted, that the omission of Sam Gompers' name from the invitations of those bidden to the White house 'labor dinner would result In a shortage of guests. And so it proves. Messrs. Mitchell, Keefe, Duncan, in vitees, have sent in their regrets. They are not overfond of Sam; but the effulgence of his labor leadership" is undimmed, and therefore consistency compels them to dodge the dinner. If the intending Amphitryon at the White House had displayed as much tact as these men have, President Gompers would have been treated as a labor leader and not as a politician, and been bidden to that 'labor dinner.' If 'labor' is to be dined, why omit the president of the entire organization? Our prediction that the faithful Loeb would be on hand with his 'explanation' is also made good. The patient pne explains that the dinner was to be private and not official. A feeble shift. The intent to .snub Gompers was plain to all men. It Is equally plain that Samuel has turned the tables, and is chuckling at the spectacle of the snubbers snubbed. Taic wouldn't have done it!" M R. AND MRS. BRYAN left . recently ior visit to Mexico. A San Antonio, Texua, rttRrmfoTi fnllnwc "Mv frfonrln tin not retlUiro me to- prejudice the future, and I shall not take the advice o. nry opponents pn this subject. J shall continue to write and; speak in defense oi things which I;bpUeve to be gqod.for the Ame lean people,- I hppe it may never become nece met t -li-hUi-ftutvvy ..