" ''f,"-f "W'v',iWml'l!h mwi If! K II li I L UU m &- r y-' 16 The Commoner. VOLUME 12, NUMBER 3g Bull Moose Perkins and Labor In tho courso of his speech in Boa ton, August 17, Thoodoro Roosevelt waa interrupted by tho question: "What about Perkins?" And this is what Roosevelt said in reply: ' 'Tho primo reason why I am . with you ho (Perkins) told mo, . 'Js bocauso I have children. I have , como to tho conclusion that this country won't bo a good place for . my children unless wo have substan tial, justice; unless tho relations be tween capital ana moor are on a bettor basis. I wish to support any movement which will bring that about' " This statement is interesting in view of a certain investigation that is now being conducted by tho Now York stato factory investigating com mittee. The hearing at Auburn, N. Y., occurred at the plant of the Os borne Twine company, a branch of the International Harvester comnanv. Tho testimony showed that George W. Perkins is a director of this com pany (the harvester triiBt) and that A. Cyrus McCormick is president, while a great part of tho FcCormick fortune is invested in tho company. As Medill McCormick is one of the principal owners of tho Chicago Tri bune, which is supporting Roosevelt, tho whole circle of interests is com plete. But Mr. Perkins is tho man who "has children" and is so solici tous for "substantial justice" be tween capital and labor. Perkins is a director in the company owning the factory where tho following testi mony was taken: Mary Previ, employe, testified as follows: v By Mr. Blkins How long have you been in this country? A. Four years in December. Q. Don't you speak English. A. Little bit. Q. How long have you worked hero? A. Three years this Decem ber. Q. How old are you? A. I am 19. Q. Worked here three years last December? A. Yes. Q. What room do you work in? A. Vhe preparation room. Q. What time do you come in the morning? A. Half past six. Q. You get here about half past six? A. Yes. Q. What time do you stop at night? A. Six o'clock. Q. What. time do you come Satur days, same time? A. Yes. Q. What time do you stop on Saturdays? A. Five o'clock. Q. How long do you have for din ner in the day time? A; Fifeen minutes. Q. Fifty minutes? A. Fifteen minutes. Q. Fifteen minutes? A. Yea. Q. Well, do you work by the piece or by the week. How do you get paid, by the piece or by the week? A. Seven or eight a week. Q. How is it, by the niece or bv tho week? A. Piece voik, because one week I make less and one week more. Q. How is it arranged? A. I don't know. Q. Some weeks you get seven, and some weeks eight? A. Yes. Q. Have you done this work since; you have been here for the three years or more? A. No. Q. What else did you do? A. Only in the preparation room. Q. What did you do in this prepa ration room? What kind of work did you do? A. Feed the machines. Q. Did you stand up or sit down? A. Stand up, Q. Are there any seats? A. No. Q. You can stand all day from the time you come until lunch time? A. Yes. Q. Then you start right in after lunch. A. Yes. Q. Do you eat your lunch In the lunch room or do you take it just where you are? A. Go home to lunch. Q. How can you go home and back in fifteen minutes? A. I live only, five minutes I am homo. Q. How long does it tako you to eat? A. Five minutes. Q. And fivo minutes to come back? A. Yes. Q How much do you eet ner hour or for each piece of work you do? A. I don't know. No ono ever told mo how I am paid; all I know is I get my envelope, sometimes it is more, and sometimes less. Q. Do you ever work at night time? A. No. Q. Have you ever been sick in threo years? A. Yes. Q. Had to stay homo? A. Yes. Q. What was the matter with you? A. I was. sick. Q. From tho work? A. My stomach head disease and stomach troubles. Q. Do your feet ever hurt you at night? A. Very much. Q. Every night? A. Yes; every night. Q. Do they swell up? A. No; Q. Do you have to go to bed when you get home, right after supper? A. Yes, sir. Q. Would you like to sit down if you could when you work? A. Oh, sure. Q. Do any of the other girls sit down that work in the preparation room, or do they all stand up? A. Yes; all stand up. Q. How many work there, do you know? A. I don't know. . Q. Is tho floor slippery? A. Yes; very slippery. Q. Do you wear shoes in there all the time, or do you wear shippers? A. Shoes. v Q. Is the light good in the room? A. It is dark, but there is olectric light. Q. How about the dust; is there dust in there from the twine? A. Sure, awful; it hurts. Q. Gets in your throat? A. Yes. By Senator Wagner Since you started to work here, have you al ways earned about the same amount of money each week? A. Yes. Q. About six or seven or eight dollars a week from the' time you started three years ago? A. Yes. Josephine Cristenoli, an employe, testineu as ioiiows: , By Mr. Elkins Were you born in Italy? A. Yes. Q.. How long have you been here? A. Around seven years. Q. How old are you? A. Six teen. Q. How old were you when yon came to this country? A. I was around 7 years old. Q. Didn't you go to school at all? A. Yes, I Went tO School nmnnil threeoars. Q. What did you do after that, work? A. Wqrk. Q. At what time did you come here in tho morning? What time did you come? A. Seven o'clock. Q. What time did you leave at night? A. Six. Q. How long do you have for your lunch? A. Half an hour. Q. How much do you make a week? A. Make around $7. Q. Seven dollars a week? A Yes. Q. What do you do? What kind or worK oo you do? A. Spinning. Q. You put the twine in the m cuines? A. Yes. Q. And pull it out? A. Yes. Q. Do you have to push those big barrels of stuff? Do you push those alone? A, Yes. Q. How much do theywelgh; do ma- yon know? A. I know how much my balance weighs. Q. How much? A, Sometimes threo hundred and two or threo hun dred and five. Q. Pounds? A. Yes. Lucy Charles, an employe of the Asborne Twine Works, being duiy sworn, testified as follows: By Mr. Elkins How old are you? A. I was 17 the 18 th of April. Q. How long hSve you been working here? A. The 26th of April was one year. Q. What room do you work in? A. The gplnning room. Q. Do you stand up or sit down? A. Stand up. Q. You are tired out pretty much every night? A. Yes. Q. Do you ever have headaches? A. Yes, lots of times. Q. Is there noise in your room, great deal of , noise? A. Yes, the ter rible noise dbwn here. Q. How much is tho least you made? A. The least I get, I had to work all week and work as hard terrible hard, and I got $7.14. Q. What do you mean by work ing terrible hard? A. To make a little more money. Q. Work your very best, just as fast as you could? A. Yes. Senator Wagner And never sat down, I suppose? The witness No; nobody sit down. They keep them always go ing, always going. Q. vYpurfingers Hurt in the ma chinery? A. A lot of times I get hurt myself. Q. You did? A. Yes. Q. Where, on your fingers? A. Most of the time I had to go up to No. 1. I had a sore hand right down to here (indicating) and they had to fix it up some. r Q. What did they do; sew it up for you? A. No;, they put some thing on. And last week I cut my finger right down . hero, here and here, and that it was in my bone here and it was raw for two days, and I commenced work again. Q. Did they nav vou -wMlo vrm .were away? A. I couldn't work. Q. What did they use that knife for (indicating knife)? A. They use this knife to cut the . strings around on the machine and take the bobbins put. You qan't work with out a kntfe; you have to keep the knife. Q. Do they, supply you with a knife, or is that your knife? A. We have to pay for if. ... Q. How much? A. Ten cents. Q. How long does tl e knife last? A. Lasts as long as .they won't steal one. These are only a few of the ques tions and answers of the hearing which concerned more than 300 wo men and girts. They worked ten hours or more a day amid distressing conditions. They were required to stand on their feet for ten hours They had only fifteen mluutes for 12 ' The dust madQ tbem flIck and their feet were diseased. They were docked half a day when a few minutes late an4 they were required to drag bundles of material weighing HO pounds to their machines. In fact, the workincr nnmiiMnnn wretched and many women and Hrls were hurt by the machinery and were broken in health by the unusual strain of their employment. Mr Perkins who "has children" and is anxious to "join any movement" that will bring "substantial justice" to the working people is one of the directors of this concern. Mr. Mc Cormick is president. All the orders come from Chicago. Both Mr. Per kins and Mr. McCormick are vigor ous bull moose adherents in the cause of "social justice" and tho "rights of labor." They Mr "pleased" at the platform ofn,a2 moose party which rionio;i i. shorter working days and better con ditions of employment. But in their zeal for the working peonle fu overlook the fact that tSandaf their own employes in the Interna tional Harvester company mills w little better than slaves, ground down to the most meager wages and required to work day and night for ten-hour stretches save for the flf teen-minutes lunch time. This is in deed a fine commentary upon tho ?mu8;rad h0,ly poso oC perkins and the McCprmicks. Dubuque (Iowal Telegraph-Herald. l wa' STANDARD OIL CONTRIBUTIONS The Republic owns its inability to get excited over this Penrose-Roose-velt-Standard Oil affair. Who doesn't know that the Stand ard Oil company owns everything in Pennsylvania republican politics ex cept that which is the personal prop erty of the Pennsylvania railroad? Who doesn't know that Roosevelt, aa a candidate, was the immediate and personal beneficiary of the fat-frying methods perfected by that prince of political chefs, Marcus Alonzo Hanna? What man has so short a memory as to have forgotten Mr. Roosevelt's close friendship with Matthew Stanley Quay, over whoso political footwear Boies Penrose of Philadelphia and . William Flinn of Pittsburgh have quarreled acrimoni ously since Mr. Roosevelt so touch ingly paid tribute to the dead boss' memory? Did the Standard Oil company help elect' Roosevelt? Of course it did. So did Cain kill Abel, and it was a great wrong and a lamentable tragedy but why grow excited about it now? It is not necessary to go back into the holy gloom of a year when great tribunes of the people like Cornelius N. Bliss were still alive and saints like Quay and Hanna were just enter ing into rest in order to prove Roose velt's close and intimate connection with the powers that prey in Ameri can finance and politics. A director in the United States Steel corporation, whoso organizers have taken tens of millions of dollars from the investing public for "under writing" alone, is a member of tho executive committee of the "progres sive" party. This man George W. Perkins is also chairman of the fi nance committee of the International harvester company of America. Another member of the "progres sive" executive committee, William Flinn, was openly exulting recently, that "he was wise enough to know how Penrose could be controlled without the necessity of buying him" by "requesting the Standard Oil chief to give orders to his man Penrose in my behalf." Yes, Flinn, too, is "pro gressive," and hand in glove with tho man who would not sit down to eat with William Lorimer because Lori mer was tainted with the imputation of corrupt use of money in politics! These things are of today. The progressive platform, too, with Its laudation of the protective tariff, is of today. So is Roosevelt's declaration that he is in favor, not of less "prize money" under the tariff, but more, so long as it is "more equitably di vided." So long as these shameless alli ances of Theodore Roosevelt with predatory wealth and with machine politicians reared in the Archbold-Quay-Penroso school are facts of the present hour, so long as this unblush ing indorsement of a principle in poli tics which the American navy has abandoned in warfare on the high seas is of the present hour, we feel but a mild interest in the historic doubts of Mr. Roosevelt as to events of 1904 and the fierce protestations of Messrs. Penrose and Flinn. The American people, on November 5, wlu register its verdict upon Theodore Roosevelt and his political affiliations in 1912, and in the light of that judg ment the stubs of Standard Oil check books of the vintage of 1904 will be of mighty little interest to anybody. St. Louis Republic. M r ti o '- ;L. " -..4.'l.l afiJU 9Hi