VjJIWfffURryn'' "- " i The Commoner OGTOBEE, 1916 1 fy - flWh wfwr 20 LaFollette Says 8 Farmers and A Madison, Wis., dispatch, dated Sept. 26, says: Declaring that the eight-hour law for railway trainmen lias been much misrepresented and that it saved the business men and the farmers from disaster, Senator Robert M. LaFollette of Wisconsin, the only republican senator to vote for the law, is out today in a signed editorial in the September number of his magazine defending the passage of the law. He endorses the senti ments expressed by President Wilson before the business men at Shadow Lawn on Saturday. Senator LaFol lette denies that the eight-hour law was a force bill as Mr. Chas. E. Hughes contends. He says that the railroad employ ees made their demands of the rail roads and not upon congress and it was only when a strike became prob able that the President and congress stepped in and avoided the disaster. The Wisconsin senator charges that millions of dollars were expended by the railroads during the pendency of their negotiations with the trainmen in an effort to influence sentiment against the demands of the trainmen for an eight-hour day. ' ,,c- '" "' rn "These millions did not come from the profits of the railroad managers or the railroad owners," said Senator LaFollette. "They came from the funds of the treasuries of the rail roads. This campaign was conduct ed with money that really belonged to the people. The shippers and pas sengers were made, in the last an alysis, to finance a publicity cam paign to influence their own judg ment on one side of this great ques tion." The senator says that the train men had no such resources for a publicity campaign to shape public opinion in their favor nor did they have the additional advantage of placing flamboyant placards upon the walls of waiting rooms at 'railway stations to influence their case with the traveling public, "This eight-hour law has been called a 'force bill,, enacted under the demand of organized trainmen," continues Senator LaFollette. "This is not true of the railroad employees. They demanded an eight-hour day from the railroads not from congress. They made no demand whatever on congress. They said if the railroads did not grant an eight-hour day they would quitwork. This was their fight. They set a day to quit work in case the railroad managers re fused them the eight-hour day. Then the railroads inaugurated a strike against the public. They refused to accept freight for shipment, especial ly perishable goods in many, parts of the country. This meant appalling disaster to farmers, particularly to iruit growers. It meant great dam age to all business, even to the rail roads themselves." "The President sought to adjust the trouble and avoid the disaster about Id be thrust on the country, we was not successful. The railway managers were particularly obstinate and refused to concede and refused jo concede the principle of the eight hour day. "At this point the President put uie matter up to congress for its cons deration. Congress, disinter estea although bound to consider only the public good, was forced to fnt i ?e public interest. It was not orced to act because of any demand upon congress by the workingmen ur oy the railroads, but because the -Houf lUw Saved Business Men public interest demanded immediate action, and congress acted. "It passed what is known as the eight-hour law for men in the em ployment of railroads in interstate commercj engaced in moving trains. Every Wisconsin representative pres ent voted for the bill which became a law and avoided the strike. I be lieve they did right. I believe in the eight-hour day. "It is claimed that congress acted without due consideration. Did it? The question for the eight-hour day for skilled employees was not new. Every congressman who was alive to the Issues of the day must have been fairly familiar with the arguments pro and con on the subject of the eight hour day. "The railroads and some other large rmployers are slow to con cede," said the senator, "but abun dant experience has shown that for the trades, professions and crafts, where skill, courage, caution and close attention are required, an eight-hour day is the maximum for efficiency. However, railroads gen erally, use no 'principle of progress that is not 'fdrced upon them by legislation. '"The dawn of a better day would never brighten the path of workmen were it left to the rail road managers. The railroad em ployees have been patient and long suffering. Theirs is a hazardous business. Their labor is performed under dangerous conditions." KERN FLAYS HUGHES FOR HIS ATTACK ON NEW 8-HOUR LAW A Washington dispatch, dated Sept. 11, says: Charles E Hughes' attaqk on the new eight-hour law was yesterday answered by Senator John W. Kern of Indiana. Senator Kern said: "In attacking the eight-hour law Hughes also attacks a majority of the republicans of the house of rep resentatives. Tho leading republican members of the house, no doubt, will be indignant at the vicious attack made on them by their candidate for the presidency. Hughes seemingly has forgotten that seventy-two re publican members of the house, headed by Uncle Joe Cannon, Mon dell and others of equal prominence voted for the eight-hour law, while only fifty-six republicans voted against it. "Hughes also seemingly forgets that while under the rules of the senate the republicans of that body were able without difficulty to block the passage of the corrupt practices act and to prevent tho passage at the last session of the ship purchase bill, and while with the same ease they could have blocked the passage of the eight-hour law, ye there was not the slightest effort in that direction. Of course, they saw the great calam ity that was threatening the country and the emergency for immediate action, and such partisanship as is now manifested by Mr. Hughes was overcome by their patriotism and they permitted the law to pass with out throwing a single obstacle in its way." SAYS HUGHES LET 8-HOUR BILL PASS From the Chicago Herald, Sept. 29. ' Senator Thomas J. Walsh, western Wilson manager, in an address to the Iroquois club last night declared that Charles Evans Hughes could have killed the Adamson eight-hour bill. A telegram to. ropubliqan sen ators, ho said, would havo applied the chloroform. Senator Walsh's speech was made at a dinner in his honor at tho Hotel La Salle. Tho Iroquois club was host, and party leaders, great and small, tucked their feet under tho banquet tables. "Let the heathen rage," said Mr. Walsh. "Tho eight-hour day for rail road train operatives is here. It never will be repealed. Congress must now address itself to tho task of legislating so that tho conditions never again will arise that made it imperative to pass tho Adamson bill with a speed inexcusable under any other circumstances. "It is vain to disclaim about the Iniquity of legislation under coer cion. Tho man who might havo ar rested the passage or the act, had ho but raised his voice,' remained silent. "Had Candidate Hughes sent and published a telegraphic message to the republican members of tho sen ate to stand firm, to take advantage of the senate rules to prevent tho passage of the Adamson bill, it would not bo the law. "Ho shrunk from that awful re sponsibility, as well he might. He had In mind tho economic waste in volving not only tho railroads and the men but every industry great and Binall; tho farmer unable to havo his grain transported to market; a nation-wide paralysis, bitter strife and probable bloodshed. "What right has he now to de nounce the bill or to denounce the President for urging its passage?" A. O. U. W. AGAINST PROHIBITION REPEAL IN ARKANSAS Tho grand lodge of the A. O. U. W. of Arkansas endorses tho present prohibitory laws of Arkansas and has adopted resolutions against its re peal as proposed in Act. No. 2 to bo voted on at the November olections. A copy of tho resolutions, which was sent to every member of the order, follows: "Whereas, nine months trial has proved tho beneficent effect ofth. statewjdo prohibition law, and ef fectually demonstrated that tho only business it hurts is that of the sa loon, which impoverishes and do grades; it has had a tendency to va cate our jails and county laruin, hub increased tho earnings of legtlmato business, has made labor more effi cient and dependable, has brought happiness and plenty to homes that had been pauperized by tho saloon and its attendant evils, and is lifting our citizenship to a higher plane of self-respect; and, "Whereas, There Is now pending before the people, to bo submitted at the November election, Act No. 2, which proposes to repeal not only the state-wldo act, but all tho salutary anti-liquor laws that havo been se cured by persistent effort during tho last 40 years, substituting therefor a law, under tho spacious guise of 'local self-government that would again deliver tho stato into tho hands of the whiskey ring with all its per nicious influences; therefore, bo it "Resolved, That the Grand Lodge of Arkansas, Ancient Order of United Workmen, hereby condemn Act No. 2 as wholly vicious and unworthy of support, as n deceitful device of Satan to defeat the will of our best citizens, and to debauch and debase tho social fabric, as a step backward in the march of progress; and In tho name of the 0,200 members of tho order and tho homes they; represent, urge upon all the imperative neces sity and their fraternal obligation to vote and work for tho triumphant defeat of Act No. 2." 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