The Social Democrat. (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 82, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 8, 1913 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Socialist Newspapers and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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♦
1
Father jokes
COLUMN.
GOVERNMENT IN FIGHT TO
REGAIN OIL FUEL SUPPLY
A DISTINCTION WITHOUT A DIF-
TERENCE.
I «
i 1111*^...
■& * *
to;. •- — » . . -»
-----—
The American people Buffer from
the delusion that there Is an Intrinsic
difference between the Republican
and Democratic parlies. On the sup-
position that they had waked up and
•pened their eyes to the fact that as
related to big business, they were
really the same. Theodore Kooae-
Y*lt and Perkins of the Harvester
trout, afljl other timorous and shrewd
politicians, launched the Progressive
party.
Tbs Frogrssslvc party, as confessed
by Roosevelt himself, was also In-
tended as a check to the drift of the
grotere toward the Socialist party,
and to catch ttug vote, the main poli-
tical demands of Socialism were put
la their platform.
Despite this, and despite of the
large campaign funds, of all the three
agate class parties, still the vote of
the Socialist party made a marked
Increase.
There can be no doubt that at least
• million votes were cast for the
Progressive party, that had there
hean none but Taft and Wilson in
the race would have gone to the So-
eialiat party.
That Ja, had Roosevelt not been In
th* race, the Socialist vote would
bare been 2,000,000 Instead of bor-
derlog on one million.
United States Hues Subsidiaries of
Oil Trust and Southern Pacific
Road to Recover Title to Oil
Lands.
Hill THE fIRES DUE
ED HBELESSUESS,
A Good Move.
DENVER, Colo.— Retention by the
United States government of oil lands
In California, Arizona, Wyoming.
A summary of fires that occurred
In Kansas during the ,|vo months
from April 1 to September I has
The following notice and com-
ment appeared a few days ago in the
iCaney (Kang.) News. It tells of a
i good plan for municipal manage-
ment of the trash proposition in
cities of the first and second class:
WORKINGMAN 18 FOOLISH. BAYS
PASTOR.
THE WORIiD-WIDE STRIKE.
(lean Up Notice.
"Official notice Is hereby given for
Utah and Colorado, valued at figure, just been completed by the State Fire!* *<?nf’ral cleaning up of the city Ev-
so stupendous as to be almo,t unbe- Mar8ha| Ihsp»rtmon( The Property owner or occupant la
lievable. is involved in the suit of the * ® uu nrer -----
[government against the Mid-West Oil ,or tllP f vr mon,bj numbers 1347. ..... .......... .
company and olhers, hearing on f ,hl* number. 267 were of unknown boxci or barrel*
which began in the United States lr,n’ leaving s total of 1080 of
court of appeals today. known origin These fires originated
front
Technically the suit involves title
to only 16 Oacres of land in the Wy-
oming oil fields valued at from 81- elaoaneas
600,000 tp 14,000,000. in reality, °W*
----Ul uif l Ullt (1
States, Sept. 27, 1909, withdraw ing p av nR w,lh ml,rhM 91
a great variety of causes ai-
nioat half of which were due to the
of Individuals, as fert-
..............Hot ashes 6< boys smoking
It Involves the validity of an order Is- *’ ‘arr-p !aRl*-,a ot rmokers 28; defer- 1 C'aney.
sued by the president of the United n,vr flu*’ and chimneys 66; ohlldren ' Everyone should be glad u take
careHsa* adiaiitas^- of this oppartunlty to
NEW YORK. — The American
w-orklngman has co^e in for a stir-
ring Indictment at the hands of the
Rev. Alexander Irvine of this city.
Preaching recently to the wealthy
congregation of the Church of the
Ascension on Fifth avenue, the Rev.
Dr. Irvine said;
"The American workingman is a
composite of superstition, stupidity
in the alleys so the (and cowardice. He refuses to see his
plight and refuses every chance to
try to help himself. He is even more
of a dullard than his English broth-
er, who has begun to realize the op-
notlfled to gather up the trash on
(heir premi es and have it piled In
teamsters can haul it away. The
•• agons will start on Tuesday morn-
i! K. September 23, and It will be nec-
esshry *o have the trash piled out by
that time jprejslons and subservience under
"Ry order of the City Council of I which the domination of the house
| of lords has placed him.
No power on earth can stay the revo-
lution,
Its banners are unfurling far and
wide;
' we are at a stage of evolution,
When soulless systems must be
swept aside.
A world wide jtrlke, against world
wide oppression,
And exploitation of the working
class,
Will swiftly cause a permanent sup-
pression
Of powers that curse and crush
the struggling mass.
IDE Ml 1 Mil?
acres in California and Wyoming
Billions Involved.
At the original hearing of the suit
in Cheyenne last year, evidence was
introduced to show that the officials
of the navy department estimated the
amount of oil in tht land withdrawn
in the state of California alone at 4,-
000.000,000 barrels, wh'eli represents
a value of *2,000,000,000.
The suit was brought by the gov-
ernment against the Mid-West Oil
company, the Reed Investment com-
pany and others. Federal Judge J
A. Riner, Cheyenne, ordered the suit
dismissed and the present hearing is
on the government appeal. The case
It would have no doubt 'een en-1 ’* b<,'nK watched closely by officials
from all forms of entry, 3,04 1,000 : w|,h n,atchps ,;i defective elec- have their trash hauled away free of ! subtle than the
"There is a house of lords in this
country—more dangerous and more
every occu-
es, all must strike,
pation,
All trade and traffic, must at once
stand still;
I am not Inquiring about pour sax|
that is immaterial in this case. But
I want to know if you havo the qual-
ities that will enable you to stand
up before the world and say. "I am a
man,” in the "manly” sense.
-’an you stand before your em-
ployer like a man, or do you cringo
before him like a dog?
Do you go to the polls and voto
the old party tickets, because your
boss wants you to, or are you man
enough to vote for your own inter-
ests and as your conscience dictates’
Are you a Republican because your
father was one, or because Lincoln
wgs one? Remember Lincoln was
not an abolitionist because his father
English institution.
staves and charge. The new state law which ! it Is composed of those who live
trie wiring 24; issoline
SrsSs c
too near wood 37; miscellaneous 33 which to pile their trash and at lean
i once each month must have same j American
wore probably un- hauled beyond the city limits
preventable were from the following burned or buried,
cairns: Adjoining buildings 153; ties have decked to have teams do
lightning 88; locomotive sparks 53; this hauling If people will only pile
ejimney sparks 47; spontaneous up the trash
And then, the "moneyed powers" of waB onB‘ and your father was prob-
every nation, ! ab|y something else than his father
Will bow before th; Common Peo-["aR' Lincoln, and probably your
pie s will. father, would both have been Social-
ists if they were altve today. There
Total 509.
The fires
that
combustion 94; suns rays 12; mis- where
cellaneou* 72. Total 619. 62 fires' member the
were reported as of probable Incan-'and have
diary origin. J them ••
and put
do not and can not work,
rare momenta of lucidity, the
workingman realizes that
the wealthy leisure class is living ' y
The city author!-j his toil, like a parasite sucking his
blood. Yet once in every four years
w-hen It is in his power to make an
it In alleys [active protest he casts his vote un-
fat, jolly, smiling.
The moneyed masters
ruination.
aim at our
is nothing to fight for under the Re-
publican and Democratic banners
They hope to win by muddling our ,odaj • consequently, it does not take
brains; |a nian to be a Republican as it did
A fight with ballots is our sole sal-,iB Linro>n’s time, when the Republi-
it can be obtained easily. Re-| thinking for the
time the wagons start ’ patronizing politician w ho Is long on
your rubbish ready for j promises but woefully short on per-
formances.’
eouraglng had we been able to point
to two million Socialist votes In
1816, hut the point Is, would they
hava bean real Socialist votes?
Aa it was the very tricks of the
political mountebank Roosevelt did a
most excellent work for us, for it
separated from us an element of half
formed embryonic Socialists, and
kolped to solidify the movement.
The old parties are so anxious for
•Vtgfbera that they pour out money to
buy votes; hut it’s not votes we want
but Hpn and women who are awak-
ened to the truths of Socialism. What
Socialism and Socialists want is a
moral and intellectual awakening of
the people, as only upon such a re-
vival and awakening can Socialism
bo put into practice. Nothing could
bo more damaging to the cause of
Socialism, than for the Socialist par-
ty to be thruat into power by a btg
vote of discontent with old party
rale, but no definite understanding
of the true remedies needed. Such
an elevation into power would mean
that half baked Socialist would be
thrust Into office; and reform meas-
ures and not revolutionary laws
would result.
Until Socialism enters into a man’s
•out and intellect, and his profession
Of Socialism means more than a par-
ty badge and party membership, he
turns naturally to reform, but re-
form in not Socialism. Socialism is
• revolution.
When the early Christians came to
A pngan city and began to propagate
thair doctrines of brotherhood, equal-
ity* etc., the pagans said: "Those
who turn the world upside down are
come here also." To the pagans the
doetriae that slaves had rights, that
•11 men are brothers, etc. did turn
the world of that day upside down,
gad *oday the doctrine that the
slaves who make the values should
qpu the values they make, and tho
tools they make them with, Is an up-
side down doctrine, it means revolu-
tion, and no man or woman who be-
lieves in simple reform is a full
grown Socialist. Therefore the line
between the Soclaliat party and the
throe ether parties is clear and dis-
tlnet, but the lines between the three
Old parties is not clear and distinct
They all believe in the private owner-
ship of the aataral resources and
public utilities, end that means a
•lorn of makers of wealth who get
4hly bare aubsiatence, and a class
Of takers of wealth who enjoy the
rt products of labor. They all believe
ta class rule and to put badges upon
them as Republican. Democrat or
Frogreaalve is a dletinction without
ft difference.
at Washington on account of its bear-
ing on the fael oil supply of the nsry.
Withdraws l.uml*.
The president approved an order
reserving certain oil lands in Wyom-
ing and California 8ept. 27. 1909.
Despite this, certcin parties acquired
a quarter section In Natroma county,
Warning to Capitalists.:
Roger W. Hanson, of WelleRley destruction of
Hills, Mass., whose financial reports
and special letters on economic sub- menibprs themselves, many of whom menl of the present uystem of inter-
jects, have a very large circulation
life and property is Personally, I think that it may
opposed by the gre*: majority of the come through either the readjust-
, ment of the present uystern
represent a high type of sturdy char- est payments, or the issuance of
must be
vation
F om slavery and age-long galling
chains.
Tls time to halt their march of rep-
robation.
The "augean stables"
ballot-swept,
Our righteous charge of truth and
agitation,
Will drive them from the battle
field, unwept.
Once we become class conscious and
united.
can party stood for the abolition of
Slavery. Republicanism has become
a mask of respectability* behind which
grafters and cowards make their
way into power.
The Socialist does not believe in
cringing before any man. nor does
he expect any man to crfnge before
him.
Are you a Socialist, brother?
Are you a man?
Try to be a man.
FtiK Set of Mary
Our will becomes the law of every Nine Cloth-Bound Volumes Worts ViO
n quarter s<*rnon in .Natroma rnnnfv ---- ’ j uu umuon ■ . , • ’ ----- •—v*
Wyoming, and discovering oil, took !«««»« the foremost bankers, both in and'wfZgnew'‘to^rlflJTtor'th£ UlP f°‘-
---------- .... the United States and on the C’onti- * 6 °f their'!°Wed b>' thfi E“S"ab to enable the
possession. The Mid-West Oil com-
pany afterwards acquired this land.
In June, 1910, an act of congress was
approved expressly authorizing the
president to reserve public lands.
The point in controversy is wheth-
er the first order of withdrawal was
valid. Judge Rtner held that the
president did not have authority to
withdraw.
Corruption ('barge Made.
This case involves several subsidi-
aries of the Standard Oil company
and the Southern Pacific railroad,
and billions of dollars’ worth of oil
and timber lands In the western sec-
tion of the United States. A congres
slonal investigation has already been
started into the validity of the titles
by which this property has been held,
and there have been various charges
of corruption on the part of officials
of the national government.
a special letter under
16:
AN OVERPLUS OF LAWYERS.
CANAL DIGGERS WHO
WHO. NEVER COME BACK
Compiled from the annual
reports
•f the
Department of Sanitation.
Isthmian Canal
Commission.
Rate per
Tear.
Force
Deaths
1.000
1904..
0,813
82
13.26
1906..
14.612
427
25.86
1»6«..
26.647
1.106
41.73
1*07..
39.643
1.132
28.77
1901..
43.681
671
13.01
1009..
47.107
602
10 64
1*10..
60,102
668
10.98
1*11..
48.670
639
11.02 i
1*12. .
50,098
467
9 18
Seventy per cent of the 16,000 law-
years in Greater New York live on the
verge of starvation, with an income
of not more than *8.00 a week. “The
trouble la overcrowding," according
to Benno Lewlnaon, chairman of the
membership committee of the New
York County Lawyers’ Association.
“If there were only 6,000 iustead
of 16,000 their chances of success
would be very fair—almost good."
He urges young men not to aspire to
the bar. To the question "What, then,
wouiii you advise brainy, ambitious
young men to doV he answers: “I
consider that the beat opportunity
from a financial standpoint, that a
young man of today has, is scientific
farming. If he would educate himself
for that, he cou.d make himself and
hts family comfortable, and It would
not take him so very long to do It.”
As we read the dally papers and
see the reports of the thousands of
young men who are graduated in law
throughout the country, the reflec-
tion naturally comes, as the former
Secretary of Agriculture, James Wll- j
son, recently said, what a pity that
the great demand of the (arm for in-
telligent men ia not being more con-
sidered by our educational institu-
tions. There is not law work for
more than a small per cent of these
young men. No doubt the education
and mental training they have will
make them brighter men. but there
are no Jobs waiting for them, that
is, for more than a small percentage
of them, while the fields are crying '
nent, says In
date of Sept.
liahsnn's Reports.
Special Letter.
WHAT QF THE I. W. WAS?
Many clients have asked for my
opinion relative to the alms, methods
and probable future of the Syndical-
ists—known In America as the Indus-
trial Workers of the World. Fear-
ing to be misunderstood, I have thus
far avoided giving an opinion. How-
ever, here is the answer:
The I. W. W.'s are a band of work-
ers who equally despise organized
capital and organized labor. They
are neither socialists nor anarchists;
but in the minds of many are work-
ing for an even more radical purpose.
comrades.
1 do not wish this to be read
defense of
by the English to enable the
Irish to purchase their farms. As I
have heretofore mentioned, the
the I. W. W.'s or Syndi- [charging of any Interest to country-
calisns. I am simply endeavoring to men was forbidden by the Laws of
presept to you, my clients, certain Moses (Deut. 23:19); was consid-
fact* which—owing to your wealth, jered a sin by the early Christian
associations and reading matter— Church; and is even today illegal in
you do not get tqday. I also wish to many states if in excess of a certain
warn you that the movement will—Irate; while the principle of the Jubl-
in some form—coatlnue to grow, be-[lee Year is th© basis of our bank-
cause it is, in my fltpinioit, founded on [ ruptcy laws. The departure of our
an economic fact, namely, that the fathers from this economic law
land
Then, monstrous wrongs will be for-
ever righted,
And justice will hold sway at our
command.
should suffer
perpia- against charging interest, ts in the
labor problem will never
nently be solved until the workers minds of many today responsible for
actually own ,the mills and other the great capitalist class and the
private enterprise* and the state or present strife between capital and
nation actually ftwns the railroads labor. In their opinion—only by re-
and public servqq properties, bow- adopting the old Hebrew economic
ever much we drsgd both events. We system will the breach between capi-
t, the interests of tal and labor ultimately be healed
o child of easth
deprivation.
Earth s bounties have been stored
for all alike;
So let us end for ays, our Uegration,
Come, let us promptly launch a
world wide strike.
M. Q. LAUGHL1N.
$2.50 to Yon-
To get this special rate you roust
suhecnbe for a share of stock in our
Socialist Co-operative Publishing Houa
at a dollar a month for 10 months. Ask
laJ. book list, catalog and
order blank. If you have Marx's work*
or part of them, you can eubetituta any
other books. Stockholder* get a
«0% discount on all our beoks; G0X on Targe
orders. You can make good wages ach-
ing Socialist books. Write today.
Oartt H, g-VT S Co„ ttj W. t!Ull at., ~.-<u|
hear much about
capital and labor being mutual; but
Capl-
economlc
laws antagonistic, and attempts at
Briefly they aim at the ultimate | thia la not economically true,
ownership of factories, banks and ail tal and labor are bv all
other industries (excepting public
service corporations which they be-
lieve should be owned by the state)
by the workers engaged therein.
They believe that they can bring this
about in ona of two ways: viz., by so
acting while being employed that
capital will find it unprintable to
longer remain in control, and will
turn the property over to the work- short time before another strike
ere In ,*«.„ desperation; or by pa- instituted. The great fundamental
tiently preparing for "The Great
Strike" by which
the properties, ei
Therefore I suggest that a change in
interest laws may be the means of
enabling the workers some day to
become the real owners of the mills,
combining these two forces are sure which Is the aim of the I. W W’s
to be only temporary makeshifts. Of course, this seems a dream to us
Certain co-operative or profit- but 1 fee! it a duty to pass the
•haring plans may be improvements j thought along In order that clients
over former systems, but they will may decide the question for them-
not solve the problem. Certain selves.
st ikes may be "settled" by eompro- ; Therefore although we may
mises or arbitration, but it Is only a apise the leaders and condemn
<ie-
the
is, methods o? .ar I W. W.’s, we must
they hope to take
question between capital aaid istoi
will never be settled by arbitration
bloc and ooards nor through the joint control
taneausly, as our ancestors took of Industries by representatives of
possession of this country July 4. labor and capital. One of these two
not lose sight oi .uelr ultimate aim.
as upon this aim depends their future
growth. In short, the American Fed-
eration of Labor professes to believe
that there can be two heads to a mill
or business and that It. can be oper-
ated jointly by capital and labor. The
are the bank- i Industrial Workers of the World
ers. manufacturers and investors state frankly that ultimately there
____. ^ , ,'vho recognize that it will be labor1 ran be but one head
people among their members. More- which is to rule. If so. this means*
PARENTAL EXAMPLE.
Mack Cretcher. who is sick with
typhoid, had enough Ilfs in him to
offer this sensible observation in this
week's Pantagraph: "Some parents
train their children by appearing as
a warning instead of an example."
| f,®® |
& A Horialig; Cartoon and Placo
*£ to Write Message. While «he> X.
£• Last 2f
® 25 Post Paid ......... 5c -g*
# IOO Post Paid......... .10c £
$ biggest bargain ever X
& OFFERED. X
JSj Co-Op. Pub. Co., Ida. Kans.
What is the a
Aurora Borealis f
opposing
As Is the rase with nil sew mave- ultima'ely rule
ments. the I. W. W.’s have gathered
a number of Ignorant, and fanatical
interests must
Wise
and will
over, many of their leaders may be
unprincipled or selfish men. Cer-
either capital
or labor must rule—and that we are
that labor must ultimately acquire (te see a fight to the finish. I
regret
nevertheless be-
sr; - “■ ; w ,bw
as to the method by which
sabotage and destruction often com- change In ownership may be brought
niltted In their name. In fact, this about
I------------ and many great man-
thls ufacturers reluctantly agree.
Respectfully submitted,
ROGER W. BABSON.
In
by
_A MARVEL THE AGE
JUST THE SAME.
Graves in Porto Rico Emptied If Ken:
Wasn't Paid.
Debate In the New York state
the past this has not been the case
any means. Only the rich were!
buried In these mausoleums, and ■
when their descendants failed to pay Yes. you hate to be bought and you
the annual rent the slab was taken hate to be sold.
down, the
I
coffin pulled out and the And you hate to be forced to
bones were cast out near the
wall
near the sea 1 Shylock in gold.
When the Americans first oc-!You hate the hard times, but you’re!
sembly recently over the bill to es- f«pied the place during the Spanish-j bound to die
tablisn a gigantic mausoleum In Nas-
sau county, Long Island, capable of
holding 675,000 bodies, evoked the
This record does not include the
votften and children belonging to the
tnmiliea of the workers; does not in-
clude, of course, those who have
gone home ta the sizus e* lag to ill-
aeei. II* there died; and doe* not
tneluda tha nagrea- end other for
employees who died at their
unitaa they were actually on
tfee my roll at the time of death.—
aloud for trained men.-The Living , wa4
Church * sepulchre under the
j American war they found
mountain ot such bones In a corner
of the cemetery. One of the first
statement from oue of the legislators things the representatives of the
that there was no such form of * ntted States did was to ha\e these
stars and stripes. J hones buried and stop the
game.
a young You hate ’em—but you vote for ’em
just the samel
f
NNIilJUaiNTT
tnUktAMUKE
m§ ? i
~ -
: i
' » —Jp* .• r"v
&#v ^
TO SHAVE WITH A MOTOR.
An Automatje W hisker « utting De-
vice Is a New Invention.
j The statement was erroneous, how- J practice
ever. At the capitals of Uncle Samla
new tropical po. sessions there are
ijust such mausoleums, in which dead
, have bee a interred for many de-
! cades.
There is such a buruU place on the
outskirts of the city of San Juan,
From the Saturday Evening Post.
An Arizona inventor has an idea ,he capita! of Torro Rico. Here for
for apply the mowing machine prln- many generations bodies h.ie bee
You hate politicians that swagger
and rant,
ghoulUh you hate a rooj jpg, of the o,d party
cant,
And you hate a large share of the
IKK* ARE STII.L AT IT IN WEST ticket you name_
' IHG1NIA. j You hate it —and vote for It just the
same!
ciple to safety razors, with a
Secret and sudden violence against !
Socialists and union organizers is the You hate to be cramped in a ftnan-
order of the day m West Virginia cial way,
, In the Fairmount-Ularksburg district ; And you htte giant frauds going
“ “ ''' ' day by day.
™..tnelu
%lg«
....... j* ®a»s meeting was recently held to
motor connected with ’the •’ L^orV.^hi ^ “M,n8' ,h^, n5e'h<’‘, 0f You «*"•
al .v h much the same IHing economic disputes, and
raxor to operate the kniven
A wire from a small battery would valuable' papers being
supply the power, and to shave it
would only be uecesaary to start the
though the coffins were boxes of j resolutions wereTorwaVdcd 7o Presit You
in your eoui the corrup-
tion you blame-
dent Wilson and the congressional
filed away in
enormou. pigeonhotos The coffin.(committee which is still'inTe.G^'tln*
mulwr and guide the tn.trumen, over SSftT^lnT W ?%£ ~
. .opening and in one ____
^ ^ f-Pr-ion a, one ot these hurt. Go after that fe„0w on the next
ala that the sealing * means that the | bench
body la more than likpiv to
curse it—and
the same!
vote for It just >
formation on small motors for thia
purpose, figuring that a motor of
larger las a aa egg is needea.
j oenett Remember, the harder be
main fighta you. and Socialism, now. the
worm and decay for urn# indefinite, re^lnnd him * " ~
b«Pc for a change, and you
pray for relief.
And you swear you will bring parti-
san schemers to grief.
Then ,n>u march to the polls to put
blockheads to shame
Buti—vote the old UcAet again just
the same.
Romantic story of an entire Blue Ridffe
Mountain district revitalized and made
over by a monster power development.
The Ancient Tanks of Aden
A glimpse at those world-old Persian
reservoirs, defying time where if
never rains, is hotter than Hades and
mighty unhealthy for a white man
Illuminated Flying Fish
Unique spectacle ef the Pacific Ocean,
sure tp delight and astonish you.
Wireless Between Germany
and America
^ow a fact, with New York-Berlin
.. ... ——— commercial service an early probabil-
ity. Big things like this thrill you; so should
Protecting the Lives of 200,000 Steel Workers I
An immense Safety First” campaign to reduce death and danger
for the man on the job.” And these are only typical of the
200 Fascinating Subjects
fairly alive with devouring interest with
200 Absorbing Illustrations
that combine to make one of the r-.ost interesting and instructivw popular 5
nj»ga*m<. ever published. |
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Merts, Dora. The Social Democrat. (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 82, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 8, 1913, newspaper, October 8, 1913; Iola, Kansas. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc942292/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.