William Howard Taft, AmericanChapple publishing Company, Limited, 1908 - 263 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 199
... issue , that he is entitled to have it stated in the face of accusations that are unjust . I have described to you some of the conditions that prevail with respect to the Americans in the cities of the Orient - in Shanghai and in other ...
... issue , that he is entitled to have it stated in the face of accusations that are unjust . I have described to you some of the conditions that prevail with respect to the Americans in the cities of the Orient - in Shanghai and in other ...
Page 228
... interest of the workingman to use careful discrimina- tion in approving or disapproving proposed legislation of this kind and to base his con- clusion and vote on the issue whether the pro- vision is fair or just , and not on the 228.
... interest of the workingman to use careful discrimina- tion in approving or disapproving proposed legislation of this kind and to base his con- clusion and vote on the issue whether the pro- vision is fair or just , and not on the 228.
Page 236
... issue between them . Not infrequently one side or the other but generally the capitalist side -will say in response to a suggestion of sub- mission to arbitration that there is nothing to arbitrate ; that their position is so impreg ...
... issue between them . Not infrequently one side or the other but generally the capitalist side -will say in response to a suggestion of sub- mission to arbitration that there is nothing to arbitrate ; that their position is so impreg ...
Page 237
... issue and publish it to the world . There often are dis- putes between great corporate employers and their employees which eventuate in a strike , and the public finds it impossible to obtain any reliable information in respect to the ...
... issue and publish it to the world . There often are dis- putes between great corporate employers and their employees which eventuate in a strike , and the public finds it impossible to obtain any reliable information in respect to the ...
Page 239
... issue . STRIKES COSTLY I shall not stop to cite statistics to show the enormous loss in the savings of labor as well as the savings of capitalists which strikes and lockouts have involved . Time was when the first resort of the labor ...
... issue . STRIKES COSTLY I shall not stop to cite statistics to show the enormous loss in the savings of labor as well as the savings of capitalists which strikes and lockouts have involved . Time was when the first resort of the labor ...
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Common terms and phrases
ABUSES administration Alphonso Taft Ambassador O'Brien Ameri American appointed arbitration attitude boycott boys Bricklayers Union brother capital capitalist CHAPTER Charlie Charlie Taft China Chinese Empire Cincinnati citizen comfort condition corporate course court Cuba duty effect employer Filipinos Filippines foreign missions friars give hand honor increase industrial injunction injury interest Islands issue Japan Judge Taft justice labor leaders labor unions live look Manila ment methods missionaries Murray Bay nation ness never Ohio Orient Parker Brothers peace persons ployer political President Roosevelt respect Robert Taft Secretary of War Secretary Taft Secretary's secure self-government Shanghai Spain speech strike Taft family Taft says Taft's talk things tion trade traveler United unlawful violence wage-earners wages War Secretary wealth William Howard Taft workingman writ Yale young
Popular passages
Page 97 - Queen and empowering the committee to devise ways and means "to secure the permanent maintenance of law and order and the protection of life, liberty, and property in Hawaii.
Page 107 - the policy of the Government of the United States is to seek a solution which may bring about permanent safety and peace to China, preserve Chinese territorial and administrative entity, protect all rights guaranteed to friendly Powers by treaty and international law, and safeguard for the world the principle of equal and impartial trade with all parts of the Chinese Empire," He was successful in obtaining the assent of the other Powers to the policy thus announced.
Page 180 - In so far as is consistent with the nature of a provisional government established under the authority of the United States, this will be a Cuban government, conforming, as far as may be, to the constitution of Cuba.
Page 178 - The provisional government, hereby established by direction and in the name of the President of the United States will be maintained only long enough to restore order and peace and public confidence, and then to hold such elections as may be necessary to determine those persons upon whom the permanent government of the Republic should be devolved.
Page 249 - To say this is not to deny the legal right of any man or set of men voluntarily to refrain from social intercourse or business relations with any persons whom he or they, with or without good reason, dislike.
Page 249 - ... they, with or without good reason, dislike. This may sometimes be un-Christian, but it is not illegal. But when it is a concerted purpose of a number of persons not only to abstain themselves from such intercourse, but to render the life of their victim miserable by persuading and intimidating others...
Page 151 - Very little practical political education was given by the Spaniards to the Filipinos. Substantially all the important executive offices in the Islands were assigned to Spaniards, and the whole government was bureaucratic. The provincial and municipal authorities were appointed and popular elections were unknown. The administration of the municipalities was largely under the supervision and direction of the Spanish priest of the parish. No responsibility for government, however local or unimportant,...
Page 178 - To the people of Cuba: The failure of Congress to act on the irrevocable resignation of the President of the Republic of Cuba, or to elect a successor, leaves this country without a government at a time when great disorder prevails, and requires that pursuant to a request of President Palma, the necessary steps be taken in the name and by the authority of the President of the United States, to restore order, protect life and property in the Island of Cuba and islands and keys adjacent thereto and...
Page 221 - The greater the need of laborers, the better their pay per man. It is clearly in the interest of those who work that capital shall increase more rapidly than they do.
Page 249 - The right and liberty to pursue a lawful calling and to lead a peaceable life, free from molestation or attack, concerns the comfort and happiness of all men, and the denial of them means destruction of one of the greatest, if not the greatest, of the benefits which the social organization confers.