Iowa Wesleyan College - Croaker Yearbook (Mount Pleasant, IA)

 - Class of 1915

Page 120 of 268

 

Iowa Wesleyan College - Croaker Yearbook (Mount Pleasant, IA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 120 of 268
Page 120 of 268



Iowa Wesleyan College - Croaker Yearbook (Mount Pleasant, IA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 119
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Iowa Wesleyan College - Croaker Yearbook (Mount Pleasant, IA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 121
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Page 120 text:

!' 1910 will raise your wages. Show us that we can trust you and we will make you a financial partner in the business. Convince us that you have the interest of your employer at heart and we will use the joint profits in making your lives fuller and happier. This must be the attitude of Capital. On the other hand the labor union must revolutionize its methods. “The motive of the union is right, the principle seeking improved conditions is right, but the method is wrong. In the union, every man obtains membership on a common basis, seeks a common employment, at a common wage. As a result the man of great ability and superior personality becomes simply a unit in a mass where the unaspiring are greatly in the majority.” The toilers of today are supremely powerful yet vastly ignorant. But it is not the power of the union, it is not the ignorance of the laboring class which is bringing down upon our industrial centers such an avalanche of strikes and labor disputes. It is this dead level scale of union wages, it is this distribution of power in the labor union among ignorant and educated alike which is rocking the very foundation of our whole industrial system. Now if the union would ever exercise its true purpose it must cast off this communal yoke. A scientific scale of wages must be established. The laborer must be paid according to his efficiency. Labor must be able to say to Capital: Give us cooperation in the regulation of wages and prices, make us a partner in the business and we will give you sober, intelligent and efficient workmen. Capital must meet Labor on this broad platform of cooperation. Thus did Henry Ford of Detroit. There is no alternative. This reform must come. We must not wait and compel the workingman to take his rightful dues by force or dynamite. We cannot coerce the laborer; he is a man, a citizen, one of the common brotherhood of Man. We may order a stone from the quarry or iron made into an arch, we may command a brute and whip it into submission, but from men, fierce, tumultuous, rebellious, we must obtain mental and moral assent. We now invite the political cooperation of the laborer, consult him in matters of public policy, appeal to his patriotism in national crises; we must likewise secure his industrial cooperation. The LEAVING THE STATION WITH OUR HERO laborer is now a co-partner in production ; we must educate him to dignity, honor and cooperation. Cooperation will effect a marvelous transformation in the field of industry. Make the laborer financially a partner in the product and you will make him a man. He is no longer a machine working blindly for a mere living wage. When tall 1 (.'Vl'W'WWWVWWWWWW

Page 119 text:

THE PURPLE AND WHITE PARADE contented laboring people. Man is pitted against man, human hands are crimsoned in fraternal blood. Had you visited Lawrence two years ago you would have seen class hatred incite the people to a mad riot and stain the streets with the blood of little children. You would have seen hordes of rebellious wage earners pour out of the factory doors demanding a living wage. You would have seen women, forced by the withered hand of want to beg in the very streets for bread. You would have seen relentless Capital answer their pleas with a storm of brutish bullets. Visit any large industrial center during a strike and you will discover that the rich scoff and scorn the poor; the poor despise and detest the rich. Behind every comment that is written, back of every angry word and oath that is uttered, back of every bit of exploded dynamite is this spirit of class hatred, which if not checked will sooner or later burst into the consuming flames of anarchy. This is the ominous cloud that looms above the horizon of America’s future. Here is a problem, nation wide in its significance, whose solution affects the whole industrial world. How shall we avert a catastrophe, not only imminent but inevitable ? For want of a better solution, a vast host of dissatisfied laboring people are turning their faces toward Socialism. The supporters of this movement, numbering only two thousand several decades ago, polled at the last election, nearly a million votes. This alarming increase in the Socialist party indicates. and measures the growth of this industrial friction. But let us not allow the industrial pendulum to swing too far in this dangerous direction. We must not permit the Socialist to dictate the course of our industrial evolution. We must preserve intact a republican government which is our heritage. There can be but one final solution of this vital issue. Its principles may be summarized in one fundamental idea—Cooperation. Capital and Labor must cooperate. It is not our task as Americans to attempt the mere conciliation of Capital and Labor. We must do more than conciliate! We must do more than establish compulsory arbitration! We must burn into the hearts of Capital and Labor the great and lasting principle of Cooperation. In this program of cooperation, Capital has a mighty task to perform. Capital must say to the laborer: Show us that you are interested in our business and we



Page 121 text:

 fiJlu r-:;' tsse8SSi ... '-5; S - s v ....i..« .r V MWWMM you arm him with ambition and hope, the mightiest weapons in the development of individual character, you light a star in his sky which draws him on to harder work and stiffens his mental and moral fiber. This principle of cooperation will react equally on Capital. Class hatred will be swept away. The Capitalist will receive added returns from re-organized labor. The output of factories will be increased; business will be quickened and the organization of new industries will be stimulated. Thus Capital and Labor approach each other as a moral obligation, as a business partnership, as an economic necessity. In this movement for cooperation, Capital and Labor must be spurred on by an awakened public conscience and supported by a united people. We must eradicate, not ameliorate, poverty; we must recognize the human factor in economic life. We must realize that the future of the country depends not upon our money but upon our men. “Ill fares the land to hastening ill a prey, Where wealth accumulates and men decay.” Listen, Americans, to the lessons taught us in the language of events. If we would preserve and educate democracy, if we would exercise the latent sovereignty which lies sleeping in every uncast ballot, if we would level the barriers of class, if we would unite the forces of Capital and Labor; then we must thunder in the ears of every statesman, every legislator, every political leader in the land: We demand for the laborer a minimum wage law and for the capitalist a maximum annual profit; we demand that the laborer be efficient and that the capitalist be willing to share his enormous profits; we demand that the labor unions choose as their leaders, not social degenerates, but responsible men with homes and families; we insist that the capitalist use a part of his wealth to alleviate the condition of his workmen; we demand compulsory compensation for injuries, government control of new capitalization and satisfactory police regulation of labor conditions! These things we demand in the common interest of Capital, Labor and Morality. ljmm 4 si; OUR DELEGATION AT THE STATE CONTEST '..............

Suggestions in the Iowa Wesleyan College - Croaker Yearbook (Mount Pleasant, IA) collection:

Iowa Wesleyan College - Croaker Yearbook (Mount Pleasant, IA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Iowa Wesleyan College - Croaker Yearbook (Mount Pleasant, IA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Iowa Wesleyan College - Croaker Yearbook (Mount Pleasant, IA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Iowa Wesleyan College - Croaker Yearbook (Mount Pleasant, IA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Iowa Wesleyan College - Croaker Yearbook (Mount Pleasant, IA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

1963

Iowa Wesleyan College - Croaker Yearbook (Mount Pleasant, IA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 150

1915, pg 150


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