home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text>
- <title>
- (Before TIME) William Howard Taft
- </title>
- <history>TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1910s Highlights</history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- JUDICIARY
- Supreme
- October 8, 1928
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> With a gentle swishing of black robes and the slow-
- shuffling steps of wise old men, the Supreme Court of the U.S.,
- august at Washington, convened for another autumn session in
- its semi-circular little room in the Capitol.
- </p>
- <p> Mr. Chief Justice (William Howard Taft) had returned to
- Washington early, after a frolicsome 71st birthday (with eleven
- grandchildren) at his summer lodge at Murray Bay, Quebec. Prior
- to convening his eight Supreme colleagues, he held a three-day
- conference with the senior judges of the U.S. Circuit Court. He
- informed President Coolidge that five additional Federal judges
- should be benched with the mounting arrears of Prohibition and
- tax cases.
- </p>
- <p> Clerks and printers busied themselves with the Supreme
- Court's weighty agenda.
- </p>
- <p> Five Supreme decisions remained to be rendered after
- arguments heard last spring. Three of these cases were notable--1) The Great Lakes States v. the City of Chicago. Lawyer
- Charles Evans Hughes, a onetime member of the Supreme Court,
- had been appointed special master. His report upheld Chicago's
- right to withdraw water from Lake Michigan, at the expense of
- other lake levels, for its sewage canal. 2) A test case about
- the Ku Klux Klan--whether it is constitutional for States to
- require secret organizations to put their secrets on file. 3) A
- test case about Shriners--whether persons founding fraternal
- orders may closely copy or parody the names of established
- orders like the Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the
- Mystic Shrine. (Negroes substituted "Egyptian" for "Arabic."
- Texans got an injunction.)
- </p>
- <p> New cases looming on the calendar for argument in coming
- weeks included:
- </p>
- <p> A boundary dispute between Louisiana and Mississippi.
- </p>
- <p> The 7 cent fare fight between the New York Transit
- Commission and the Interborough Rapid Transit Co. (Mr. Chief
- Justice Taft had allowed this case to be moved ahead in the
- interest of millions of subway riders. It will be argued Oct.
- 15).
- </p>
- <p> United Fuel Gas Co. v. the Public Service Commission of
- Kentucky--a test case on public regulation of private rates for
- natural gas.
- </p>
- <p> The famed "Stone-Cutters Case"--the Journeymen Stone-
- Cutters' Association of North America v. the U.S.--to determine
- the validity of court injunctions brought in conflict with
- union regulations.
- </p>
- <p> St. Louis and O'Fallon v. the Interstate Commerce
- Commission--a railroad valuation case.
- </p>
- <p> More than 300 applications were on file, by the Coast
- Guard to admit cases for review, among them:
- </p>
- <p> Cases of liquor-bearing foreign vessels, seized by the
- Coast Guard between the 3-mile and 12-mile limits.
- </p>
- <p> The "Lake Cargo Coal Case"--between Southern coal and
- railroad men, Northern coal and railroad men, and the
- Interstate Commerce Commission, over freight rates.
- </p>
- <p> The "California Deciduous Fruit Case"--90 Western
- railroads trying to have an I.C.C. rate-reduction on fruit set
- aside.
- </p>
- <p> Kindly, equitable gentleman that he is, Mr. Chief Justice
- Taft was neither vexed nor disturbed by the talk that went
- around Washington, as it does every year at this time, that
- there is certain to be a vacancy in the Supreme Court before
- long. Mr. Associate Justice Holmes, oldest of all the high-
- benchers, looked as hale and bright-of-eye as ever at 87. Even
- Mr. Associate Justice Sutherland, 66, who was sick and absent
- much of last year, looked fit as 40.
- </p>
- <p> Mr. Chief Justice dropped easily back into the health-
- guarding routine which he follows when in Washington--up at 7
- o'clock to be pummelled by a strong Swedish masseur; breakfast
- of hard-toasted bran bread--(oh, how different from the
- oranges, beefsteaks and sugary coffee which he used to swallow
- when he was a 332-pounder in the White House and when he said,
- "Things are in a sad state of affairs when a man can't even
- call his gizzard his own!"). Until 11:30, he reads and dictates
- in his study; then by motor to the Capitol, to sit from 12 to
- 2; then the luncheon recess and the one real meal of the day
- (meat, vegetables); sitting again, until 4, and home by motor.
- This is the hour when children who play in the vicinity of the
- Connecticut Avenue bridge espy the huge old figure who chuckles
- with his stomach and is always willing to stop and say hello.
- Mr. Chief Justice walks and chuckles thus for a half hour every
- day.
- </p>
- <p> "Dinner" is at 6--more bran toast; dictating or studying
- stops at 9; and so to bed. Mr. Chief Justice is not one of
- those septuagenarians who boast how little sleep they need. Nor
- does he "run upstairs." He does, however, operate his own
- elevator.
- </p>
- <p> They say the coming election may have a profound effect
- upon the future of the country's laws. A vacancy in the Supreme
- Court might be filled by some one whom President Harding or
- President Coolidge would never have chosen. Those terrific 5-
- to-4 decisions might go the other way. Picture, for example, a
- 5-to-4 decision on Prohibition!
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps, as he lies under invigorating Swedish digits of a
- morning, Mr. Chief Justice reflects, or talks, about past and
- present--perhaps somewhat as follows:
- </p>
- <p> "Goodness! Nineteen-twenty-eight! [Chuckle.] Why, its half
- a century since I left college. I played football--and I was
- class salutatorian. They used to call me `Big Bill.' I suppose
- [chuckle] all heavy Williams get called that [chuckle]. Big
- Bill Edwards--Big, Bill Thompson [chuckle, chuckle]...."
- </p>
- <p> The footballer became a low student and, at $6 per week,
- court reported for his half-brother's (Charles Phelps Taft's)
- newspaper, the Cincinnati Times. (Alphonso Taft of Cincinnati
- married a Miss Fannie Phelps, who bore him Charles Phelps Taft
- and died. He then married Miss Louisa Maria Torrey, who bore
- him three sons, one every other year beginning in 1857--William
- Howard Taft, Henry Waters Taft (Manhattan lawyer) and Horace
- Dutton Taft (founder-headmaster of Taft School, Watertown,
- Conn.). Three of these Tafts had issue. Charles Phelps Taft's
- children were Jane, David, Anna, Charles. William Howard Taft's
- were Robert, Charles Phelps II, Helen. Henry Waters Taft's were
- Walbridge, William Howard II and Louise. These, in turn, have
- produced eleven grandchildren....Lorado Taft, famed sculptor,
- native of Illinois, is a distant, if any, relative.) Another
- publisher paid $25 per week to alienate his services. He shared
- first honors in his class at law school, practiced with his
- father and got on quickly--assistant prosecuting attorney,
- judge of the Superior Court. He was only 33 when President
- Harrison made him Solicitor-General of the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> The seal fisheries dispute with England defending the
- McKinley Tariff were his first big jobs, both successful.
- President Harrison made him a Federal judge in Ohio. He handed
- down the decision dissolving the cast-iron pipe monopoly--first
- vital effect of the Sherman anti-trust law. President
- Roosevelt, the trust-buster, offered him twice a Supreme Court
- appointment but he declined.
- </p>
- <p> Appointments and commissions filled William Howard Taft's
- years--the Philippine Commission, first Governor of the
- Philippines, a conference with Pope Leo XIII. President
- Roosevelt made him Secretary of War in 1904--an amiable Mars
- indeed who made empiric yet cherubic sidetrips to Cuba, Panama
- and Porto Rico. Wherever he went, he acquired weight and
- respect.
- </p>
- <p> Roosevelt sent him around the world and finally, in 1908--just 20 years ago--William Howard Taft found himself, at
- Roosevelt's insistence, the Republican candidate for President.
- </p>
- <p> If, lying back while his earthly frame is kneaded, Mr.
- Chief Justice thinks about 1908 in contrast to 1928, it is
- doubtful that his thought is political. A knowing newsman once
- said that the Taft bump of political sagacity was really a
- dent. True though that may be, there are more bumps than dents
- in the Taft make-up, mental as well as physical, and as he
- looks back from a double eminence never before achieved in the
- U.S., it may be that he sees far more than any politician of
- comparable age would see.
- </p>
- <p> In 1908, Calvin Coolidge was an inconspicuous Assemblyman
- in Massachusetts. Alfred E. Smith was the same thing in New
- York. Herbert Clark Hoover had branched out independently in
- engineering and in 1907-08 visited England, Egypt, Burma,
- Australia, New Zealand, Malay, Ceylon.
- </p>
- <p> Mabel Walker Willebrandt was a 19-year-old school teacher
- of lumberjacks' children in Buckley, Mich., soon to marry the
- school superintendent and nurse him in Arizona.
- </p>
- <p> Charles Augustus Lindbergh was a child of six whose father
- had just gone to Congress from Minnesota. The Wright Brothers
- were making sensational flights, staying in the air as long as
- 1 hr., 31 min., 25 4/5 sec. But not until the next year was
- Louis Bleriot to astound the world by flying across the English
- Channel. If young Lindbergh had a hero the year Taft campaigned
- it was doubtless President Roosevelt, with whose son, Quentin,
- he used to play in the White House grounds. Legend says that
- "Cheese" Lindbergh was one of the boyish gang that inspired
- Quentin to rough-ride his pony into and through the White
- House.
- </p>
- <p> A handsome, ursine figure from Idaho entered the Senate in
- 1908, William Edgar Borah.
- </p>
- <p> Henry Ford brought out Model T that year, and a year later
- said he would make nothing else but. He also said: "Any
- customer can have a car painted any color he wants, so long as
- it is black."
- </p>
- <p> Abroad, the scene was idyllic. Edward VII of England, with
- two more years to reign, visited his nephew, Nicholas II of
- Russia, at Reval. Wilhelm of Germany, busy building warships,
- warmly welcomed Dr. David Jayne Hill, the new U.S. Ambassador.
- He explained his growing Navy as follows: "Every German warship
- launched is one more guarantee for peace on earth."
- </p>
- <p> Emperor Franz Joseph annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina and
- nearly started the War prematurely, but Wilhelm scowled down
- Russia and the peace was kept.
- </p>
- <p> In Turkey, the "Young Turks" revolted, with Europe's
- approval. In China, the Dowager Empress died, closely preceded
- by Emperor Kwang-su, and China passed to two-year-old Pu-yi. It
- was evening for the dynasts.
- </p>
- <p> The President of France that year was a man named
- Fallieres. The premier was a young man of 67 names Georges
- Clemenceau....
- </p>
- <p> Politics. Should any political thoughts stray through Mr.
- Chief Justice's mind this year, it might occur to him to
- compare the 1908 and 1928 Republican platforms. The one Nominee
- Taft ran on was partly the work of a newly-eminent lawyer who
- had successfully prosecuted the Harriman railroad combinations
- and the Standard Oil Co. for the U.S.--Frank Billings Kellogg,
- then called "the Beau Brummel of the politicians."
- </p>
- <p> The G.O.P. platform, then as now, mentioned Progress and
- Prosperity:
- </p>
- <p> "American manhood and womanhood have been lifted to a
- nobler sense of duty....
- </p>
- <p> "Under the guidance of Republican principles the American
- people have become the richest nation in the world"--richer
- than England and all her colonies, than France and all her
- colonies,..."one-fourth of the world's wealth."
- </p>
- <p> In 1908, the Farm Problem was solved by promising more
- Rural Free Delivery.
- </p>
- <p> Prohibition was a reformers' subject, not yet forced into
- national politics.
- </p>
- <p> Snobbery was no issue, though Bryan's origin and training
- were humble compared to Roosevelt of Harvard and Taft of Yale.
- </p>
- <p> Not even women's suffrage got a mention in 1908.
- </p>
- <p> The great Issue was, of course, the Tariff, the politics
- of which Nominee Taft so miscalculated that he was astonished
- when the reactionary Payne-Aldrich bill, signed by him, proved
- unpopular.
- </p>
- <p> Far more obviously than Nominee Hoover today, Nominee Taft
- in 1908 was a President's hand-picked successor. Also like
- Hoover, he had never before run for a public executive office.
- With Roosevelt's aegis over his personal distinction, he easily
- beat Bryan. On a blizzardy 4th of March he drove, behind four
- skittish bay horses, to be inaugurated in the Senate Chamber.
- </p>
- <p> Roosevelt linked arms and led him in. Little old Chief
- Justice Melville W. Fuller, who had sworn the last five
- Presidents, administered the oath. Then came the historic
- Inaugural Ball in the cavernous Pension Building. Roosevelt
- slipped out a side door of the White House and soon was
- tracking and slaying wild animals in Africa not yet crowded by
- tourist-hunters. Taft stayed behind, corpulent, just,
- constantly annoying his children, citizens, by his benevolent
- logic. They had voted for him because the dynamic, hustle-up
- Roosevelt had told them to. When they found how unRooseveltian
- Taft was, they were vexed. Their clamor pained and confused
- him. The late Senator Dolliver described him as a large,
- amiable island surrounded by people who knew just what they
- wanted. "Figuratively," as William Allen White says, "he used
- to come out upon the front stoop of the White House and quarrel
- petulantly with the American people every day." (In Masks in a
- Pageant (Macmillan, $5), currently published.)
- </p>
- <p> When Roosevelt came home, he did not like the way his man
- had turned out. He tried to block his renomination and, failing
- in that, founded the third party that lost for them both in
- 1912. Soon the Yale law faculty had the distinction to include
- an ex-President of the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Bench. In 1921, a message pencilled on rough copy paper
- and signed "Gus," reached the Hon. William Howard Taft in
- Canada. It was from the late Gustave J. Karger, oldtime
- correspondent of the Cincinnati Times-Star. "Gus" reported that
- President Harding had just decided "to appoint Big Bill Chief
- Justice." Back to Washington he went, now far removed from the
- irrational bickerings of "practical men." Looking down from the
- High Bench, he beheld the "Best Minds" of the Harding era on
- the job, many of them from his native Ohio. When the Oil
- Scandals broke, there were no party ties to prevent him from
- concurring in the scalding Supreme opinion thereon. Now the
- "Best Minds" are no longer referred to as such, but Mr. Chief
- Justice hears that his onetime party's Nominee "probably has
- the largest mind in America" and is a "planetary thinker." No
- opinion is required of the High Bench on these matters. When he
- hears of Hooverism and the Brown Derby, Mr. Chief Justice can
- smile, chuckle. He can point to his "dent" and lend his now
- almost universally admired bumps to the law, which follows
- sedately, a decade or more, behind politics.
-
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-