Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 265, 23 September 1916 — Page 10

FACE TWELVE

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, SEPT. 23, 1916

St

(b) (a) (b)

Captain and Mrs. H. R. Canfield,

Misses Elsie and Rose Klotzenbuch-

er, Miss Ella Shlvely are at the West

cott Hotel for a few days and are

guests of Miss Lillian Mahln, city ris-

King nurse.

Mrs. Robert Kerr of Martins Ferry,

Ohio, is the guest of Mr. and MrB.

George C. Ball at their home, South

Fifteenth street.

Mrs. Ralph Polk of Indianapolis, a

former resident of this city gave a

prettily appointed luncheon Friday when she entertained the meembers

of the board of directors of the Har monie club.

The Hiawatha Social and Literary society met yesterday afternoon with

Miss Mamie Green In Centerville.

Twenty members attended. In two

weeks, Mrs. Morrell entertains the

social. There were guests present to fill seven tables Friday afternoon when a card party was given in the Eagles' Hall. The South Side section of the Woman's Character Builders class of the Central Christian church will meet Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Denny, 300 South Twelfth street. Brown-eyed susans and goldenrod were used in appointing the table last evening when a dinner was given at the Arlington by members of the A. N. C. club for Miss Rose Ferling. The place cards were handpalnted and were ornamented with miniature brown-eyed susans. After dinner the guests went to the home of Miss Mary Bulla where the evening was spent socially. Miss Fannie Horrell presented a number of her pupils in elocution in recital this afternoon at 3 o'clock at the High school auditorium in the presence of a number of guests. The program was as follows: fa) "Her Reasons"

'Kittens and Babies" Miss Helen Wetherel 'A Little Girl and A Kitten" 'He Said An Awful Thing" Miss Thelma Boswell

Musical Monologue "Bed Fellows Miss Dorothy Lebo. accompanied by Juanlta Wlckett (a) "The Night Wind" (b) "Jane Jones" Eldon Wilson A Story Master Allen D. Hole, Jr. (a) "Our Hired Girl" (b) "The Fourt Leaf Clover" Miss Bernlce Burnett fa) "The Raggedy Man" (b) "The Boy That Lives on Our Farm" , Master Richard Crawford Monologue "A Telephone Romance" Miss Charlotte Rogers (a) "The Secret" (b) "Baby Brother" Miss Mary Wilson Grandma's House is the House Master Allen D. Hole Jr. (a) "The Three Monkeys" (b) Barbara's Bad Dolls" Miss Dorothy Lebo Musical- Monologue "Two Dreams" Miss Charlotte Rogers, accompanied by Miss Juanlta Wickett. A number of friends gave Mrs. Chester Tellls, North Seventeenth street, a shower yesterday afternoon. The affair was in the nature of a surprise. The hostess received a number of pretty gifts. Delicious refreshments were served. Those invited were Mesdames William Beatley, Earl Pettibone, George Moelk, John Schroeder, Lewis Campbell, Paul Noss, Harry Crowe, Carl Smith, Earnest Goodwin, Samuel Ligon, Sheridan Inderstrodt, Will Henderson, George Maisch Clifford Cooper, . Dempsey Pierson, Mae Little and Louis Campbell. A meeting of the aid society of the First Presbyterian church, was held Friday afternoon at the church. Plans were made for a Christmas bazaar to be held the first week of December. A meeting of the Mary F. Thomas W. C. T. U. will be held Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the MorrissonReeves Library. At 1:30 o'clock the executive board meets to name superintendents. The Missionary society of the Reid Memorial U. P. church will be entertained Friday afternoon bv Mrs. George Ball, 128 South Fifteenth street. Members are asked to bring one or more guests. Mrs. J. C. Hill will be the guest of honor. Thirty-five couples attended the dance given last evening in the Eagles hall by members of the Good-Time dancing club. There was special music. Another dance will be given in two weeks. Mrs. Leslie Nelson of Richmond avenue, is entertaining Miss Marcella Kleuben of Redding, Ohio. Mrs. Nelson and Miss Kleuben were class mates at Notre Dame.

Get Rid of That Miserable Feeling There are few diseases that make one feel more miserable than a disorreder stomach. Mrs. A. Wingale, Gorham, N. Y., writes: "I began using Chamberlain's Tablets about five years ago. At that time I was having a great deal of trouble with my stomach. I suffered great distress due to indigestion and constipation. Nothing did me much good until I got Chamberlain's Tablets." Obtainable everywhere. Adv.

SCHOOL ELECTS STUDENT BOARD

Members of the Garfield school council were elected Friday morning. The new council members will meet the first of next week ' to organize. This body of students with faculty advisors controls the activities of the entire student body. The personnel of the new council

follows: Chester Arnold, Ralph Ap-

pleton, Kiefer Calkins, Elmer Clapp, Robert Graham, Elmer Eastln, Chas. Hyde, Paul Harmon, Roy Johnson,

Dudley Kemper, Homer Meyers, Low

ell Little, Richard Peed, Ernest Piatt, Lee Smith, Walter Schultz, Clarence Taylor, William Winchester, Annette

Barr, Helen Bentlage, Iris Cook, Sar

ah Deem, Martha Eggemeyer, Mary Fitzpatrick, Ruth Hasemeier, Conda Haworth, Lorraine Long, Mary Jones, Margaret McLeland, Elma Morford, Maud Reber, Osee Roco, Marie Schutte, Lucile Thuraan, Lois Ward, Lucile Weller.

REPORT GOOD CROP OF GLOVER SEEO

WEBSTER, Ind., Sept. 23. Miss Caroline Nicholson of Richmond, spent Tuesday with Miss Daisy Malory. .. .Several from here have been attending the Yearly Meeting at Richmond Miss Mabel Steddom spent Tuesday night with Miss Mary Myers ...Miss Louta Wiedick fell and broke her arm.... The quarantine for diphtheria was lifted from Mr. Charles Wiedick's family and the children entered school Wednesday. .Miss Mabel King of Richmond, visited school and at the home of Miss Juanita Hendershott Wednesday Mrs. Charles Hollingsworth visited her mother, Mrs. Jonathan Plankenhorn Tuesday. ....Mrs. Lucile Beeson spent Monday with Mrs. Grace Steddom The Clover Huller was in this vicinity last week and the farmers report a good yield of cloverseed. . . . .Mrs. Clinton Commons attended Yearly Meeting Monday and Tuesday.

APPOINTED REPORTER

Grant -Spears has been appointed student reporter for the Garfield junior high school. Grant's duties will consist of supplying the Palladium with a weekly budget of news from the Garfield building.

BOUNDLESS

Continued From Page One. son administration and answered a number of the criticisms directed against the administration by Mr. Hughes. The vice-president's entrance to the coliseum was the signal for a wonderful ovation. The crowd arose and cheered him for several minutes:

bands and drum corps contributed to

the din. County Chairman Lewis, acing as chairman of the meeting, tried in vain to restore ouiet: then Henrv

U. Johnson took charge of the situa

tion and was partly successful It was necessary for Mr. Marshall, however, to restore order out of chaos. Occupy,, Places on Stage Among those " occupying places on the stage were Rep. Gray, Judge Geo. Gray, Walter Chambers of New Castle, district chairman, Judge Douglas Morris of the state supreme court; State Treasurer George Bittler, Bowman Elder, president of the Indiana Democratic Club; Samuel Cox, president of the Rooster club, and Henry Farwig, chairman of the arrangements committee. Conspicuous in the audience were delegations representing the four railway trajnmen brotherhods. Vice-president Marshall made a strong bid for the former Progressive vote of Wayne county. He several times asserted that the Democratic party was the real progressive party of the nation and that it was entitled to the support of real progressives. He asserted that the Democratic party the past three and a half years had not only enacted the progressive legislation called for in its own platform but had also passed the important legislation called for by the Progressive platform of 1912. , Unite with Democrats . Mr. Marshall said the independent Republicans in congress had united with the Democrats in securing passage of such legislation as the child labor law, the currency reform bill, rural credits bill, agriculture extension bill, seamen's bill, parcel post extension bill and workmen's compensation bill. "But the election of Candidate Hughes will put the government under the control of the 'standpatters'," he declared, "for the rule of seniority in the Senate will confer the important chairmanships of Senate committees not on the LaFollettes, Kenyons, Cumminses and Clapps of the Senate, but upon such men as Boies Penrose of Pennsylvania, Reed Smoot of Utah, Warren of Wyoming and Lodge of Massachusetts." Penrose, the Vice-president . asserted, would be chairman of the powerful committee of finance, which would frame the next tariff law. . Lodge would head the committee on foreign relations, Warren that of appropriations, Smoot that of public lands and Clark of Wyoming that of judiciary. Sees Small Consolation "You Progressives who follow your old-time leaders into the Republican party will have to And consolation," he declared, "in the fact that Senator LaFollette will be chairman of the unimportant committee on the census and Senator Borah will be chairman of the committee on education. All the important committees through which the administration will have to legislate will be controlled by the very men you Progressives vehemently condemned in the last campaign." Law Not Real Issue. Mr. Marshall spoke at some length on the Adamson eight-hour law, which he classed as vitally important legislation. He sarcastically expressed his pity for the sixty Republicans in the house of representatives who had supported this bill because their party leader was now denouncing every one who had supported this measure. Vice President Marshall declared the eight-hour law was not the real issue of the campaign. He said the paramount issue was whether there should be a change in the policy of President Wilson which has kept this republic at peace, and prosperous, while two-thirds of the nations of the world were at each others throats. Mr. Marshall said that for three and

a half years fife had been, listsjling to the whinning, droning voices of Republican senators predicting calamity for the nation while the country was enjoying unprecedented prosperity. Predicts Safe Majority. He said ninety percent of the Indiana voters were Democrats at heart and were heart and soul for Wilson. How many would vote the Democratic ticket remained to be seen, he said, but added that, judging from his audience, there would be enough to make Indiana safely Democratic. ' The vice president said the American people were no longer divided between the two old political groups, the Republican and Democratic parties. An American of today, he said, was either a Democrat or an Aristocrat. The speaker said that those Progressives who were returning to the Republican ranks were those whchad shut their eyes and blindly followed the lead of Theodore RooseveltTheodore the Vain and Weathervane," he called him. '.'Real simonpure Progressives will be in the ranks of the progressive party of today, the Democratic party," 6aid .Mr. Marshall. Same Men in Saddle. He declared the Republican party was still dominated by the same group of reactionaries who were responsible for thee Progressive revolt four years ago. "These men believe that God makes some men out of a special kind of clay1 and gives to such the Divine right to rule," said the vice president "They are the Aristocrats. I don't know why God made an Aristocrat. I am not permitted to. understand the workings of the Divine Mind. Neither do I know why we have bedbugs." Mr. Marshall said he was not in Richmond pleading for Democratic votes. "Vote as you please, but if the Republicans win and give you their old brand of government please don't growl. You will be getting Just what you wanted." Would Divide Honors. The speaker said he did not know how the present Republican campaign would go down in history but he believed it would divide honors with the Banbury idiot who always scratched where it didn't itch. Referring to Justice Hughes, he

said: "Justice Hug&es is a ciean, aoiei

and conscientious American citizen. If you can get any more than this out of a Democrat you will have to choke it out of him." He said there had been complaint that Hughes was not showing his "old time form" in the present campaign. He said this was not Hughes' fault. "He is doing the best he can, but when he speaks he has to please both

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progressive and reactionary? and that is a hart trick to perform. ' "I have noticed that every time Mr. Hughes arises to speak he blushes for shame for his country. I don't. I glory in the achievements of my country." Referring to the civil service, issue, Mr. Marshall denied a Democratic violation of the merit system. "You can't pry these civil service men off their jobs, and that is a pity in many cases where real live men are needed. Answers Tariff Argument ' "The Republicans tell us that we must build high protective tariff walls around this country to keep out goods made by crinnles in EuroDe after the

close of the war. They also contend

for a general expansion of foreign trade. How do they expect to send goods to the places where the cripplemade goods are. manufactured and compete with them if they cannot compete here without a high protective tariff?" asked Mr. Marshall. "I know that up until the Underwood tariff was made in this country, all tariffs were made by those who were most benefited. The protection of dye stuffs went out of the Aldrlch tariff because New England woolen manufacturers wanted to buy cheap foreign dyes. Pays for Labor Cost "There are at present not six Important articles made in the United States on which the tariff is not high enough to pay all the expenses of labor and wear on machinery. I do not mean that It will pay for all highpriced dummy articles such as $75,000 vice-presidents of corporations. "One thing which makes me angry about my Job Is that I receive $12,000 a year for being vice-president of the United States while some vice-presidents of little old corporations receive $75,000 a year. "What part of the Democratic platform-do the Republicans object to? No Republican has yet made a threat to repeal one law which has been enacted by the Democrats. G. O. P. Makes Issues, "They seek to make issues. There are no real ones. They are trying to make the fight on the 'eight-hour' law. They will not declare that law unconstitutional nor will they repeal it if they are elected to power. I have been fo an eight hour day ever since 1899 when the Republicans en

acted a' law for Indiana setting the legal length of a work day at eight hours for all classes of workmen except those engaged in the pursuit of agricultural labors. "The Republicans cry thai the eight hour day question should have been arbitrated. Suppose your wife were sick and had to be operated on. Then suppose the doctors would get together and agree that no one would perform the operation for less than $5,000. The cry would come for arbitration. Would you let your wife die while the price was being agreed upon? "Before I will accept the eight-hour law as an issue, I want the candidate for v president, ; vice-president, and every candidate for congress on the Republican ticket to sign a statement that they will repeal the "Adamson 'Eight-Hour Law' if elected. "President Taft told the American people that Schedule K of the PayneAldrich law was an outrage on the public but the wool growers and wool manufacturers had congress .by the throat and congress had to pass it If the wool growers and wool manufacturers had congress by the throat why can't a few laboring men choke congress too? ( Wants Peace With Honor. "But the most vital interest of the American public is whether America can remain at peace with honor. The Republicans have complained of the

way our international " affairs hay been handled, but they don't say they would have handled them some other way. "Roosevelt says that if he had been president, Belgium would not have been invaded. I do not believe It And what would he have done about the Lusltania? Declared war on Germany? You couldn't get any more out of Germany than we got. "And Mexico! Everything Is all wrong down there always has been all wrong. But it was air wrong when we got it. But the Republicans will not tell what they would have done in Mexico. Somebody cried out in a Hughes meeting: 'Would you . have recognized that murderer, Huerta?' and Hughes whined: 'I didn't say that. I didn't say that "He probably would say it now since Taft has taken a stand on the Mexican question. He has never come out with his own views on any International question, even the Belgian question, and . when .Teddy Roosevelt did, Hughes wired at once: 'That's me. That's me.' Here's the difference. W'oodrow has led for us and we have gladly followed. He has blazed the way for every man to social justice. I happen to know that the common people do not want war with Mexico. American patriotism is common sense and common judgment as to the circumstances under which and when the American people are ready to go to war."

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