Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 292, 25 October 1916 — Page 10
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY. OCT, 25, 1916
PAGE TEN Quelling An Athens Mob SKULL FRACTURED WOMAN CHAMPION concedes that the Canadians skate with remarkable skill, but she main, tains that nevertheless the 8wedes are even more accomplished on the ice, and asserts that she will Instruct us In certain new steps known only on the Scandinavian Peninsula. Miss Johannsenn earned-the title of Sweden's most expert woman skater at the Stadium at Stockholm. married in Eaton in June, 1901, and separated In February, 1902. TEACHES SKATING IN FALL OF WAGON IF YOU HAD A UECK EATON, O., Oct. 25. W. E. Trefflnger, 59, well-known farmer, living near New Hope, is lying in Reid Memorial hospital, Richmond, Ind., in a serious condition as the result of a fall he suffered Tuesday at the home of Harry S. King, a neighbor. His skull was fractured at the base of the brain when he fell backwards out of a wagon, from which he was unloading corn. He struck his head upon a cement driveway. The injured man was hurried to Richmond. A3 LONG AS TKI8 FELLOW. AND HAD S SHE THROAT SEEKS MAIDEN NAME EATON, O., Oct 25 Divorce and restoration of her maiden name, Brandenburg, are sought In a suit instituted In common pleas court by Bettie Smith against Joseph Smith. Wilful absence and gross neglect are charged. They are childless. They TC'iS 1 LIIJE W2'JL8 Q'J'CHIT RELIEVE IT. 25c an! SC;. Hoioitat Size. U -tc OHucaisr.'cs. Fountain City News By Zella Lacey.
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An anti-Ally mob being quelled by the Athens police Is shown in the picture, the first to be received in this country showing the disorder which has existed In the Grecian capital since the establishment of a Provisional government by Premier Venozelos. Since the photograph was taken the city has been patrolled by French marines and the police force put under the command of Admiral du Fournet, commander of the French fleet, practically making the French naval officer a Dictator.
Philomath Events
By Gertrude McGashlanc!.
Mr. and Mrs. John Clevenger and family were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter McCashland at Pea Ridge ....Mr. and Mrs. Earl Doddridge and daughter Doris, and Mrs. Sam. Fisher, attended the Centennial at Richmond "Wednesday, and took supper with Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Mauley. . .Mr. and Mrs. 1'lunkenhorn and son Orville, were Richmond shoppers Saturday Mr. F. P. Dye of Brownsville, made a business trip to John Leistner's Monday.
HOLD PRAYER SERVICE
WEBSTER, led., Oct 25. Prayer meeting will be held Wednesday evening, Oct. 25, at 7:30 p. m., by Rev. Ulmer at the Methodist church. Every one Invited to attend. Home-Coming will be held Sunday, Oct. 29, at the Methodist church.
h AMUSEMENTS AT
LOCAL HOUSES
:t watch him
AGAINST HARVARD
1
A portrait of Norma Talmadge, used as a property in "The Devil's Needle," at the Murrette tonight, the new Triangle play in which she is presented as a co-star with Tully Marshall, was painted by Miss Talmadge herself, looking in a mirror. She has been taking art lessons for a long time; and her friends have mmy specimens of her ability in this direction. MURRETTE Of course you like good motion picture drama everyone does. The only trouble is that one may be "stung" occasionally and be compelled to sit through a long succession of scenes which carry no story. If you will view "The Country that God Forgot," a Selig Red Seal play in five thrilling reels to be presented at the Murrette theatre on Thursday and Friday, you will see what the critics pronounce one of the best photoplays of the year.
Tom Santschi enacts the leading role In this drama of the western desert, written and produced by Marshall Neilan. Supporting Mr. Santschi are euch sterling players as Mary Charleson, George Fawcett and Victoria Forde.
GEORGE SWOPE NAMED
EATON, O., Oct. 25. George P. Swope has been appointed postmaster at West Elkton, to succeed J. C. Rob
erts. Swope expects to take charge
of the affairs of the office at an early
date. He is an ex-county sealer of
weights and measures.
BEGIN COURT HOUSE
EATON, 0., Oct. 25. Excavation for
the new court house has been com pleted and work of building the con
crete foundation will begin at an early date. The building site will be fenced in with a tall fence while the building
is being erected.
UNDERGOES OPERATION
ECONOMY, Ind., Oct. 25. John Paul Salisbury went to Indianapolis
Monday morning, where he underwent
an operation for chronic appendicitis at the Methodist hospital. Mr. Salisbury was resting fine Tuesday.
A full-grown pounds of ivory.
elephant yields 120
Secret of
A Beautiful Complexion ROSE ATED CREAK (Tokalon Brand) oct in three night Neref fails The lecret of the beautiful complexions of hundreds of famous actresses. Sold by
All leading droj aid department stores
Mr. M. C. Harrison has been spending the week with his daughter, Mrs. Clayton Dougherty, Cambridge City . . . .Miss Reba Lewis, Richmond, spent Saturday night with Miss Clementine Overman Miss Zella Lacey is making a short stay with her brother Forrest Lacey and family before leaving for Fort Collins, Colorado.
MARKER DIVORCE GRANTED
EATON, O., Oct. 25 Divorce was granted Erma Marker from Raymond Marker by common pleas court and she was restored to her maiden name, Weave. Gross neglect was charged.
MRS. FARMER FALLS
ECONOMY, Ind., Oct. 25 Mrs. Martha Farmer, 68, fell recently and broke her left hip bone, which is causing her great suffering.
Miss Marta Johannsenn,, Sweden's champion woman ckater, who has appeared by royal command before the King and Queen of England, is in New York today for the avowed purpose of teaching Americans to ice skate as the Scandinavians do.- Miss Johannsenn
Worth Careful Thought Do you read the label to know whether your baking powder is made from cream of tartar or, on the other hand, from alum or phosphate ? Royal Baking Powder is made from cream of tartar, derived from grapes, and adds to the food only wholesome qualities. Other baking powders contain alum or phosphate, both of mineral origin, and used as substitutes for cream of tartar because of their cheapness. Never sacrifice quality and healthfulness for low price. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. New York
Morning After
Whether your duties are social or onlv
domestic whether your strength is taxed
with receptions, theatres, and midnight sutv
pers, or with the dreary round of housework how like the elixer of life is a brimminc
of hot coffee in the morning how soothingly it chases the weariness of yesterday- stirring your vitality speeding your blood with a swifter rhythm--preparing you for the day's work good for you.
To get this elixer of happiness at its best,
Duy the best insist upon getting
Heekin's Coffee
Your grocer has it.
The James Heeldn Co.
Cincinnati
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Room 2, 1. O. O. F. Bldg. PHONE 1330
BENEDICT. The Cornell football team this year v.ll have no Barret to charge the Har vcrd tine on Octobsf 28, but 6hc will fiV9 a Cfl edict and a 6hiver1ck, who piey turn out to be ac effective scoring Mc,Tiie as was the great Charlie Brrret, BcMd'.ci Is playing at Half back and has shewn great line plunging and runpit fl ebility,
Aa American has obtained a Cuban paim; for a machine that cultivates Broking sugar can, work that heretofors !:a3 had to be don by hand.
1)0 YOU BELIEVE YOUR NEIGHBORS? It is what your neighbors nay about Vitalis thut counts mont, '"It is what my nolchbora nay that
count most," RfUd a prominent busi-1
liens man rocontly In rocard to Vitalia, tlio remarkable tonic that has taken 1ho country by ptorm, Vltalls neoula but a small start in nny city to makn It a lnrga poller, One "oottlfl In sold by advertising, but tea bottles are sold by mouth-to-mouth ad vertislng. If you fire sick, yon will tell your neighbors, but If you aro cured, and made a new man or woman, you will be more than dad to tell of the medicine that did the work. The best friends of Vltalls are lliose who have been Pick and have been cured by this wonderful medicine. If your stomach is out of order, Jf you wake In the mornlnp without fei'linR refreshed, have foul breat'i. ruffer from nervousness, you are no, pttintr sll that you should out of Ufa, Hp fair to yourself try Vltnlls. After von have trtod Vltalls, vou will be fair to vour ne'ehors snd tell thefn fbont, this remarkable and reconstructive tnnfe. ViMlis tq heirs: esner'al'v IntroI'oril fvMpiV)d at Qulglev Tiws ,0(i Vsi?n St. Adv
WDdd Ds the REAL Frlemi
cS of Labwlingiies
"I Am a Fierce Partisan of the Open Shop" WOOD
S
Extract from letter of Dr. Woodrow Wilson, January 12, 1909, in reply to an invitation to speak at a banquet of antistrike and anti-boycott advocates.
"I am a fierce partisan of the open shop and of everything that makes for individual liberty, and I should like to contribute anything that might be possible for me to contribute to the clarification of thinking and the formation of right purposes in matters of this kind." WOODROW WILSON.
Woodrow Wilson Says: "Labor is a Formidable Enemy to the Country"
Extract from address by Dr. Woodrow Wilson at a dinner at Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, New York, March 10, 1907.
"We speak too exclusively of the capitalistic class. There b asother, as formidable an enemy to equality and betterment of opportunity as it is,' and that id t!sc class formed by the labor organizations and leaders of the country." WOODROW WILSOU.
Woodrow Wilson Says: "The American Laborer is An Unprofitable Servant"
Extract from Baccalaureate Address of President Woodrow Wilson before the graduating class of Princeton University in 1909.
"You know what the usual standard of the employee is in our day. It is to give as HttJt as he may for his wages. Labor is standardized by the trades-unions, and this is the standard to which it is made to conform. No one is suffered to do more than the average workman can do; in some trades and handicrafts no one is suffered to do more than the least skillful of his fellows can do within the hours allotted to a day's labor, and no one may work out of hours at all or volunteer anything beyond the minimum. "I need not point out how economically-disastrous such a regulation of labor is. It is so unprofitable to the employer that in some trades it will presently not be worth his while to attempt anything at all. He had better stop altogether than operate at an inevitable and in--ariable loss. The labor of America is rapidly becoming unprofitable under its present regulation by those who have determined to reduce it to a minimum. "Our economic supremacy may be lost because the country growa more and more full of unprofitable servants." WOODROW WILSON.
Woodrow Wilson's Erroneous Presentation of the Adamson Labor Law
The Adamson Labor Law, Passed September, 1916.
President Wilson says he approves of an 8-hour law. If this is his belief, then for heaven's sake why didn't he pass such a law, because, although he and the Democratic Party call the Adamson Law an 8-hour law, it is not an 8-hour law at all and has absolutely nothing to do with hours of work. It merely fixes labor's compensation on the basis of an 8-hour standard, the same as a yard-stick fixes 36 inches to the yard, but if you buy a yard and a quarter you pay for yard and a quarter and under the Adamson Law you can work 10 hours, 16 hours or even 24 hours there is absolutely no limit as to time of labor under this law. Besides it only raises the wages of 20 of the highest paid labor on steam railroads. It does not affect the wages of the other 80 of those employed on railroads nor of the great mass of other American workmen. This Adamson Law i3 called by President Wilson and the Democratic Party an 8-hour law merely to catch votes, but the American workman is too intelligent to be flimflamrned by any such deception. .. President Wilson and the Present Democratic Party are the Greatest Foes to Labor that have ever graced our Executive and Legislative Chambers.
Governor Hughes, by His Record, When Not Seeking Office at Ail, Has Proven Himself the Greatest Friend Labor Ever Had. The Legislative "Labor New" of New York, October 10, 1910, had the following: "Now that Governor Hughes has retired from polltics and ascended to a place on the highest judicial tribunal in the world, the fact can be acknowledged without hurting anybody's political corns, that he wa the greatest friend of labor laws that ever occupied the Governor's Chair at Albany. During his two terms he haa signed 56 labor laws, including among them the best labor laws ever enacted in this or any other state. He also urged the enactment of labor laws in. his message to the legislature, even going so far as to place the demand for a labor law In one of his messages to an extra session of the legislature. "Only 162 labor laws have been enacted in this State (Xe-T York) since Its erection in 1777 in 133 yeare one third o these, exceeding in quality all of the others, have been enacted. and signed during Governor's Hughes's term of 3 years an$ 9 months. "With such record ef approval and suggestion of progressive leglsfatlon in the interest of humanity to his credit it Is easy to beHevo that human rights will have a steadfast and sympathetic upholder In the new Justice of the Supreme Court of the iM'ied States." The following Is Governor KagSeste record for the benefit of labor not told by himself, bat 9f tha "Labor News" viz:
New York State passed 162 lan-B for the benefit of labor In 133 years, 56 of same, or one-third of all labor laws passed In said period of 133 years were passed and signed by Governor Hughes during hia term of 3 years and 9 months as Governor of New York State. There Is no record of any Governor in the United, States that can match Governor Hughes's record la favor of labor. Woodrow Wilson was Governor of New Jersey for three years. Have the laboring people ever heard of any law which he passed in their favor during his entire term as Governor of the State of New Jersey T
If Governor Hughes was such a friend of labor when not seeking votes and Woodrow Wilson was such an enemy to labor .(as Illustrated opposite) when not seeking rotes, In your Judgment, who do you think will be labor'a best frien4 when President of the United States?
We Leave It to Your Judgment on the Above Record to Decide, Who Is the REAL Friend of Labor?
REPUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE.
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