The evening world. Newspaper, June 17, 1908, Page 3

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TME EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17. © SAVAIGNT OY HARRIS Ye EWING 1908. Secretary Taft, the Candidate, Talking Over the ‘Phone With President Roosevelt--- Snapshots by Hallie Erminie Rives, the Novelist, Especially for the New York Evening World TAKEN IN THE SECRETARY’S HOME, IN WASHINGTON, ON FRIDAY LAST. INFERS Defiant as He Pres man’s Plank for SS —— Talks Out to (By Assoctated Press.) | CHICAGO, June 17,—When the subd- @ommittee of thirteen of the Resolu- @ons Committee began business at 10 @eclock to-day the doors ‘of their as- @embly rooms were thrown open tem- @erarily for the purpose of granting twenty-minute hearing to represen- fatives of the American Federation of Zador, and to those of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association. President Samuel Gompers and Vice- Presidents Keefe and Duncan appeared for the Federation, and at the be- @inning of the hearing Mr. Gompers @uggested the following as a plank fm tne platform, saying that it con- @ained the embodiment of the Feder- Btion's view! Labor's Injunction Plank. ‘The Republican party !s In accord with the great emancipator, Abraham Lincoin, when he declares that ‘Labor ts prior to and independent of capital Capital is only the fruit of labor anc @ould never have existed if labor ha: not first existed. Labor is the superio: of capital and deserves much more con- | q@ideration.’ Through his wise and hu- mane policy the shackles were stricken | from the limbs of four milllons chattel i @aves. “The Republican party ha. staunch defender of property and prop- | erty rights. yet holds and declares that personal rights asd human liberty are and must of necessity be entitled to the first and highest consideration. Recognizing the new conditions artsing | been the | from our marvellous industrial devel- | opment, our people and our nation; realize the fact that the wheels of in- | dustry and commerce of our time re- | quire that new law and new concepts of law must be enacted to conform to modern industry and commerce and advance freedom in line therewith “We therefore pledge the Republican | warty to the enactment of a law by Congress. guarantecing to the wage- earnes, agriculturists and horticultur- tsts of our country the right of organ- ized effort to the end that such ass clations or its members shall not be @arded as illegal combinations in re- straint of trade. Trial by Jury. “We pledg> ourselves to the enact- meut of a law to prohibic tne ‘ssuance of injunctions in cases urising out of labor disputes, when such injunctions ‘would not apply when no labor disputes existed; and, that in no case shall an fnjunction be iseued when there oxists @ remedy by the ordinary process of law; and which act shail provide that in the procedure for the punishment of contempt of court the party cited for | contempt shall when such contempt Was not committed in the actual pres- | encé of the court be entitled to a trial dy jury. “We pledge the Republican party to the enactment of an amendment extend- ing the existing eight-hour law to all Government employees and to all work- ers, whether employed by contractors gt sub-contractors, doing work tor or on behalf of the Federal Government, “We pledge the Republican party to the enactment of a law by Congress, as tar as the Federal jurisdiction extends, for a general employer's liability act, for tpjury to body or loss of life of em- ployees. “Wp pledge the Republican party to \ ne DECLARES LABOR MUST HAVE ITS FULL RIGHTS Platform— Federation Chief ‘We are not Anarchists or destroyers of pror je continued. "I do not believe in existence in this country @ force and power that Is such @ conservator of peace as the American | jlabor movement. But you might. just as well destroy the organizations of |you will have to deal with th WARNING ents the Working. the Repubiican Committee. the enacuuent of @ law to the extent of Pederas jursuicuun yiauung wolMen 6 Sulrage Mud to suoaut a cousucduomal | amenamenc tor ratucauion to the Sues for tie wosulute suitrage of women co- equal with men. For Uspartment of Labor. “We pieuge Lie Kepeuican party the eudcuncut or a iw creaung @ Di partivent 01 Leovr, seyarave irom wu exisiing deparument, W.th @ secretary at its head oavang & seat in the Presi- dents Cainet. d please the Republican the enactment of a iaw to ty to for the crea- tion of a Federal bureau of mines and that, with the Presidency disposed of, | mining, preferably under the proposed Department of Labor, and the a, priation of sufficient funds to thors oughly igate the causo of mine disasters, so that laws and regulativis may be recommended and enacted which will prevent the terrible maimii lous of life In the mines, Gn “We pledge the Republican party to the enactment of a law the estab- lishment of United States Government postal savings bank: Gompers Gives Warning. Mr. Gompers followed the reading of the planks he presented with an argu- ment, which was extended from ume. to ume’ by the committee, ten and five ninutes at a time, unui half an hour d been umed. He described the labor movement, its high {deals and the pairiotism and American spirit possessed by members of lab r organi- ions. © do not want to eat an employer des- but as an appetizer for breakfast for dinner,” he ejac fair treatment go.ng to have it or as labor a8 to prevent their normal activ- itles. “Task you to compare the influences which this movement is exerting In the United States with the revolutionary movements that going on in foreign countries, “if you outlaw oar movement and make it the 4 impossible, and de- stroy ventive for men to belong to labor organisations you will find the expression of dixcon- tent take some other form a Challenges Emery. A somewhat lively colloquy res when Mr. pers took up the re He disputed the si | erday to the full com- presenting the urers Asso lation, to teen ‘Injunctiong on federal record for’ fife re charged hin to be w this Mr. renu- Gomp- ers had concluded he was xiven an op- portunity to be heard again. He sald in his previous statement he had taken the record furnished Con- gress by Mr. Gompers. His own figures were, ho sald, twenty Injunctions in labor disputes in five vears, Mr, Emery took occasion to repeat his points of yesterday. Mr. Van Cleave. who heads the Man- ufacturers’ Asociation, and Mr. Smith, of the Illinois Association, wero dott given a word In conclusion 'n opposition to the Injunction plank, Both called at- tention fo previous failures of labor to accomplish results on election day and urged the committee to look at the question without fear, Governor Fort At the commencement Seton Hall College, South Orange (N J.), to-day the degree of Doctor of Laws Wa's conferred upon Gov. John Franklin Fort. Instead of being’ present to-day to receive the degree the Governor ad- dveaged the students, ¢ the college, on Decoration Day. He is now attending the Republican Convenption at ‘Gaius Go! errs nly objected, and when Mr. Honored. exercises at cM MAE A BAL TO AT FARBINKS Declare the Vice-President Will Not Take Renomination . and So Push Iowa Man. THEY MEET OPPOSITION. Indiana Forces Say With the Presidency Settled Situa- tion Will Be Open. (By Associated Press.) CHICAGO, June Fairbanks. Such the Cummins men were deciar- ing to-@ay, and they were adding that Fairbanks would not take the nomina- 17.—Cummins or tion !f téndered, and that if he would take It the Administration would not accent him. The supporters of the Vice-President did not for a moment accept this anal- ysts of the situation, but contended the supporters of the successfil cand!- date will be only too glad to welcome the renomination of the Vice-President, They also urge that under such pres- | sure as ie likely to be brought to bear| on him, Mr. Fairbanks will not be able to refuse to permit the use of his name, The Iowa supporters of Cummins are inereasing {n numbers, and they began the day with an earnest effert to ob- tain the support of the full delegation for their man. At 11 o'clock some of them were still firm in their opposition, but the Cummins people were not with out hope of success. Senator Borah, who started the Cum- mins boom, took nate of the Iowa move- ment and said that the outsiders who favored Goy. Cummins would now walt upon the Governor's own State Prores Mterature for a minut thought’ ellow Hughes was . DOWE: NOW DO FLIP~FLAPS! _PLAYEO WITH LoTS OF 'Em WHEN I WAS ON THE Bench! TO MONKE | CAN GOMPERS GET BUT You WERE ‘A TUOGE THEN!> LABOR INJUNCTIONS, ARE BAD THINGS FOR CANDIDATES INJUNCTION RESTRAINING THINGS ARB DIFFERENT NOW! 100 VOTES Oa HUGHES ON THE [AST BALLOT That Will Be All, for Angry Delegates Will Be Released From __ Instructions. CHICAGO, June 17,—Gov. Hughes's declination to withdraw from the Pres!- dential race will probably cause a split in the vote of the New York «elegation. The delegation has @ voting strength undivided of seventy-eight, but eighteen of these are declared to-day by leaders to Le opposed to New York's Governor, despite the pledges made early in the Presidential candidacy of Gov. Hughes, ‘The sixty remaining ballots remain in- tact for the Governor, and will be cast, It ts stated, for him on the first ballot The eighteen anti-Hughes votes will be divided between Secretary Taft and Speaker Cannon, Although the Now York delegation ts to be divided, friends of Gov. Hugh add that forty votes from other dele- gations have been corralled for him, #0 {hat the firet balloting will witness the casting of 100 votes for the Governog of the Empire State for the frat place on the ticket. Banner to Stir Things. To stimulate the delegates and in an Le rested to start a real live Hughes boom, the Governor's friends and man- agers here have decided to carry a Hughes banner into the convention hall at to-day's session, The banner will be an elaborate one In blue and gold, emblazoned with inacriptions, the solors of the Empire State predominat- ing. But insistence fur mented upon by many TIghes is com- Lepublicans as being prejudicial to New York's in- tere in that, {f Goy, Hughes would withdraw, New York would have a finc chance to get the Vice-Presidency. His failure to withdraw when It {8 accepted that he has no chance of being nomi- nated leaves the New Yorkers here up a ree, and the delegates declare the del gation will c~~ py a most humble posl- | tion at the convention, To-day many of m are walking about the corri- dors 0: the hotels wearing Taft buttons, having discarded the Hughes embiem, amc the New York uelegation Lou | . Payn, of Columbia, is openty op. red tu Gov. . ugh Payn Ie Very Frank. He told sus constiiuedis tna he would er vole for Hugaes. “Waen yuu Ware a tage-driver sane & Man ALO UNdernsuus 20 auld Payn. “When you Weol @ caudi- wie you WAHL wo man Waln poicai ahowleage. Hughes ib & woud Curie oon Tan Bnd Keeps a8 WOFd, UL Ne knowe 0 mare woout men or wan he diag when he w old, it perchance he should pe renom!- | ated for Governor what 1 @ will run 10,00 behind the Gcker wii o@ Named nere, and the Ueket me v6 lost so far a8 Lhe Siaco is concerned, There never Was & ine in the histury of the Republican party when New York cut so little a figure ap It doce now. It 0 small you can't see it. When you" flad tirrown with i of refora mean no di ot to Gov. Hugnes—you will find they deal under dle. 1 be- In aying the p ‘1 game in ‘open. To-day State Chairman Woodruff, Herber rsons, Willum Barnes, Will im L. Ward and three or four oth uential members of the New York gation had a conference at the Shore Country Club, and tried to fixure| one of the. prin jenoosing a Herbert Parsons could not see it that { al, of these y agile pollticlans, evise any plan by wh! present a candidate for Pre: tce-Presl. | | dent at the same time, W. on Its c sisted ing, him b self, there would be Vice-Presi¢ not wa: “AWAY WITH IT? | Writers admit hey couid do| since andidate upport- Thouga oodrult wanted to call a caucus and | Parsons's instructions are a ecullarly bind.ne brani, devised by him at ¢ ‘fovaltv" to the Governor. tlons are so tight that onlv Gov can release him. Parsons | men In Chicago over Hugh was settled by ‘ ANY, No dey June IT—ine den City ity or and hls 3 1 is and of W + W wdk heiders. out some way of straigheening the tan-| wnat ‘they were trying te do was te » tifloate snowing an increase Btook from $800,000 to $1,000,000, h Relght of the Hughes boom to show his His instruc- | DELEGATIONS FROM TERRITORIES WILL | NOT BE CUT DOWN. one of the uation, and he and his friende are say- ine things about the Governor that wouldn't look well {n print = CHICAGO, June 17.-The decision was reached by the Committee on Rules and Order or Business that there should bo no ohange in the representation from the ‘Territories, Alaska, the Dis- triet of Columbia and the Insular pos- sursions. An ifort to reduce the num- | ber of delegates from New Mextoo, Art. | zono and Hawai from six to two failed | by a deols! Hach will be en- | Utled to two daleyates each, ax ho tofore. | ‘The question of what method should bo pur in olecting the dolegater iving authority to the National Committee to determine In |each case whether the elections shall be by primaries or by conventions. —_—_—» COMPANY INCREASES CAPITAL.} State a cer. | of oapital | Mixed Drinks Not Popular---How Vir- :: NS MIN Funny Things Said and Done by the Politicians — That Keep Them Cheertul Under Big Steam Roller + ginia Got In,Wrong on Hughes--- | All Kinds of Weather but Snow. tstrtcoremensent) “There are more at the convention you see at a political The Chicago women are | more enterprising than their Eastern | sisters, They overrun the State hea2- | quarters in the hotels, grab all the badges in sight, and do not resent tne | polite overtures of a lonely Harterner. They are almost as well dress*d #s the New York women with a family tree | of record. But even the local hion they dv aot know how te wear their clothes as well, | OD | HOW HAMMOND, THE | CANDIDATE, 18 FOUND. John Henry Hammond, the Repubil ean leader of the Twenty-ninth Assem bly District In New York, has been com. ing in for a lot of attention since he has been at the Auditorium, very few minutes a boy dashes madly throug! the corridors or bar sbrieking, “Mr. J if Hammond." The New York Ham. mond responds. When he opens the en velope he finds that It is John Hay» | Hammond, mining engineer, African ad venturer and candidate for the Vice- Presidency, who is wanted. The New York Hammond received a telegram which had heen sent from a local tele- raph office to-day. It read: “Will you take the Vice-Presidency? The State of New York will stand by you.” ‘Here, boy,” said the New York Ham mond, “take this telegram and follow |the colored delegates looking for ci | gars. The man it's for ts buying them I am not.” | Om | CONVENTION HALL NOT CHICAGO'S ONLY CHILL. (Special from Our CHICAGO, June 1 than a women | would | in the East. A lot of men who attended the session of Mr. Roosevelt's little conven: |tlon took their overcoats along. Chi- cago, which is fickle in all things, has |been ladiing out all kinds of weather the Easterners arrived. ‘Me only hing lef! oat was snow. To-day windy city turned out a fine line of autumn weather. It was cold enough for overcoats and ear muffs; that |» probably the reason why the hotels Joquipped their beds with the sort of covering thev give you at Manhattan Beach on Labor Day, one sheet and a thin spread. O-~ BARKERS SUGGESTED TQ GIVE LIFE TO BOOMS. Barkers will probably be employed goon to call attention to the various booms. “Uncle Joe Cannon has a glee to alng afternoon club under contract and evening in his day the Fairbanks boomers. yuidone, einployed a woman harpist and @ soprano aolvist to keep a crowd the imilana man headquarters. 1 e will naturally pllow the barkers One MIXED DRINKS ARE NOT POPULAR THERE. The only thing Chicago has not in- vented to get the money Is a convention drink, The range of flulda passed over the bars at the big hoteis is moat cath- olfo in ita ecope. The fevorite drink ls whiekey—straight, place and w snow in Buurvun whissey if the moat popular, take . bear a c.0ve third ana y at the tail of the Ii iurte ders do not mant when a mixed drink 4 for. ‘They wait on the straight-goc fellows and leave a man who calls & cocktail until the last. ‘There is tory of a mun Who auked yas rk lemonade The barton him the Ingredients an¢ vited him to make tt himeelf, sOe BLIND BOSS OF “LITTLE RHODY” AT CONVENTION. Chicago Interest One of tallest delegates tn oynvent Brayton, the diln bows of nd. He ie thre: nohes and h thin, nh utteation myention hail through the corridors of the hotels his attendant. The Rhode Island bows, who was invited by Gov. Higgins to make his headquarters outside <* the enu ated © ts re pilote ndlage |State House, at Providence, takes a keen interest 1s national politics and 1s | |Much sought after for his Knowle ige of | | Political conditions in New England, T have attended every convention of | |the Republican party since 1868,” said \s ton to-day, “and Tt never ° like this before. Feally nothing for a delegate to dost] like the old kind best.” Om HER “SHEATH” GOWN ONLY AN IMITATION. The convention was fired by many ru- mors yesterday. None created so great a sensation as the report that Mrs. Nicho- as Longworth (neo Roosevelt) was uring a@ “sheath gown.’ When the sident’s daughter started to leave the convention hail a lot of women surrounded the exit from which she was to pass. ‘Ther commenta were in- structive and frequently too frank. . that’s not a ‘sheath gown,’ large, fleshy woman who ‘in- uded herself upon the notice of Mrs. ongworth. “It's only one of them vitaton things that them Cincinnatl essmakers turn out. They were tl behind the times. One young woman with Western ideas t enterprise pushed her way up be. ween Mrs. Longworth and her hu: and and sought to discuss the ma! of sheath gowns with her. Mr. Long: worth politely but firmly res'eted her advances and escorted hie wife to the uutomobdile waiting for them. Oe ODELL’S PROXY, M’KNIGHT, | PUTS IN A BUSY DAY. Mr. J. Calvin McKnight. the chief utenant of ex-Gov. Odell, put in a busy day. He represented hia chief at convention by proxy, patched al rows between leaders of Ne: York factions, arranged the details of . harmony dinner at the Chicago Club ht, sod some Long Isiand reai » to Chicago investors and round- up business of various States jagainst the anu-injun plank, which President Roosevelt insists shall go into the platform. He incidentally became stodian of a score of bets on the i psidency nd was invited to wrestling match between two. shts last night. Ove THE QUIET MAN WHO Is FEARED BY ADMINISTRATION. Senator Murray Crane, setts, who is one of the of Massachu- most retiring men of importance, Is @ tall, thin man with small, round head and appare.tly very nervous. That his looks are di d by the fact that he after than any other hicago. As the leader of the the anti-injunction pia k nthe storm centre of agi er it, He ts one of tho best 1. fv public ify, oul would not agsed as 4 fluent Oratur, usualy co.- imeelf to @ short and uirect an- ber, atid Keneally Of a Non-couunteal Character, He {8 the one man taking a prom ine t part in the convention whom | tion « tene the admin’stratton forces are afiald of, becuuse of Hix resourcefulness and abil: Ity aa an organizer and executioner, Orn HOW VIRGINIA “GOT | IN WRONG” ON HUGHES. Above the door of the Hughes quarters In the Auditorium there | five foot portrait of the Governor of the Empire Btate Under It, in big jelectric letters appcara his name. A Virginia delegate wio studied tue sigt clowely last niki! entered tie voom and | accepied a handful of pamph ets hante out by Mr. Humphrey, the marage of the Hughes boom “Hell,” he eald, after studying the COERSEPRORERE 0 Taxameter ates Reduced | | For lowest rates and best service ‘phone 2380 COLUMBUS Write for the new ‘ariff card. NEW YORK TRANSPORTATION CO, 40th Street and 8th Avenue | quarters a lawye much fa we've been him thoug cure in th ow it turna e don't care very lawyers down our way.” “Om Ser rayne amis of Uni wie Here eae, ued for sleep. te othing will ha, policies while his two trusty said a New York delegate: | TWIN STAND-PATTERS | RIGHT ON THE JoB. { John Dalzell, twin stand-patters and trusty lieu- Joe nnon, never . Or ie Lew a They eat, drink and convention toget ppen to Uncle J boys are Ow | HAMMOND’'S CIGARS WIN. | THE COLORED BROTHER. The negro dele: haunting the Vice of wansterred Hays H man's headquarters ded out savors 1 rucnia, ure unmistakable their pntment. ' morning, | with a hay Franklin nond’s boom. wale the thirty-centers, the negro delegates puff with fine con- es who have been Presidential head Murphy have Ailections tO _ J: In the Jerse; brand of clea) the Hackei Hammond ¢ th HEMORRHOIDS SORESAND ECZEMA Accompanied by Terrible Itching— A Complicated and Most Distress»: ing Case—Well-known Remedies” Failed to Cure—Doctor Thought. an Operation Necessary—Then CUTICURA PROVED ITS WONDERFUL EFFICACY Se “T am now eighty years old and one two days I had three years ago, I was taken ird_pain in my right side. In an attack of piles (hemorrhoids), bleeding and protruding. The doctor gave me an ointment for the some but I had to the time. ould get. a hospital and be this time, about a using the S—— remedies, » some medicine and em which helped me keep using them all Then I changed to the P—— Fema but if I did not use it every yt we worse. The doctor 1 the only help for me was to go tq » operated on. At year ago, I went to T tried them for four or five months but did not get much help for. my time sores would ¢ of my body. the time, I would another would changed t a terrible Itching. could not keep my my flesh, brought on an Then I got the Cu They come eczema, piles, During this me on a fleshy part bothered me. all get one healed and sores accompanied b: It seemed as if hands from tearing This and the pile trouble condition, I nflamed ticura Remedies, washed the affected parts with Cuticura: S ap and warm water in the morning, at noon, and at night, then used Cuti+ cura Ointment on faces and injected cura Ointm pository Syringe. cura Resolvent Pills three t irritated nt the a qu sure took Cutie sa day. also It took a month of this treatment to (i me in a fairly hen I treated mysell hea state and if once a day for three months and, after that, once or twice a 2 ( N.Y. A fo External ren Olnunent. ie Rea ivent (80 c. her Vial week. It is fortunate that I used Cute cura, The treatments I had tried took a , lot of money that I would have saved by | using Cuticura Remedies sooner, but T am wiser now. [am supplied with a full set of the Cuticura Remedies and would not feel safe without them, J. H. Henderson, Hoplinton, St. Lew tor PhO) to Purit the Blood: ). Sard 65 2SMITH Sto! THREE; , MILLER.’ &SAT EVE'S ‘al f HACON ST; REO y of Cutis, nt with @ Cuticura Sup- |

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