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a IRS IS LAGOR' VOTE WL SEND WISIN BAK TO WHITE HOUSE Federation’s Vice President Says President Will Get Union Men's Support. | Frank Morrison, Vice President of the American Fedoration of Labor, Was at the Hotel Continental yester- @ay for a few hours before starting out for Connecticut to make a final awing of that State for T at Wil. son. “There isn't the slightest my mind,” sald Mi. Morrison, “about the result of this election, The people of this country are going to send Mr, Wilson back to the White Houseby how big a plurality I leave the expert to figure out. Mr. Wilson is just as mire of re-election as he is of getting the largest part of the entire regis- tered votes of union men throughout the country. Everywhere labor lea ers bave held labor meetings the at- tendance has been large, and the re ports that come to headquarters of | labor committees in the various Stated doubt in 4 firm me in the publican Party Pennsylvan sil the right in| Wilnon, With the convict Jabor Question the decks are practically cleared of the bill of grievances drawn up by the A. F. of 1. in 1006, during | Mr. BR it's Admini on, and abe | , t me add just this—no | what may tb the oute snally 1 hay the hearty sup sort of rv of the hivor leaders ountry and that that number | ally on the stump for him.” | President John H. Walkers, ist and offictal of the rkers, organ in another mine ACHING TEETH = RELIEVED AT HOME Sloan's Liniment Robs Toothache of Its Terrors. Pain Vanishes ina Few Minutes No need to pace the floor all night | with the agony of a throobing tooth Sloan's Liniment will quickly relieve the pain and giv u rest. A single appl n and the pain vaually disappears. Sloan's Liniment gets right to the root of the trouble. Pike a warming bulm it relieves con- gestion, and ina few minutes toothache is reduced, To soothe the throb of # te pains with reuralgia Liviment externally, rheumatism, gout, lumbago, chilblains, sprains and neck can also be most effecti treated with Sloan's Liniment. € than musey plasters or poultices. | Sloan's Liniment at all drug stores iy 25¢e, 50c ard $1.00 bottles, sprains Your Garbage Can toilet bew!l, kitchen sink, ecru water, etc., this powerful disinf 1 deodorant wil! prevent fou! odors Apetioy disease germs. Use it daily ia your 0@, Atall grocers and druggiste--160.a cam, ORFEIT Grugeiet about tt. 1: \aimed from any good dru; THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OUTOBER 31, 1916. ‘ : POLITICAL, _ | | __POLITICAL. POLITICAL. _ POLITICAL. _ Poutica. _____| POLITICAL. | UU poniricat. Dieniticiellia vada usd meagiast Uaueedldtuucdinatindbactiaullet idee Manama onatnaiantinnteanetuoimmcina tuathoumettetaudttiion tition tt uieqseuenee eremerrsirt yemenrertare yeusmnoerne yveenneeeTTNjsmrTmNeUrTag” venvorvenrnne YemrepDUNNU YoryHeFTON/T¥C)00//ErFPEYT SeF-HTr/MH YMAMREUTIOPTYHEMNHERYUDE )OEULENEPRORE YOHNONEUTTVOTYYRRVYTNOURR YOzmRERRHONE erorts?9™1V€) SEOMQERELERE YYTHPEDOTTITY)wevernremAR parneuvonnErt YHOMNEVEN FEL PrP NLEABOPC povervmnapetPonmagevT: (Pt NRERNNEE DrerennErrG | Wilson’s Opinion of Labor ~ Before He Entered Politics New York City, June 16, 1000. Ron. Woodrow Wilson, = President Princeton University, . = ounoevon vervenerry \ Princeton, BE. J. ommberon, w. 4. Dear Sir: presepited labor hours of the day were over and the Im the New York Times of June 14, which purports to give ex tracts of your baconloureate eddress to the students of Prineetom Uni- versity, you are quoted as follows:—- June 18th, 1909, giasier could net venture, withqut ricking © strike, te do the werk himself and coull not order any of hie -~worknen “You know what the usual standard of the employe is in our day. It 18 to give es little os he mey for his weges. Labor is stenderdized by the trade unions, end this, is the standard to which it is'made to conform, No one is to do more then the average workmen oen do. In 6 hendiorafts no one is suffered to do more then the t skilful of his fellows cen do within the hours @lloted to @ dey’s lebor, and no one mey work out of hours et 61] or volunteer anything beyond the minimum.” to do it. J had in mind ecores of inetancee, in short, My gear Sire Your letter of June 16th contains @ very proper lying within my own experience and resting upon the testic 5 whose veracity I have every redscn to challenge. I quite agree that I ought not to make the etater nony Of friends im whee a F t fidence monte I did wake about the trades unions, unless I were RENO) AWE ereerees ee . I of eccurse could net, in the case of more than able to cite cases in verification of my etatenente. ene or tvo of these instance: ive legal proof of ay Now, your reported remarks strike me as being so extracrdie I, ef course, had no indivicual trades unions in nery--so different from whet I, es 6 member of orgenized lnvor, have ‘ a ASF to be the fectsa--thet I feel impelled to esk you if the foregoing mind which I can name by number, but I had in mind several poregroph is a correct report of whet you said. If you ere correctly quoted, I should like to have you give me your authority for your stetement thet in lebor unions “no one 18 suffered to do more than the svcrege workmen can 60.” Also give me the names of @ few trades or hendicrafts where “no one is" suffered to do more than the least exkilful of his fellows can ¢o within the hours alloted to a ¢ey’s lobor, and no one may work out of hours et ell or volunteer enything beyond the minimum.” AS @ matter of ccurse, © president of a umiversity of the reputes standing of Princeton would not moke statements in his bacoe- lJeureste edéress unless he knows, or et least fully believes, thet his statements are true. Therefore it ought not be a difficult matter for you to oblige me with the nemes of those labor unions whose laws, or even policies, bring sbout the results you specify. Amoiting your reply with lively interest, 7 om, ‘Yours vory truly, Labor’s Opinion of After He Retired From “HE WAS A GREAT GOVERNOR” * Now that Governor Hughes has retired from politics and ascended to a place on the highest judicial tribunal in the world, the fact can be acknowledged without hurting any- body's political corns, that be ways the greatest friend of labor laws that ever occupred the governor's chair at Alhany Dunrng his two terms he has signed 56 labor laws, including tions, but the evidences I have are entirely eufficient ih of the etatement I ende cases of buildings in New York City, for exarple, the trick to convince me of the general truth o e e Very truly youre, layere working on which spent about one third of the workirg day eitting around, smoking their pipes and cliatting, der cause they had laid the numter of bricke to which they were limited for the day by the union to which they belonged. I had dr. mind numerove experiences of my own in dealing with vorking men in Prir.ceton, where T once fcund i. impossible, te. Hagar R, Laverty. for, example, on a very cold evening to get @ broken window pane mended at the house of an invalid friend, because the Gere Evening Telegram, we ork City. Hughes Politics all of the others, have been enacted and signed during Governor Hughes's term of three years and nine months “With such a record of approval and sugges- tion of progressive legislation in the interest of humanity to his credit, it is easy to believe that human rights will have a steadfast and sympathetic upholder in the new Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. '* From the October, 1910, Issue of Legislative News, Published hy New York State Federation of Labor Labor’s Opinion of Hughes is Based on WHAT HE HAS DONE These Are Some of the Laws He Advocated and Signed While Governor of New York: among them the best labor laws ever enacted in this or any other state He also urged. the enactment of labor laws in his messages 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 legifature ‘Only 162 labor laws have been enacted in this state since its eréction in 1777—1n 133 vears Qne-thord of these, exceeding in quality TT A TT CT TT ET A. I TL NE A TL TT AT NN, Te A AT, MS "Samm 3 REHEAT ANS EL RE I TS SN NE NE ON TT LT CT TT a CT! LN eT a AS AN NN NEUEN NN MEN NT, Wainwright Commission of Inquiry. Limiting the hours of labor for signalmen Reconstructed the State Department of and railroad telegraphers. Labor Changed the penalties to make enforce- ment of labor laws easier. Automatic mutual agreement compensa- tion la’ ‘ i Placing young women from 18 to 21 years of age in the protected class. ELEVEN CHILD LABOR LAWS extend- ing over a period from 1907 to 1910. Automatic compulsory compensation. (The first law of this kind enacted in the United States.) Limiting the hours of labor for street car men. - Requiring semi-monthly payment of "wages. THIRTEEN LAWS relating to welfare, safety and sanitation in workshops. (These laws secured the first definite standard for the protection of children in New York.) Limiting the hours of labor for men in train service. ct Yona Maem Na SMT SEMI SAMENESS Smee Sa ME DH TH Republican National Publicity Committee aT UM hain mun ug Sun Sot eA SOM SS 3 NN 9 Ry NE MQ EH HONEY] ME DHE YORE DUE SOME 0 06 HUN RHEE MRE AREA MU MMMM NE SN DA 2 MH DN ANCA MAE RE MC MN NN Nw NH A Do a