The evening world. Newspaper, July 7, 1919, Page 13

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/ ‘ ude's confers lasting ben- . efit on jaded nerves and weak, tired bodies. Itisnomere temporary tonic, but one of lasting hos mnie y actually , Makes rich, red blood : Stomach Out Of Order? Try NR Nothing Better to Straighten You Out Tones Acts Guaranteed. , After Eating Too Much. Liver, Regutates Bowels, Pleasantly. Many people eat too much every day and mést eat much too much some days. That is why Americans suffer more than any people in the world from indigestio bdillouan and constipation. With a little thoughtfulness and care, jount of this distress however, a great could be avoided and ou’ never reali how true this is until you become one this jature’s on hand and use it whenever indigestion, of the several million people country who keep a box of ot t Remedy (NR Tablets) constantly billousness or constipation threatens, Unlike laxative purges, foree bowel action, entire digestive and elimina’ —=the stomach, liver, its purpose is to promo’ syste! That is the use of Nature's Remedy are a delightful surprise to those wi try it. The action, while thorough, is as mild and prompt entle ar ‘Mangan “The Red Blood Builder’® cathartics, such ag otl, calomel, etc., which merely Nature's Remedy exerts a beneticial influence upon the bowels and even harmonious action of all that handle the food and why the results which follow always ho fii ! | (Continued From Third Page.) sential that certain conditions and | principles should be clearly kept in mind and generally ‘abcepted. THINGS LABOR AND CAPITAL MUST CONSIDER JOINTLY. “If Justice was to be done and terms \of employment and conditions of labor equitable to the employer and em- ployee established, certain broad prin- ciples must be applied. In determin- ing what the wage rates were to be there were certain vital factors to be considered apart from the increased cost of living, The existing wage rate in an establishment should first be considered as to its equity: Was it established as a result of joint con- ference and agreement between the employer and his employees, or was it established as @ result of the em- ployer’s individual conception of what wages should be paid to those in his employ? | “To what degree did the previous wage rate compare with those in cs- tablishments in the same district ‘where wages had been established through joint agreement between the employer and the employee? “How did the wage rate adopted through joint agreement in the dis- trict compare with the wage rates in other districts where joint wage agreoments existed? “In the composition of boards or commissions which considered ques- tions of terms of employment and conditions of labor it was essential that there should be equality of rep- resentation between the employers and the wage earners. “The representatives of the wage earners were nominated by organized labor. The right to organize is esse':- tial to the solution of problems aris- ing between employer and emrployec. This last principle could not be too strongly emphasized. There could be no co-operation where organized cap- {tal dealt with unorganized labor, nor could there. be justice, lasting har- mony and democracy, Employers ap- ply this right, but in many instances it has been denied to employces by employers, “Tt was decided that all agreements formulated by wage boards or com~- missions should contain a claure de-| claring that the right to organize was inalienable and that prevention of the exercise of this right by the employer or his representative should constl- tute a violation of the agreements. “The nation’s interest made it easential that co-operation should exist in the industries, No efficient co-operation can exist except through organization, Co-operation presumes good will, and there can be no good will without recognition of mutual rights, Therefore, the recognition of the employees as a, group having common interests i# one of the funda- mental prerequisites to co-operation. ‘There can be no true, efficiency in nm, ne te id nd PRE-WAR CONDITIONS FOR LABOR wages, and & vance, very 600n and ‘up their mii increases willingly and sardly, grudging spirit. peace and rity of America, even the stability of our Government and our democratic institutions, hang in the balance, ORGANIZED LABOR AS THE SANE FRIEND OF THE NATION, =| “Employers freely acknowledge that the only bulwark which stands between the security of the Republic and those madmen who would destroy it is the American Federation of La- bor and those other organizations of workingmen who have kept their sanity. These organizations should be treatet as friends, not enemies. “I would make « strong plea in be- half of that immense number of wage earners who are not yet organized. These men and women are human beings and should not bé made to suffer hardehips merely because they have no powerful organization to de- | fend their rights, They must meet the increased cost of Evia like the rest of us and employers should untarily snd generously raise Gamat “mn dictates of ity “WwW all working together. e are ot labor's erste are ne Others are not. It is true the American Federation of Labor fights ganized, palin) ee ic vine ~hour day unorgant labor benofits by the victory. When or- ganized labor wins increased un- organized labor generally finds more pen in its pay envelope. But ein- loyers are prone to deli ivi 4 organized lal the pi ba Denedts that organized labor has won. I that they will abandon that atti ‘But more jJewlarly I speak behalf of workers In of typists, clerks, bookkeepers, shipping ierho. cashiers and their kind. t any em~- ployer sit down with pencil ‘paper at bis home at Might and ion out what it costs him to ff house, clothe and educate his son or daugh- ter. Try as he will to screw the cost down to the Jast item of economy and he wilt find that it exceeds the pres- ent pay of any office or store worker in his service. e will be @ bard- hearted man, who, after finishin; with his figuring, should il to ‘at his employees’ pay en’ next Saturday with » sum sufficient to keep them in the bare necessaries of | "T7"S- life. The fécal centre of cinema atten- “Another word to industrial em- ployers. When you see an American Federation of Labor organizer in Sone town do.not wish that you could ave him ordered away. On the con- trary, give him a welcome and help him at his work. Remember that every worker who joins an American Federation of Labor trade union be- this day, Monday, July 6, A. D. 1919? The little boy at the foot of the class yells “New York.” He’ ‘The little girl at the head of the class ligps “Los = Angeles"—and tion to-day is Columbus, O. The oc- casion is the great centenary of the missiogary endeavor of the Meth. odist Episcopal Church, and heads of the centenary are strenuou» evangels of the motion picture. There are three men who are para- “Close-Up” News and Views Of Filmland and Its People By Julian Johnson’ FIRE is the centre of motion picture interest-in the United States to-day—that is to say, ‘wrong. she's the pleasant as Nature herself, and the thorough cleansing the body receives brings a feeling of real relief and benefit such a8 no laxative pill or cathartic ever produced for any one, Get a %c box of Nature's Remedy “~NR Tablets) and try it. There Is no risk in doing 80, for it must give you greater relief and benefit than any liver or bowel medicine you ever used or money back instantly. It is sold, guar- Onis: anteed and recommended by your wist. Nabares-Hemeds y Ne- TABLETS~N MR Tonisht- Tomorrow Feel Right IN MISERY FOR YEARS Mrs. Courtney Tells How She Was Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “For years I was simply in misery from a weakness and awful pains— and nothing seemed to do me any good. friend advised me to take Lydia E. \Geta {25 Box 214 production without good will. will and cratic terms of employment ditions of labor. ciency in production secured through the the principles of democracy. are as essén’ are in civil government. “wheneven We can oply application them. follow the spirit of this policy operation formulated by the oan Federation of Labor, and whi was faithfully carried out by the x fhey will immediately realize that new life has entered doors, that the wh are turning more smoothly, that production oreaged and profits as well. THE STANDARD BE KEPT UP. “Also I would commend this the thought of employers: swiftly has standgrd of living of workingman, Ratheu dard be Improve nave try | rig’ who tempt t employ’ —must and of their fellow men truly nt of the earners, ‘The through wage be compelled Good co-operation cannot exist where the employer exercises auto- authority in determining the and the con- ‘The highest effi- These tial in indastry’ as they employees in a 4 an establishment heve a “pet ‘the ‘employers of our country or- ganized worl@rs during the war, and | their factory | eels of industry and in- OF LIVING MUST “phere shall be no lowering of the the American r must that stan- employers who the good of civilization, of goun- t will not attempt to deny this/ selfishness. would at- deny itr-and there are such comes a soldier of the army pl fanatics who would destroy it. the defenders of the nation.” ARMY. GETTING OUT be of Sommon. Marshall, The two last named are common complaint or grievance, it : ; ; f is. fundamental that, the employer | Officers Club at Coblenz Closed pasrern i oe New Yor cu hould eet, those who may - F A 4 churebead DA Taylor 18 ; feted. by the workers to represent and Army's-Daily Paper Quits |'ome of his Wesleyan brethren have July 45. ri- ich the old Third Army ai in getting out of Germany. a are booked a week ahead. Lu Tues: Next scheduled to move in th ©) que to leave the east bank of the Rhin July 16, day night. The club quarters were at|of the finest on the Rhine. o#¢ | Many notable Pershing, who danced workers, nurses and telephone girls | 10 \ the spacious ballroom, to protect the Republic against the “The American Federation of Labor organizer is a recruiting sergeant for OF GERMANY VERY FAST COBLENZ, July 5 (Associated Press). —Individuals and the smatier units of losing no time All trains are crowded with casuals, and sleeping car réseryations from Coblenz to Paris The 5th Division began moving from ourg Friday, and the 4th Division is scheduled to leave the Rhine sector direction of home is the 2d Division, The Officers’ Club, which played an interesting part in the history of the American occupation, was closed Satur- in the casino of a private German club, one In the six months it was used by the Americans persons were entertained, including the Prince of Wales and Gen with welfare Despite efforts mount in the centenary, doings, and each of them is doing his utmost to gain wide and full recognition, by all parts of this huge religious body— with its forty-odd thousand congre- gations in the United States and its territories—for the screen. Thepe men are the Director Gen- eral, ‘Dr. 8. Eart Taylor, Dr, Chris- tlan F. Reisner and Dr. Chestet C, called him Methodism's greatest pro- moter and business man. The way he has put the missionary centenary across seems to prove It. ‘There are twenty picture shows in continuous operation on the Cente- nary grounds, These are not using motion pictures continually, the mov- ies alternating with stereopticon lec- tures and series of colored slides. The picture shows, when running movies, Go not confine themselves to religious or propaganda pictures, Instead, they present the Centenarians’ regular pro- gramme entertainment, carefully se- lected, of course, but doubtless a bit- ter pill to swallow in the mouths of the old hardshells who frowned upon any sectarian diversion, Fhe energetic Dr, Taylor, however, was not content with giving numbers if celluloid entertainments. He must needs do one thing quite unrivalled in magnitude—so he built, wind-braced like @ bridge and solid ag a house, the world's greatest picture screen, 136 feet high by 146 feet wide, This vast flat arena of light fronts a great e n Pinkham’s Vege- table Compaund. acknowledge it “Labor cannot, without accepting a poorer standard of living, consent not to make money, the club has 200,000 marks on hand which will be divided’ be tween the Salvation Army and army re-| 5° umpitheatre seating 75,000 far it has not proved po I did so and ‘got relief right gway. I can certainly recommend this valuable medicine to other women who suffer, for it has done such good work for me, and 1 know it will help others if they will give it a fair trial.’"—Mrs. Lizzie Courtney, 108 8th Ave. West, Oska- loosa, Iowa. Why will women drag along from day to day, year in and year out, suf- fering such misery as did Mrs, Court~ ney, when such letters as this are con- tinually being published, Every wom- an who suffers from displacements, ir- regularities, inflammation, ulceration, backache, nervousness, or who is pass- ing through the Change of Life should give this famous root and herb rem- edy, Lydia EB. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, a trial. For special advice write Lydia EB, Pinkham Medicine Co,, Lynn, Mass. The result of its long experience is at your service.—Advt. 'HEN you goon your vaca- tion this Summer have your favorite paper mailed to you every day. Evening World, 19¢ per week Dally World, 19 per week Sunday World, 6¢ per Sunday 4 week oF Neb, aod we Soar actives as olten as Tou desire Jour gular nenaleaier SAR RS Weta Sond he ate cect Ve x aise to a reduction of wages, has gone far beyond the increase wages. hg to governmental reports, will gher. Yet there are employers who ity of decreasing wages. It is impossible. must be prepared for an advance The cost shortsighted k about the neces The thing |t ted men. of) ‘The Amaroc News, of three months, go made money from the beginnini n 250,000 mar! tributed to cannot be done. | tion Interested m ‘AWorkingmen have been compeited | 0m Interelnn ee to curtail their household expenses | THE PROOF. until the lightness of the family Cioels | (From the Detroit Pree ) verges on downright hunger, Stop! «sis this a strictly fresh e; tgheng about reducing wages. Stop| «htrietiy, ‘The hen that’ laid win thinking about it Employers !ma'am, hasn't quit cackling over th of fact yet.” Cadum intment is very soothing and healing wherever the skin is irritated or inflamed. Cadum Ointment brings nights of peaceful suffered agonies from skin troubles. It stops sleep to people who have the itching at once i oothing and healing wherever the skin is irritated or inflamed, Much out nf pork skin troubles may be avoided by the timely use of this » ondartal Cadum Ointment is good for ezcema, pienples, blotches, chafings, rash, scabs, cuts, sores, burns, [Cadent Oldtment ie a {rome the original tormala) inhale lie rs wth Hef associations handling fundy for the Mf living has increased at a rate that families of en! the army’s daily The cost of living, accord-| wilt cease publication July 16 after an The news quit with a surplus of more ks, which also will be haritable organiza- it, Silda gcc ast lanes throw a motion picture the full size vf this screen on account of the in- tense heat engendered by the power- ful lights. Dr, Taylor, experimenting himself, has perfected it at full size for stereopticon purposes by enlarging his plates to 7 by 5 inches, this giving a Nght space of thirty-five square inches, a8 against less than one square inch on the film, Even at that, a r ie STAGE FAVORITES WHO WILL APPEAR HER -—AREGONE FOREVER, SAYS GOMPERS [8 a Le ee JOURN Ke VAM Deelier and the unmistakable planting of the knowledge that nation: wellas men must be brothers. . As I see it, the motion picture is the most power- ful religious and civilizing agent on earth. We must develop it as though we had just discovered and were de- Yeloping the art of printing.” Howcver, Dr. Taylor is no mere dilettante or amateur enthusiast. He himself perfected the picture pro- gramme of the church, is the inven tor of the “panorama slide” for stere- opticons, and has put across @ tre- mendous picture programme in the missionary endeavor of the church. More than 60,000 persons day have been in attendance at tne Co- lumbus Centenary, which is to close this week. The stock company Ide cently tried out by Jesse I . magnifi- sky in his Hollywood studio, is to be adopted by Goldwyn, This is a direct de- ascendant of the grit dramatic stocks of other days, and seems its present working out the ideal sy tem for an extensive motion pictu organization, It enables a concern| to give fine talents to small parts, It is naturally a diminisher of the force of the star system, since while it has nothing to do with stars or stel-| n THEATRES. | OOO oP Vn ene erences ce mm MERICA’S FOREMOST? THEATRES AND HITS UNDER THE DIRECTION OF LEE & J. J, SHUBER’ WINTER GARDE MONTE CRISTO Vain y & 50th St BEST SHOW IN TOWN | | frigerating system had to be inven to keep the emulsion from peeling the big plates, Four blowers, two directed against the plate and two igainst the light condenser, have done the work satisfactorily, As I write, I have a telegram before me saying that Electrician Rich has thrown a perfect motion picture sixty feet square on this white colossus, and he vows to make the full distan in the coming week. D. W. Griffith's. men pageant last week, winding their black bexes, although Mr. Grit- fith bimaelf was in California At 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon a party of highly interested motion picture men left for Columbus, the travelling aggregation including Will iam A. Brady, Gabriel Hess, Walter W. Irwin, Jolm C. Flinn and severa! others. Dr. Reisner, an ardent advocate of the motion picture as an adjunct chureh work, is frank in his ex-| pressed determination to campaign until he sees the picture officially adopted by the church as a whole and a picture machine for the expo- sition of religious work and teach- ings be considered as necessary as a pulpit, Dr. Reisner has used pictures in his own church in New York City for four years, as has Dr. Marshall The latter says: “I found a strange thing—a motion picture exposition of my sermon helped the sermon, and the sermon helped the _ picture; | neither went so well without the | nther, I've been combining them, of| course, dis- | covery.” Dr. ‘Taylor goes very far In his as- sertions of picture power, ever since I made that 45 ""-W. oF B'WAY. EVES 8:30 MATINEES WED & SAT. 2:30 ELTINGE RESTS St Eves 3.50 Mats Wed.% Sar 250 ‘omedy bs ¥ Roberts Avery Hopwood, the Summer © He s0 She new peace which has come world the |) never be maintal except by spread of Christian! alts lar values, it builds up all parts in a play until no part is conspicuous by super-excellence, The Goldwyn and Lasky studios half a dozen miles apart, to the west of er 2 Angeles the first in Culver City, dn the short direct road to the sea; the other 'n heavy-follaged - Hollywood, at the base of the foothills, Both are ample in grounds, buildings and equipment to maintain genuine stock organiza- tions of the highest class, Ben Turpin, the optical counter-ir- ritant, will keep his bifocal oyes at Sennett's studio for another two years, This item may Interest many who have read the false reports of his signing with Fox. Blanche Sweet is going to make pic- tures for Jesse D. Hampton. Misr Sweet has done nothing since finish- Rupert ing “The Unpardonable Sin, Hughes'’a indictment of Teutonic deviltry. Early Shame Note: Richard Bar. thelmess, the meditative young Budd- hist of “Broken Blossoms,” mado his first stage appearance at the ago of ten, playing the girl in “The Little Princess.” His weekly wage was $3.50. THEATR MATINERS ‘Tuc, Thurs and Bat, 2 JR Geelong WIR W 44th Sl Wed, & Sat PLAYHOUSE fist it Bit $38 MELODRAMA It’s Bome Rensetion! 447 STREET W. OF BWAY, PHONE BRYANT 64 — EVENINGS $33 MATINGES THURS An® SAT. 2:30 RACHEL CROTHERS DELIGHTFUL COMEDY SOEAST) E THIS WEEK ww STER! woo wet rahe ita ARE YOU A VICTIM OF HEADACHES? Bvery tow weeks, or oftener, count~ less thousands of men and women wake up with frightful headaches, What is tho pause of this condition, and what can these poor victims do to overcome It? Nine times out of ten thé cause ts constipation, and the use of strong catharties, nauseating oils, ‘powders, pills and salts Onty makes the vietirn’s condition wOrse, Boal's Laxative Fruit Rolls solve the problem. They are made with fruits and, ave delicious to taste as though they were made with the one purpose of producing a delight~ ful, fruity confection; yet their action on the bowels can always be depended upon, They are efficacious, yet gentle. Children tease for a taste. For sale at ail drug stores, Package of 6 rolls, 15¢, Write for free sample, Boal's Rolla, 216 W. 1th St... New York.—Advt. PHOTO PLAYS. COHAN Baaeyatse D. W. Griffith ‘27 Perio Broken Blossoms. wei comine—" WE FALL 0} BABYLON.” PLAZA Scientifically Cooled BILLIE quo ges CHAPLIN Soloists, RIALTO” ORCHESTHA. TH BIG MON f CREENWIC LIBERTY GEORGE WHITE’S fom a ee au Constance TALMADOR In ‘The Veiled Adsemture,” ‘sennett ¢ GIRARD STRAND OnEHESTRA, BRIGHTON BEACH %%''¢ 8,000 ST st. Bt, Theatre, on B'way, Tel. Bobuyiir By rvoe NCE REED ",:3%* Woman ‘Also Greater ED tate THEATR ‘Theatre + Beainnlny 44TH S' SHUBERT TO-NIGHT si! ES OF 1919 Both Willard and Dempsey knew in Toledo that the real punch lay with LEW FIELDS in ‘‘A Lonely Romeo'' at the Shubert Theatre, N. Y., with his Greenhouse of Summer Girls. Matinees Wed. &Sat. Nett Nr, 6th av oi Ik Owing to the Sensational Seasons Sole Surviving Oi MIL Billy Bway, Jona Lrvines Powerful Pl MOVES TONIGHT JS FULTON THEATRE': Phone Bryant 700 tv» 4 30 Naty Wed & Sat 230. RICHMOND \E orro, six gt ELIZABETH BRICE RUTH ROYE WITH HENRY Hua sonal en i lll ES id yA at The Daintiest Chorus Ever Seen.on ve hy SCA A MODERN MUSICAL Revue. a oa ARNOLD Vi fr AND i Rhodes, ZIEGFEL " U r TH | Fy use MWUReAL & ST E B, 1 ACF ILLAWE Peptic FONGHT i) 10, Steinway Piaho Used. Seats, 25c, Hessie Aitkin, Willie ‘Alreraft Speclal? “bay Vou Hoss King & Co, & Willette, Flagler Muady. HENDERSON'S * in “OVE MoCartay, rs 4 "Hie Georee Kelly & Co, Bob te Marie ts, Greene & Parker, th ‘ ALAC. ry ~ ) TER NIC a NDALS 3 scH RT'S UNFINISHED ils Stadium Symphony Orchestra ‘ond wotor. '50c, $1.00

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