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‘4 __ THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 19 |FAMOUS SUFF BACK IN POLITICS WILL | AID WADSWORTH it has mant- busine: mone the we of two ealers to) uid otfiern for 't dar art @dlne\fo Aupport the Re-| League of Nations te @ war-nyking | at ers an Party in November, both on | contract, a unt of the party's performanc “Those are the reasons I have fo d'= prominew for the future and! knowing that Uarding will carry rehvon Of wit helief that thd ‘ new aptrit een months the pw WIT] Hays, huve t Obie tt CK AND HARDING HES NANT ‘Voere are | the op ani whe 2 hie f ; 7 { vat 4S, tanta the cnneks and ‘ i | 1 * vided by the Constitar M Sue ti oa yond is « Libera) cor rubber work It wants the Government to fi: vice toa an i and o the campaign, and her women voting In w on i it i (Continued) the hudband was Treaster of the Re te 1,200,000, divided in Who Doesn’t Like Milk | ing talk about Harding of Publican State Committ i the mroups firet mentioned going to re poeee t tughen tal or hand, t a th mats } ft concerned, It |x Cox for the foliowing reasons: ee ine we on women 9 infortunate tlint no one evet took the unparalleled organization of the fm Obio, the intent of a majority soldiers served overneas for him, the practical unanim- | minitter 4 * tine or extended the effort to a State Senate ‘ 6 natural political preferences ¢ labor vote in and out of cam en periods. No such statlation are on. have probably noticed that more ten are drinking milk, these days. Par- ticularly noticeable in the lunch rooms and repreventat tn addition ¢ 0 county pre y Repubitoan, — these |? fable (n Ohio,’ We hid assumed There are rest i ve jaboring men in bie favor, the tnistaite about _ Chat a majority in the labor group more waye shi ake wiik LS ie bape ‘a That Glavntaniien of o taal o Toaca how wd s “preference for the Democratic say tha ik doesn't agree with him. That cogs nber, When tt tecling ty. due largely, in Ohia, to the to use milk it makes him bilious. Of course it does VW ublicans to support him at the b went ‘ont In New te of all torated declaration that Cox was thanany He goes right along eating a full meal and . by reason of his stand on the , a 4 Te Yur ! Oba aril friend of labor. But thie had heed nt Larges Racin, We? ate of Nations, the trend of the ius 3 because ‘ Ry on Ws nothing but an {ity wena te) then adds a pint of milk ta %. He's over ; iy Sowa Cee, the. vorett ‘ t ok founded on tact in the fed and blames the milk. Milk is @ food y @ White people of Ohio against t will burn eo : cook book. not simply a temperance drink, Leave out f of the Republicans to es- JUST WHY HARDING WILL | some of the fat, greasy things and stick to Va the negro on an equality with pt ev x CARRY THE STATE. a bding : sa. the milk. And watch the result ite to flatter him and thus ob- In vote will figure atrongly in the and now for the interview with [ple of nat majority Cox will pes - x Rare with ahetn ) these working men and women. l dow Aop Sie of thoes wher Ueda: his vote, and, finally, becaube the } ay ee ee Chalrinan Clark at Republican hend- r combbina ie Givers ‘wationalities, “largely. fat. oF he MJoeon't tbe the taste’ of. ovith. pul én'6 tate are mure the majority of | REPUBLICANS INJECTING © 4/9 Hard Sinded oF that reignty, which | Secon neration Americans, tiey pinch af bold: We know many milk drtnters 14 advocacy of the League of Na- wens tate ie tee Phine Boiico a 2 X ng the + Firat | BUee. N of the Old World. Their fa- J rerio matters in the present cam: ("ni Tee me divide the voters Into | SAYS BURN ESS Ane CARON ARE, or May thoenecived Jett thoes : mgd Moana Many re; four major groups; first ta the farm . tries to come to thin land of op. | ¢ the other hand, the Republicans bo Sinnatrously upon the Weput vote; second, that of the business! ‘The professional or buainens |p. pet ol ‘Ane tuey are ‘iialnelined e 1e arms oO nc. as certain that Benator Hi ‘arty. ‘This i the injection of & people, both professional and semi-|group is that class which wan caug ake partnerships with countries | be | will ride down Pennsylvania || erent aja if Negro queation. i * professional; third, the labor vote,/in the rising cost of everythis « institutions and"Burdens they New York ! te ue with ex-President Wilson, een Lge te jute, nee J fourth, the vote of the women. fave compensation for {ta ery ht to”ecape in coming to Amer: | _ - the ald of Ohio votes, aovording ; ca 4a nest man was the one me { nager, and ft han atirred t ught irman Clark, for these reasons, Most of the 600,000 farmers in will yous for him, being protec- at heart the lo very deeply. It has an- — hundreds of thousands of white people, and for what? For the sake of 80,000 negro votes, T am wure that the white people of Ohio are wide awnke to what the Republicans » women of Ohio which each expecta to take mont Fonemy of the cause, Jame W. Wads-| the whites in all places of public ao- « tricks, That each should deride aive of the other's hand is only a part of Gic game. Nee “Stand Pat” by Joining “Stand Pat are doing, one of which is the nomina- | Organization, tion of six negroes to the General | Asnsmbly of Ohio. Three have been | nominated from Cuyahoga County, the | home of Harry I. Davis, Republican ly itistrumen- beset pe A egg oma tell you tal in the renaissance of the Buffrage| Something about tas melee — ovement in thie elty and state which | ‘Wo fran Frask¥a, County and one from Cincinnat!. This ts only « part tion will never support ay On® | virtually kindled the final fire of vic-} of the Republican plan to to the seeks to force on them an en- 4 vanity 06 ea foreign all.ance tory, has come back In politics Vanity of Une negro and te get his he nature of a| vote for Harding, ee ene ee ae “In tho Just General Assembly. | which was Republican, the Toure | paaved the Beaty bill, deggned to) pince the negro on full equality with commodation, resort or amumement, worth jr, and announces she will do] wich meant all hotels, theatres and | allin her power to brig about that) soda wa Pinces and -the ike, and| regult. Mr. .Wadaworth ‘is . Mrs.| provided heavy penaltios for any one refusing to entertain them tn such | Goon Witt TRIUMPHANT UNDER TEST -* As this message is being written, They reduced these old copy ‘ s cousin. pincer In. the Senate, however, the Dodge Brothers’ daily, weekly book maxims to a splendid and ; YEARS AGO. As an earneat ¢ deaision she] pit) wis held up wud finally the hotel | d thi ion, is at S : Aairma:! Durbin had recelved only |ha» become a member of the Woman's | and ro nt people ne mathe and monthly production, is at the scientific system, pouring more, Rut in this campaign all these #ol-| and fave are bere and they will aasuredly | sation A their votes for James M. Coz,| erendum use no old hen ever looked after het, chicks as assidously time Lefors a series of reports ‘ ; his Weutenants in the field when | Griswold Wents Is the President, oom- places held a convention in Columbus correspondent talked with him. another brief glance over them of the pre-German element which is not one bit stronger than It was two years ago, the | knéw it ratic Party is more united be- Gov. Cox than ever before tn any | #6 folldly beliin: . And that is only one of the why he te wiaured of ejection | 5) recely’ figures,\and this feeling Is pro- y for Cox, even to the Utter | ang hiy reactionary trend and record, P boundaries of the State. ¢ to turn back a moment to the ected element of which I spoke. | as every euch Gement was OP") than 80 per eent., and In some cases to when Cox was running for] ay high as 95 por cent, rnor, and those opposed to wir | of Cox, and the voters were both men og thelr only of hitting at the Administra-) ‘Then we had about 200,000 Onio | STRENGTH. ta in France or so their votes did not get 1m) ang this will be well turned bac a had bad that vote Cox would upon him in November. Harding was recorded a 4,000 majority over) with the rea instead of the 12,000 he polled, | °Y*" when FR against him Ps Indicate feeling rather | n ite 9p) Reports which I have |i: ugain in Novemb 9n the CHEERFUL GRILL RGDM of HOTEL PENNSYLVANIA heatres and moving pieture | Republican Club, of which Mra, James] gers wf in the winter of 1919 and protested poned of the ntand-pat nt OF oo loudly not to be heard. This! feminine voters, who ateep devia-~ hiens the R bites Tende: | tion from the ticket nor bias for the| frightened’ the Republican teadert:| be mations Harry Daugherty among them, and agus Of = 11 was allowed to die. ars Now as to Harry L. Davis, He was yoked aftet the soldions-and they Mayes. ot Cinema, tnd S Rese ~~ per, eo lvocate, Lol in an vi MPurthermorc, labor has never been |Itortal that he had put on the city tn candidate aw it ts] payroll negross who were drawing an behind Cox in Ohio, He has always |akRregate of $350,000 jn yearly sala~ carried the industrial cen in this | ries, fod that hytiged ood lgnet had Lager every campaign and he'll do]0nly (Ave or alx negro policemen. o! # th every campaign) and hell de line force in preveding adminiatrations, Ardti@. ‘The rail-| there were twenty-wevon under him. | ‘nat him for|. “Thin negro tewue fe one that we tn- | Inmina bili {tend to fight with all our power to the | end, because Ohio is @ white v's country, And, mark me, the ve are up in arms against the He- | ublicans for what they are doing to} the negro an tage. My ob: ation of the present altuation in- | # that something has been Wed to the negroes, but the Re- | publicans will never be able to keep the promises, “What they are doing tn pure to take ‘votes from the Republican col- | umn, for the opposition to the negro stronger now in Ohio than it has So strong ia it that here yas, when the people living | in @ certain district learned that a nary element In Oblo| plot of ground in the midst of their to the|own property had been sold for the in 193 lerection of A negro fraternity house, | -| they tore down the ros of Hard- he Initiative and ref-ling ‘that they themselves had put up! Harding said that all this|in thelr windows because they knew tended toward Socliliam. The work-|that it wan tho Republicans who had! men Will Hot forget that made ich & thing possible. So you “In the Inst ten dtys a reaction|may ba quite sure that the negro ‘tion Lo road emple hig vote for t of the centres, where there a number of factories, T found that not lens) )) were In favor]! and women. | \HARDING WEAKNESS IS COX } “Harding has beet against all pro- tn training) cgsive reforms in be Constitul as Cox XQ{BDC WN \ RG "Tea Dances Dinner Dances Supper Dances Tt strikes a new mote in New York —this dance-music of the new Pemmeylvania Dance Orchestra that at tee and supper The Grill Room Season Opens Today highest point in its history. The most casual sort of inquiry will satisfy you that this pro- duction is being absorbed as itis - Within sight and sound as we write, a great addition to Dodge Brothers’ immense works, is being rushed to pletion. The interesting thing nat this situation is, that it is not likely that a half a hundred people have ever bought Dodge Brothers Motor Car just because they wanted a motor car. Of the more than half a million who have bought it—the over- whelming majority did so be- cause of the name it bore. It has always been treated, by the American people in particu- lar, as an exception—always set apart, and singled out, and never judged by ordinary standards. It has always been thought of, and is still thought of, first, and foremost, and all the time, only in terms of its goodness, and the results it gives. All of this is wonderful, in one way, and quite natural and logi- cal in another. It all dates back to the day when John and Horace Dodge con- ceived and designed and finally built the car—after warning each other, and their associates, not even to think of it in any other terms than the best obtainable value, They began with a few almost absurdly simple principles, bluntly expressed and rigidly executed, about decency and honor and integrity— such as most of us wrote in our copy books at schdol and more, and still more value into the car, and then marshal- ling all the resources of modern massed mantfacture to get their product into’ the hands of the people at an’ honorable and an honest cost. These policies and principles have never been changed, and never will be. changed, by so much as a hair’s breadth; and they have come to be recognized and accepted as Dodge Brothers principles wherever motor cars are driven. ° It has all happened as John and Horace Dodge planned it— quite simply, naturally, and automat- ically, all over America, and all over the world. People do discriminate, as Dodge Brothers contended they would; people will find out when a motor car is well built and gives good service and great good value. Dodge Brothers market today is where they planned to locate and establish it—-in’ the mind and the heart of every man and woman who admires good work, well done. It will last, and it will keep on growing, as it has kept on grow- ing for five years (faster than Dodge Brothers works could keep pace with it), as long as the number of those who believe that a manufacturer should build to serve and not merely to sell, continues to inerease. All is well with Dodge Brothers today, because John and Horace Dodge builded well in the begin- ning, and because their business will continue to build well until the end. NEW YORK Colt-Stratton Company 1847 Broadway — BROOKLYN and LONG ISLAND Bishop, McCormick & Bishop (aa1 Bedford Ave. NEWARK Bonnell Motor Car Co. 562 Broad St.