Show PRESIDENTS PRESIDENT'S RECORD ONE OF FRIENDSHIP i iFOR FOR OR TOILERS I I Hughes Dominated by Love I of ef Money and Powerful Power Power- I ful Interests I IBy IBy By DR AGNES WINZELL I w By y Invitation I have been requested views 8 the labor to my upon q question In In order to do this we should look 1001 ba tf k really reany fifty ears years At that time m the Eastern states girls and Sand women v. v Yf ee receiving Ing from 1 50 to 2 50 per r peras e. e as household servants n cooking and general housework I I which Ich required at least fifteen hours pr r day A washwoman would get fram 80 to 75 cents per day daj girls In I P only received enough to k soul and body together After I the ite discovery ery of gold in California an and when women were brave enough t tI tc j to that far Western v estern state tUg were ere well recompensed led for their labor cir as 88 wages were from 50 50 to 75 p 3 month for less work worl there than I they had done foi for to 2 2 1 per pei I Week In ln the te Last East i Afterwards tards the Southern Pacific railroad was projected to California b by ollis P P. Huntington and Leland St Stanford They The brought hordes of men to California which took tool l the tho wOrk work vork from Crom men women and girls I 1 Causing thousands of women and girls Jo J fall all by the wayside because the they 1 x Va way to make a living Dennis I rny took up tip the fight tight for the woi workIng work work- Ic Icing ing ing- class and waged the fight bitterly I to bring about better conditions forthe for th the toilers toners At that time they tried 1 to o oget get a measure passed to restrict the immigration of ot the Chinese to this k country Many of ot the sky pilots pilots' of the th F East Kast st st. calling themselves ministers Of ir the gospel and the wealthy wealth 1 f I politicians brought all of ot the inh in- in h possible to down this measure f. f i they did The laboring classes V oi eif J t the people finally became desperate tt organized labor unions for tor their n protection Corporations and andI I IUd looked with dismay at the ab- ab 1 In alty of ot these downtrodden slaves I f I to offer force if it neCEssary t to their then inhuman treatment TJien wo began to hear of strikes and M as that seemed to b be the th weapons the laboring class clasp could Wield as the framing of ot laws had been such AS itS' to enable corporations and capital 0 to call all on the militia to protect I their wealth Cripple Creek Cited Tho The great strike at Cripple Creek and the treatment nt of ot miners there the deportations of the miners by the corporations cor cor- and nd left leU to starve on n the desert wilt will stand as a it blot biot on humanity human human- I ity ty ti tot for or all time tune to come I ZAhl All o ot of those thos things existed under the r all this party part During ma mO we ve e never heard an anything thins of those lt I t tender hearted women of the we hear of ot today It seems mg f-mg the Republican party began to up Just about the time our be be- Wilson lIson had taken the theof I. I of this government in his firm c. c unflinching power It seems ade up OP their minds to l prevent or destroy every law that he attempted to have lla passed parsed on the tho side of humanity human human- ity il- il But in spite of all their efforts he lie has succeeded in having many laws passed for the thc benefit of the working class Had he hc done nothing but sign the child labor bill preventing pOOl poor little children from becoming mentally and phys dwarfed he would have done society a service for which future beera generations ons TV wIll il bl bless ss his name Wilsons Wilson's Mexican Policy Ladles Ladies before you ou east your jour ote vote on November o 7 7 please look Into the record record record rec rec- ord of the Mexican trouble A William Hearst the multimillionaire who has never r known what It Is to labor the owner of at ten powerful newspapers the I owner of ot lands and mines in Mexico that were obtained for little or nothing noth noth- ing lug when the te l Mexicans were tit ill 1 a starving condition and to retain their hol holding lIngs with others of equal wealth and influence went Into Mexico Imposed upon the ignorant Mexicans and thc they being of a revengeful le- le vengeful nature brooded over this condition and arc are taking revenge for forthe forthe forthe the wrongs they suffered With all of the admiration that I felt for tor Theodore Roosevelt i in his past career as a president and the disappointment In 1012 1912 in his defeat by President Wilson studying the I conditions that have confronted us by bythe the great Me Mexican trouble I can only feel thankful to God that we did not have o a H. Republican administration as asI asI asI I firmly believe if ff we wc had that today toda there would be Le heartaches and sorrow In iii thousands of ot homes If It yo you can realize the horrors of war as I do you will vill seriously sh consider the candidate for foi you OU are voting Woodrow A Wilson ilson has Kept us out of war Woodrow Wilson has passed more laws for the betterment of ot labor than all of the Republican presidents have done In tort forty years There never was a time in history that has given into the hands of ot the laboring class what we have today today today- the possibilities of the laws that may mav maybe maybe be passed by retaining him hint in fn office for another four years yeal's the good laws Jaws lawshe lawshe he ha has passed during during- his administration tion nIl ion nil should appeal to you vou for the vote vore YOU vou will cast ast on November 7 If you ou will look over o the hIstorY of at Charles Charl E TI Hughes you will see Ae that that hi his rulings as a governor go his de decisions decisions de- de as Judge were all on the side of ot corporations Hughes cannot help this Ho is a a. money lover he worships worships worships wor wor- ships money and men of ot money His Ills cold old indifference to tho the pleadings of the common people his lack Jack of sympathy sympathy sym sym- pathy for humanity have been discernible discernible dis dis- dis- dis in all of his public career Take Woodrow Wilson Compare that great man with his tender sympathy sympathy sympathy sym sym- pathy for the little slave child chUd In the sweatshops the old people the miner I striking for his rights the railroad I Iman man to whom he gave the hour eight law not once did he think of ot corporations corpora corpora- corpora I lions and the money power but of i humanity I Woodrow V Wilson WiNon is the man Iran of the I hour Let us rally to his support nd nd cast a strong vote ote for him and for tor our United States senator and congressman congress congress- man with the assurance that our country is safe under the administration tion of ot President Woodrow Wilson |