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Show NEWSPAPERMAN ILL Ml HERE . i Carlton Chamberlayne of New York to Deliver Lecture on Chautauqua Program. On a stone over the grave of some of the American boys in France are these words "we gave our today for your tomorrow." This sentence is the text of a lecture to be heard on a week from Tuesday :ternoon as a part of the second day program of the Ogden Og-den Chautauqua. I The lecturer is to be Carlton Chamberlayne, Cham-berlayne, a New York newspaperman, and ho will discuss some of the problem; prob-lem; that are grouped under the' title of reconstruction. No day and ago ever had more pressing problems before be-fore it than ours, and any discussion of them will be helpful. There is nothing dry or prosaic about Chamberlayne. Neither is there i anything purely academic or theoreti- cal. He is intensely practical, and always constructive. While he ia an optimist, he faces squarely the perils I of the times and point3 out leson-I leson-I able solutions. . I- As a part of the program of the j evening ot' the third day there will be I another lecture that will touch a vital issue of the day, E. B. Fish, of Set- tic, is a machinist and a labor union i man. Shortly over a. $ear ago ho was employed In one of the great ship yards on the coast, and -came into conflict with the preachments of the. 1. W. W., and other groups of radicals. His Inborn In-born Americanism could not stanci ror some of the things that he heard, and he began to talk to the men In the shop and then in the meeting of his union and as hia fame grew to wider I and wider audiences. ! His title is "Americanism in Indus-' Indus-' try." and is a straight out fight for ; 100 per cent Americanism, and hi3 in-! in-! flnence has been great in the fight j that has been made against the radical I groups in the Northwest. oo |