Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 72, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 August 1922 — Page 5
AUG. 3, 1922
MORE PRIMARIES DUHC AUGUST SHE SIGNIFICANT California and Mississippi Contests Have Features of Special Interest. WILSON OPPOSES VARDAMAN Hiram Johnson Making Fight i ! of His Life to Retain Seat in U. S. Senate. By United Xctcs WASHINGTON, Aug. 3.—Ten more primaries, including significant contests of national interest in Ohio, California, Mississippi and Texas, are still ] to be fought out this month. Perhaps the greatest national in-1 terest in any of these will center in j California and Mississippi. In the former. Senator Hiram Johnson, I-eague of Nations "bitter-ender” and irworn enemy of the Republican "old guard,” is making the fight of his life to return to the Senate. In Miss'ssippi the primary is of interest principally because former President Wilson has injected himself personally there. Against former Senator 1 Vardaman, as he did in the Missouri primary, just closed, against Senator Reed. The California primary Is Aug. 29 and the Mississippi primary Aug. 15. Vardaman Wants to Return Vardaman seeks the seat of Williams, who, when Wilson was in the White House, constittued one of the former executive's most cherished friends. He is opposed for the seat by former Congressman Herbert Stephens and Miss Belle Kearney. Miss Kearney is an attractive woman, a brilliant orator and a leader in the Mississippi suffrage and prohibition movements. The Ohio senatorial primary next Tuesday is of national interest, largely because it will be the forerunner of an election in which a Democratic incumbent. Senator Pomerene. will test the sentiment of President Harding's home State. The Texas primary, Aug. 26, will be featured by the run-off of the two | leaders in the July 22 primary, one a pro and the other an anti-Ku-Klux Klan candidate. Other primaries this month are as follows: Tennessee, Aug. 3; Kentucky, Aug. 5; Alabama. Arkansas and Wyoming, Aug. 8, and Idaho. Aug. 22. PRIMARY SCRAP HOT "Hi” Johnson and Charles Moore Stumping California for Ballots Aug. 29 Bv United Xetrt SAN FRANCISCO. Cal.. Aug. 3. Senator Hiram Johnson and his opponent, Charles C. Moore, are stumping the State in preparation for the primary Aug. 29. Moore is running on a platform of indorsement of the arms conference treaties, and general support of the policies of President Harding. Johnson is running on a platform of his tariff achievements, and his record In 1910 as Governor. One of the bitterest points is the charge that Johnson, while Senator,
RED PIMPLES ON FACEJW Itched and Burned. Lost Sleep. Cuticura Heals. “My face wma affected with pimples for about three years. They were @hard and red, and festered and scaled over. The pmples itched and burned causing me to scratch and irritate them, and I lost many a night’s sleep on account of the irritation. ‘‘l read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample which helped me so I purchased more, and after using four cakes of Soap with the Ointment, I was healed.” (Signed) Miss Martha Theusch, R. 2, Box 45, Vining, Minn. , Give Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum the care of your skin. teH.l.lMkrn.krlUl- Adt/WCrttowitaa#r**rla*. Dsnrt M. Kjudan 4, Hua ” BoJd*T*rr* Soop fk Ointment V end kVv Talcum flfo. PflTCahan Soap ebaeae without mis.
QUEER FEELINGS AT MIDDLE AGE Women Should Know Low Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Helps at This Trying Period Sheboygan, Wisconsin. ran down, tired and nervous. I could 1111111 i I Ii! 1111 1 1 jI not even . do my ImUlL* 0w n housework, could not sleep at ; -* ii *>*~ nightandallkinds * of queer thoughts w ° u ldcoraetome. fit Finally I gave up 'JpSirl to the doctor anc * a en d i told me of Lydia It E. Pinkham’s ' l eta hls Compound. After the ■- I could •leep better and I have kept on improving ever since. I have taken seven bottles now and am so happy that I am all over these bad feelings. ” —Mrs. B. Lanser, 1639 N. 3rd St., Sheboygan, Wisconsin. For the woman entering middle age Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound can be of much benefit. During this t ; me of life certain changes take place which sometimes develop into serious trouble. Melancholia, nervousness, irritability, headache and dizziness are some of the symptoms. LydiaE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is a natural restorative, especially adapted to assist nature in carrying you safely gast this time. Why cot give it a fair
accepted a 110,000 fee for represent- J lng Hearst’s interests before the Supreme Court. BOARDREPORTS LABOR SCARCITY Steel Mills Scout for Men —Ft. Wayne Has Plenty of Jobs. There is a scarcity of labor in many sections of Indiana, Thomas Riley, i of the State Industrial board, said toi day. The steel mills of the Calumet re- | gion are sending scouts out for men. j The Ft. Wayne branch of the State [ employment bureau reported there i
See What $1 Buys at the Thrift Shoe Store /V This h a Good • 1 Play THRIFT SHOE STORE MERCHANTS BANK BLOO.-OOWN STA/RS Washington and Meridian Streets
Copyright 1923 New Tork Central Railroad Cos. The Direct Route to New England The Big Four maintains a fast daily through service to New England vore the New New England over the New the Hudson River Limited eastbound, and the Southwestern Limited westbound. Club cars —and a dining service of acknowledged excellence. Hudson River Limited Southwestern Limited Lv. Indianapolis 12.ir p.m.* y I *' l io *ton 2.00 p.m.* At. New York 9.40 a m.* - • N, ’ew York 4.30 p.n>. Ar. Boston 12.00 noon* Ar Indianapolis 11.50 a.m.* •Standard Time. ‘Standard Time, For tickets, reservations and information t Union Station: Main 4567 Citr Ticket Office. 112 Monument Circlet Circle 5300 J. W. Gardner, D.P.A., 112 Monument Circle: Main 2627 BIG FOUirROUTE
Round Trip Round Trip NIAGARA FALLS $1&22 BUFFALO $15.22 TORONTO 10,Vi CLEVELAND 12 35 DETROIT 11.00 CEDAR POINT 10.50 15 Da;* Re urn L nT-15 Cays TERRE HAUTE. INDIANAPOLIS & EASTERN TRACTION CO. Frankfort end Clover Leaf Railroad to Toledo and Steamer beyond. Round Trip, DAYTON, OHIO Round Trip, 52.75 SUNDAY, AUG. 6th $2.75 Lv. Indianapolis 7:30 a. m. Return limit, leave Dayton at 7 rOO p. m. Aug. 6. Call Traffic Dept., Main 2737, for full Information regarding above rates. Circulars of Tourist rates mailed by addressing General Passenger Agent, 208 Terminal Bidg.
were more jobs than men. The only districts that he has heard from In the last few weeks that have reported more men than Jobs, were the districts around Lafayette and the mining districts. The situations there, he said were caused by the coal ! and mine strikes. ' "The factories In Kokomo are booming,” Riley said. “Ninety-seven factories there have taken on only ten per cent less men than they had in 1920 before the bottom fell outs of industry, and have taken on more tnan the average of the number they had before the war. "There is no shortage of work in Indianapolis but I have had no reports from the eastern and southeastern parts of the State as yet. “Os course there are still some idle men. These are the ‘floaters’ and the men that cannot find the jobs that suit them. It is also rather hard to j I place women.”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
(Paid Advertisement) . h Stand by the Loyal Workman Being the fifth of six messages to the Public, based on resolutions adopted by the Board of Directors of the Associated Employers of Indianapolis, and having for their purpose the awakening of the Public to its interest and its responsibility in obtaining Just settlement of the present railroad and miners strikes. THE public is under lasting" obligations to the loyal workmen who have continued to operate the coal mines and the railroad shops after the strikers quit the jobs. These men are not “strikebreakers” and it is to be deplored that they are so characterized. The United States Railway Labor Board has publicly declared that new employes of the railroads and old employes who refused to strike are not strikebreakers. “Thej'’ have the moral as well as the legal right to engage in such service of the American public to avoid the interruption of indispensable railway transportation and are entitled to the protection of every department and every branch of the Government, State and Nation. The men who remain in the service and those who enter it anew are within their rights in accepting such employment.” Tj'XCEPT for these independent workers, the country’s transportation facilities would be so seriously crippled that every citizen today would be feeling the sad effects. Chairman Hooper of the Railway Labor Board says: “The men who take the strikers’ places are merely accepting the wages and working conditions prescribed by a Government tribunal and are performing a public service.” President Harding has declared that the Railway Labor Board is “an agency of the Government” and that “its decrees must and will be backed up by the Government.” It has been officially recognized that the strike of the railroad shopmen is against the Railway Labor Board rather than against the railroads, and, therefore, in opposition to the Government. The Board, after careful investigation, determined upon certain working conditions and wages which were not acceptable to the shopmen, who then quit their jobs. Thereupon these positions were declared by the Board to be open, and the strikers were declared to be no, longer employes of the railroads. The demand of the strikers now is that they be allowed to return to the abandoned jobs with all seniority rights, and that the men who remained loyally at work and those who came in later be discharged. In the light of the fact that there are about 50,000,000 gainful workers in the United States, and that only 3,195,651 are dues-paying members of the American Federation of Labor, it would seem not to be in the interest of the general body of workers to permit the minority to dictate who shall and who shall not work. The momentous question before the country today is whether the radical leaders of organized labor are to continue to exercise an artificial control over American industry, and whether this control is to be strengthened by compromise of the inherent American principle of the right to work in the settlement of the present strikes. TT is time to urge upon public officials and private citizens that in behalf of national rights and safety, no sanction shall be given to any compromise or settlement of either the present coal or railroad strikes which does not definitely and firmly establish in unequivocal language and as a precedent for all time to come, the principles laid down in the decision by the Roosevelt Anthracite Coal Strike Commission in 1902, that “the right to remain at work where others have ceased to or to engage anew in work which others have abandoned, is part of the personal liberty of a citizen that can never be surrendered. * * # No person shall be refused employment, or in any way be discriminated against on account of membership or nonmembership in any labor organization; and there shall be no discrimination against or interference with any employe who is not a member of any labor organization, by members of such organization.” It is time for all citizens to uphold our established institutions; the perpetuation of the rights of property; the sacredness of the law, and the inviolableness of the Courts, and to resolutely oppose encroachments on these principles. Patriotic citizens everywhere must see the folly of the uprooting of economic and other laws and the destruction of constitutional guaranties for the purpose of dictating who shall and shall not be employed, what minimum wage they shall be paid, how little work they shall perform, from whom they shall buy, to whom they shall sell their services or product, how little work they shall produce for a maximum earning, and how few American boys shall be allowed to learn trades. The Associated Employers of Indianapolis, Inc. 1406-1407 Merchants Ba lk Building
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