Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 176, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 October 1926 — Page 8
PAGE 8
BEST TO SETTLE LABOR DISPUTES OUTOFCOURTS Report Finds Industrial Courts Have Proved % Failures. Bv United Frees WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—Machlnery for voluntary agreement of Industrial disputes, such as the railway labor peace bill passed by Congress last winter, furnish far xpore hope o.f Industrial peace than industrial court acts, which have been tried and have failed. This is the conclusion of a committee of the American Bar Association, which has Investigated various industrial court proposals. It has been summarized by the United States Labor Department. In analyzing the thirty-nine bills now before Congress for the regulation of the coal industry and the prevention of strikes, the committee observes that ‘‘none of them go far enough to constitute a real solution.” “Where Judicial machinery has been tried out it has failed. The Canadian industrial disputes act is Inadequate, and the Kansas labor court law is unsatisfactory, even the United States Supreme Court being influenced as to this law by the conviction that as a matter of public policy, business was better off without compulsory adjustment of wages or prices," the committee said. “We believe that, instead of urging an act for an industrial court with powers of coercion, the bar should give Its attention to the encouragement of a movement for dealing with industrial controversy for agreement by the parties themselves, in line with the principles of the railway peace act. % “Our experience with the Interstate Commerce Commission and other boards quasi-judicial in character indicates that commissions more in the nature of fact-finding bodies are necessary, and the wiser course Is to let the parties concerned select their personnel.” PERFUME ‘ON THE AIR’ Device Sprays it Into the Air As an Advertisement. Bv United Press RIO DE JANEIRO, Oct. 29.—Perfume is considered essential to being well dressed in South America, and perfume vendors put their products “on the air” I norder to attract costumers. In Rio De Janeiro, perfume shops are equipped with an aparatus resembling an electric fan, which sends a constant spray of perfume into the atmosphere. Buenos Aires maintains regular perfume stations, where large forces of sales girls are kept busy. The stamps show the king in an admiral’s uniform. The two-shilling value is printed in blue, the threeemlling in mauve. ,
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COAL EXPERTS IN U. S Company Sends Delegation for International Confab. Bv United Frets PITTSBURGH. Pa., Oct. 99.—The Germans, considered the world’s leaders in coal research, will send their leading scientists to America to describe their discoveries. This step in international cooperation will be taken at the conference on bituminous coal at the Carnegie Institute of Technology on Nev. 15 to 18, President Thomas S. Baker announced today. Dr. Friedrich Bergius and Franz Fisher will represent Germany at the meeting. They are the Inventors of processes considered the most promising of all of the methods so
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cents, per kilo, but at the end of the dry season, butter usually advances to 9 mltrels per kilo. * In the late summer of this year, butter reached fifteen xnilreis per kilo, due to an unusually dry season which caused a shortage of the milk supply. The price of fifteen milreis per kilo, or about $1.02 per pound, was the highest recorded here In several years.
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