Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 271, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 March 1928 — Page 6
PAGE 6
GOODING SEES COAL CURE IN CONSOLIDATION Would End Over-Produc-tion: Life of Miners’ Unions Is at Stake. This is the last of three articles by Senator Frank R. Gooding of Idaho telling about conditions in the coal strike region of Pennsylvania. A Senate committee. headed by Gooding, recently made a tour of this section. BY FRANK R. GOODING (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service. Inc.) WASHINGTON, March 9. A great economic question is involved in the conditions leading to and arising out of the bituminous coal strike in Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia and elsewhere. Despite the appalling nature of the discoveries made by Senators Wheeler, Wagner, Pine and myself in the Pennsylvania fields as affecting the conditions striking and working miners are forced to bear, that is only the offshoot of a bad situation. The miners’ union feels its life is at stake in its present fight. Insofar as Pennsylvania is concerned, that is probably true. Part of the mining region has been working under union shop and part under open shop conditions. There has been much cut-throat competition that some railroads are able to buy their coal below the cost of production. Others pay only a little more. Fifty per cent of the coal mines now operating and 50 per cent of the miners now employed or on strike can produce all the coal that this nation requires. Thus, with no organization of the Industry, we have had serious overproduction. The case of the coal people is much like that of the farmers. The coal operators, it appears, haven’t- gotten together to violate or evade the Sherman antitrust law. Our committee is hopeful that some legislation can bring prosperity back to the coal industry. We must recognize that all the mines can’t operate all the time. We must bring about consolidations. The coal companies are entitled to
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a somewhat better price for their coal from the railroads. As it is now, the public sometimes has to pay too much for coal because the railroads are getting it below cost. The railroads should be willing to pay a fair price. It may be best to exempt the mines from provisions of the Sherman act. That will have to be determined. This country is not going to be saved by the captains of industry. History shows that selfishness and greed have destroyed one government after another. We can’t afford to have organized labor broken in Pennsylvania or elsewhere. Organized labor is essential to society. If it is destroyed, destructive forces in our country will organize into a force which will be likely to destroy government itself, i
WIFE INSPIRES MEMORY HOME Richest Straphanger Builds for Children. By United Press NEW YORK. March 9.—The world's richest straphanger, John Emory Andrus, 87, of Yonkers, N. Y., believes that a woman plays a large part in every man's success. Now that his fortune is about $80,000,000 Andrus remembers, the first few dollars he made selling fish to Horace Greeley, the poverty of his early school teaching days, and his early struggles when he founded a small chemical concern. It Is as a monument to these memories, and to his wife now dead who shared his lifelong struggle that he has founded the Julia Dyckman Andrus Memorial Home for Children, part of which is practically completed. The Memorial Home being built at Yonkers on the spot where his wife lived as a child, “is the outcome of suggestions from my devoted wife who has gone before me,” Andrus said recently. We always thought that little children and old people were equal subjects for our loving consideration.”
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Temperamental Stars Liked by Marion Talley
Prima Donna Admires Variety of Emotions in Other Opera Leaders. By Unitrrl Press NEW YORK. March 9.—Marion Talley, calm young prima donna of the Metropolitan Opera, admits that she likes displays of temperament and emotion—-on the stage. In fact her three favorite opera stars, Jeritza, Mary Garden and Geraldine Farrar, represent the exact opposite of her own self-con-tained disposition. . Each appeals to her for a different reason—in Jeritza it is beauty of appearance; in Mary Garden, a vivid and an exotic personality; in Farrar, charm and distinction of manner. Lovely to Look at "Jeritza Ls always so lovely to look at and her gestures are so exquisite,” Miss Talley said in an interview given United Press. “She was the first real opera star I ever saw. That was back in 1922 when I first came to New York for my hearing at the Metropolitan. Afterwards Otto Kahn gave us tick-
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ets for ‘Tosca.’ It was like a wonderful dream. "I prefer Jeritza when she wears her own wonderful hair. The black wigs that she has to put on for some of her roles are not becoming to her.” Expressions Are Vivid It is natural for Mary Garden to express everything she feels in a vivid way. Miss Talley said, adding that she, herself, could not be like Mary Garden and be natural. As for Farrar, the former Metropolitan favorite was the ideal of the younger star's childhood, and she has remained loyal to that ideal, though she has never seen Farrar in opera and has heard her sing only once in concert. FILM FA NS MA Y S MOKE Chicago Movie Advertises Special Privileges. CHICAGO, March 9.—The Windy Cty movie fan may now smoke while he is watching the favorite cinema artist do his stuff on the screen. One of the palaces of the silent drama carries this line in its newspaper advertising: "Ladies and gentlemen may smoke in luxurious loges.”
FREE IN GAMING CASES Charges of keeping a gaming house against Thomas C. Dillon. 742 S. Capitol Ave., and Clem C. Hendrickson, Severin, were dismissed in
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AGGIES TRIUMPH I>H United Press MANHATTAN. Kas., March . Kansas Aggies defeated University of Kansas, 40 to 30, in a Missouri Valley conference basketball game.
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