Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 278, 26 September 1912 — Page 10
PAGE TEN.
THE RICHMOND PAIiliADnjJl AN1 SI3 N-TELEGRA5I, THURSDAY, SEPTE3IBER 2G, 1912.
PERKINS WAS ft VICTOR ON
FIRST BALLOT
State Federation , of Labor . Names Popular Leader as 1 Head of Organization for Eighteenth Time.
(Continued from Page One) scheme was the failure of the election board to call the name of Persa R. Bell, delegate of Typographical union No. 78, Fort Wayne. Bell was a member of the credentials committee and the oversight caused a ripple of amusement in the convention. The federation permitted him to cast his ballot by unanimous vote. 'iv Attack on Detectives. The Indiana State Federation of Labor today considered a resolution asking its legislative committee to draft a law to be presented to the 1913 general assembly prohibiting the importation of private detectives in Indiana to harrass union men engaged in strikes. " The discussion followed the report of the resolutions committee opposing the adoption of a resolution presented yesterday that demanded the prohibition of private detective agencies from Having offices and doing work in Indiana. ; The Indianapolis News and other state organs that devoted whole pages to the delienation of the work of detectives in the recent dynamite cases were scored heavily by speakers. If was charged that factory owners import strike breakers under the guise of detectives. , John Keagan, of Indianapolis, a democratic member of the state legislature, said: "Oelman Smith of the News printed, pages of stuff identifying union men with dynamite ' outrages,, but now, when it has been proved that factory owners planted
dynamite in the homes of laborers in Lawrence, Mass., the News is silent." t Demands Publicity. - Keagan held that a law should be passed compelling detective agencies to file with the state officials a record of all cases they handle in Indiana and he said that if he were elected to the legislature this year he would introduce a bill asking for publicity on the working of detective agencies. Detective agencies were branded as ! criminal by William Houston, a mine union delegate of Terre Haute. He asserted that no institution had worked such injustice on the workmen as tflie detective agencies. He referred to conditions in West Virginia where detectives are now preventing the formation of unions among miners. Speakers expressed the opinion that they favored the protection of life and property through proper state and municipal police jurisdiction, but were opposed to the importation of strike breakers under the guise . of private detectives. Denounce Outrages. J. W. Lackey, of Terre Haute, a nine union delegate, was bitter in his denunciation of the outrages committed by detectives in West Virginia. William F. Worland, of Fort Wayne, .who was discharged from the Packard and Bend Piano factory because he i was a union man, detailed the work ; of the detectives there. Worland 1 claimed that factory owners engaged ' detectives to pose as laborers, secure j admission to the unions and then be-
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tray the organization to the employers. 7 . Frank T. Hawley, affiliated with the mine workers, formerly a newspaper reporter and one of the men who reported the Homestead strike for Pittsburg papers, urged that the private detective system be abolished. The federation voted that the resolutions committee reconsider the proposition and bring another resolution before the body. Demand an Explanation. Albert J. Beveridge, Progressive candidate for governor, was asked to explain within ten days why he did not order the Spietz and Worch company, cigar manufacturers of Detroit, Mich., to cease using his name on a brand of their cigars. The Cigar Makers' union of Indiana alleges that the company employs children in the factory. William Houston, of Terre Haute, said that Mr. Beveridge had informed him that his (Beveridge's) name was used in conformity with a business contract into which he had entered several years ago, not knowing the conditions under which the cigars are made. Mr. Houston said that he inferred from Mr. Beveridge's answer that he was bound by a contract and could not prohibit the use of his name. Pass Resolutions. The resolution asking Mr. Beveridge to make an explanation was passed by a rising vote of the federation. The legislative committee was instructed to frame a bill for the next session of the legislature demanding weekly pay for miners in Indiana. The Packard and Bend pianos were placed on the unfair list. Proceedings of the State Federation hereafter are to be printed on union made paper, in conformity with a resolution adopted today. The legislature will be asked to pass a bill compelling persons working on steam boilers to take out a license. Hereafter no person will "be seated as delegate in the State Federation who does not wear at least three garments having the union label. Resolutions were adopted urging union men to buy tobacco that bears
the union label and to encourage the use of tobacco made by union men. Universal Label Defeated. The federation concurred in the report of the resolutions committee that the time was not opportune and ripe for a universal union label. The universal label proposition has been voted down regularly for many years by the State Federation. Speakers pleaded for the retention of individual labels now used by the different crafts. Advocates of the universal label argued that union men do not know the individual labels and that one universal label would simplify the recognition of union made goods.
ATTENTION SIR KNIGHTS! Richmond Commandery, No. 8, K. T., you are requested to assemble at the Asylum at 2 o'clock on the afternoon of Friday, Sept. 27 for the purpose of attending the funeral of Past Eminent Commander, Geo. R. Williams. (Signed:) Harry C. Keelor, E. C. Leroy E. Brown, Capt. Gen. 25-2t
The Final Test. "Yon are the first girl I have ever really loved," he declared. She looked doubtfully at him for a moment and then asked: "Have you ever been sensick?" "Yes," he replied, "but why do you ask?" "Take me," she said. "At last I have found an honest man." Chicago Record-Herald.
-OLIVER VISIBLE-TYPEWRITER
For Sale Cheap. Frrecv condition and does splendid writing. Could ship on approval and trial. Write to Charles W. Rlckart. K'nedal. Kans.
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JOY RIDE HALTED BY WRECKING RIG Spilling Out Two Men and a Woman and Causing a Flood of Booze.
Driving at a mad rate on an unimproved street, when one in in a
"pickled" condition may be an enjoya-
,ble diversion from the daily grind for some but it did not prove so for Harry King, Feab Carroll and Mrs. Kate Inderstrodt last evening when the vehicle in which the trio were riding skidded into a ditch at the North Tenth street bridge, the three being thrown from the rig. None was injured although a half dozen quarts were smashed, the sparkling liquor being spilled in the street. 5 An argument was then started as to who was to blame for the accident. The three became boisterous aJid nearby residents called the police. Patrolmen Menke, Longman and Little arrested the three. In police court this
mat "sne was there, but declared she was not guilty of public intoxication. One of the arresting officers stated that the woman was too drunk to stand up. It was necessary to call the patrol, ,he said. However, her hearing
was postponed until tomorrow morning at" 8 o'clock. ' King also pleaded not guilty to the charge of drunk. Carroll pleaded guilty and was fined $1 and costs.
An article mat has real merit should in time become popular. That such is the case with Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has been attested by
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