Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 61, 21 January 1914 — Page 7
THE RICKMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 21, 1914
PAGE SEVEN
; fair to condemn unionism for the ac
tions of some of its unworthy members as it was to criticise other organizations for the misdeeds of their representatives.
"During the last legislature there
was a bill introduced wnicn was not for the best interests of the working 1 people, and a big fight was made
against it. A Richmond man, probably
the employer of more people than any-
good homes, a chance to save a little , one in the city, wno went up zvv per money, well fed children and content-' cent in my estimation at that time ment." when he bluntly remarked to me in
speaking of tills bill, mat ne was
'sick and tired of all this tomfoolery
LET EMPLOYER MEET THte EARNER (Continued from Page One.)
Bass reported that only one union
4 1 th A Attir - -i nnnr Kifiri tr OtlV t T0 11- I
ttV the sVgr mechanicsnion of which calied for employers rtlng whifh h i. . m0mh.P h- Rald that everything aimed to injuie unionism,
only conservative methods would be
LATE MARKET NEWS
NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS
Furnished by Corrcli and Tnocipsoa. I O. O. F. 31dg. Phono 1446.
Am. Can 33 Amal Copper 75 Am. Smelters 68 U. S. Steel 63 Atchison 98 St. Paul 103
Gt. No. Pfd 128 Ms
and that he stood for promoting the benign vaney io-j? best interests of the union. Mr. Jordan ! New York Central 931, then declared his belief that Richmond Northern Pacific 114 had the best class of employers of any : Pennsylvania 114 city of the state, and he was applaud-1 Reading 170 ed to the echo. Southern Pacific 95V He took occasion to praise the en- Union Pacigc 159
terprise of the local unions in publish-
resorted to by the members of this un
ion to win their fight for recognition Special guests of the Central Trades council were Mayor VV. J. Robbins, exmayor Dr. W. V. Zimmerman, Chief of Police Harry Goodwin, ex-chief I. A. Gormon, Charles W. Jordan, Rudolph G. Leeds, Edward H. Harris, Luther M. Feeger, W. R. Poundstone and Li. M. Shaw. Interesting toasts were responded to by these guests, although several of them were really too full of provender for utterance, having previously attended the Commercial club banquet at the Westcott hotel in honor of a delegation of Marion business men. Fahlsing Presides. William Fahlsing of the painters union anrl nrpRidpTit of tho trades council
presided over the banquet and showed j up, he declared, himaeir in ho an xf pntionsllv well ! such questions in
qualified toastmaster. President fahlsing is well posted on labor questions and contributed numerous interesting comments during the course of the evening in introducing speakers. President Fahlsing turned on the flow of oratory for the evening by urging all classes of citizens to "put their shoulders to the wheel" in a combined and well directed effort to make Richmond "bigger and a better place for all of us to live in." lie predicted a prosperous year for the city and then intmdnriwl Mavftr "Rnhhins as thfl first
speaker. The mayor, suffering from ue "toughs" posing as "sympathizers, the effects of an overly burdened com- He related many amusing instances missiary department, obtained at the fnd the banqueters enjoyed hearty earlier banquet, called for a boiler- laughs. Chief Goodwin spoke brielly maker to reline his boiler. Laughter n,i declared his thorough sympathy greeted this sally but to his sorrow no 'r union labor. L. M. Shaw was anboilermaker was present. Mr. Robbing other interesting speaker and Charles traced the history of the labor move- K"k. a member of the Typographical ment and declared himself the good "n. rendered two ot ins always popfriend of the trades unions, declaring u'ar ormc songs. that It had been not only beneficial Stem, president of the sheet to the workers of this country but also metal workers, declared unionism to the republic. stands fo,th moral up,m ?f h,! , masses and there was a moral uplift Criticises Piece System. even in a strike ,f waRed for a just Dr. Zimmerman, braving a threat of cause; that there was a benefit even pneumonia to attend the banquet, also jn 8ucn a strike even if it was lost, spoke in high praise of unions but ex- -The revolutionary war cost much pressed the opinion that each union j niore than the tax on tea, but no one should have a working . standard to wjn dispute the justice of that war," compel all tt members to render ex- le remarked. Mr. Stein also declared pert and competent services. He also tnat bloodshed was not a necessary sharply criticised the piece-work pay- adjunct of a strike and that if he ment system, declaring he had once j thought it was he would quit unionism been a victim of it when he was a a once. casketmaker. Under this system the j ihe unon mon wno attended the scale of wages is fixed by the work j banquet were: Frank Hartzler and C. done by the most expert and fastest i j. Turner, musicians: Ben Thomas,
34 76 Va 68 64 98 104 12SH4 154 93 Vi 114 114 170 96 100
SOUTH SIDERS MAY GET SHOEJACTORY Committee Appointed to Visit Officers of Concern At Cincinnati.
REVIVAL NOTICE
There will be no divided revival meetings tonight as was announced last night, but Thursday night there will be a meeting for women at the tabernacle and a meeting for men at the Friends meeting house, Fifteenth and Main streets.
BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU TAKE FOR A COLD
The New Creation . Talking Motion Pictures Theatorium today and tomorrow only.
ing their unique New Years paper, sounding the "trade at home" movement and urging cooperation between employers and employes. "That's the kind of spirit that is going to do big things in Richmond and make our city the banner one of"the state," he concluded. i-.. H. Harris seemed to strike a popular note when he urged the settlement of wage scales on a sane l-asis. "In such matters employers and employes should meet each other half way and both show their cards face
By dealing with spirit of fair play
for both sides there would be much less needless wrangling, in his opinion. One of the "hits" of the evening was an address by I. A. Gormon. His first experience with unions, as a police officer for a railroad company, was when bricks and bullets wt're flying thick and fast, but as a "strike expert" he declared that most of the rowdyism in the course of strikes was
CHICAGO GRAIN WHEAT.
May July
CORN.
May July Mav July
OATS.
Open Clog 92 92 87 87 65 65 64 64 39 39 39 38
HEARD IN RICHMOND
The South Side Improvement association will make an effort to get one of the large shoe factories of Cincinnati, which is hunting for a new location, to bring its plant to this city. At a meeting of the association last night, B. A. Kennepohl and J. A. Having were appointed on a committee to visit the officers of the company at Cincinnati. The committee will open
negotiations within .the next two j the good work. Richmond people are
c t-no, uiuei 1uu.11 mis. oniv routine
The danger In using patent medicines Is from t!i stimulants and dangerous drugs which many of them depend on for their temporary effect. Because it is free from alcohol, narcotics and dangerous drops.
Father John's Medicine has had 50 years of success as a tonic and bodybuilder, for healing throat and lungs and In the treatment of coughs and colds. Father John's Medicine is a doctor's prescription, pure and wholesome. Guaranteed. (Advertisement.)
How Bad Backs Have Been Made Strong Kidney Ills Corrected. All over Richmond you hear it. Doan's Kidney Pills are keeping up
business was before the meeting.
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Jan. 21. Hogs: Receipts 47,000; market slow; top price $8.50; bulk of sales $8.35(3-8.45. Cattle: Re
ceipts 16,000; market slow;
J6.709.C0; calves $7.5011. Sheep:
Receipts 20,000; natives and westerns ?4. 80S6, lambs, $6.80(?J 9.60.
ASKS SUNDAY SHOOT Dayton Gun Club Secretary Issues Challenge.
A challenge for a Sunday shoot has been sent to the Richmond Gun club by J. I. Brandenburg, Dayton, O., and it is nrohahle that a matfh will Uo. a
beeves, j ranged within a few weeks.
j The matter has been placed in the j hands of the secretary, Walter Engle-
uretnt, wno will ascertain the feeling
PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK PITTSBURG, Jan. 21. Cattle: Receipts 200; market steady; choice beeves $12 down. Sheep and lambs: Supply 1,000; market lower; prime
telling about it telling of bad backs made sound again. You can believe the testimony of your own townspeople. They tell it for the benefit of you who are suffering. If your back aches, if you feel lame, sore and miserable, if the kidneys act too frequently, or passages are painful scanty and off color, use Doan's Kidney Pills, the remedy that has helped so many of your friends and neighbors. Follow this Richmond citizen's advice and give Doan's a chance to do th same for you. Mrs. Townsend, 72S X. Thirteenth St., Richmond, Ind., says: "While I never used Doan's Kidney Pills myself, I can recommend them in return for the benefit they brought in our home. One of the family suffered
of other members of the club before ! a great deal from disordered kidneys formally accepting the challenge. i and pains in the back. Doan's Kidney !
choon ?; Qri l.imha S rlnwn Hoes:
perpetrated not by the strikers but by; npf.pIntfl ssnn- market netive: nrime
heavies $8.6b8.70, pigs $8.50.
INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 21. Hogs: Receir-ts 9,000; market lower; tops $8.50 8.55, bulk of sales $8.50. Cattle: Receipts x,500; choice steers $8 $8.-,; other grades $7.10(7.85. Sheep and .ambs: rteceipts 300; market condition steady to strong; prime sheep $4.50(3 5.25; lambs $S down.
Brandenburg wrote that he will bring a bunch of crack shots to Richmond for a match any Sunday if the Richmond men will line up against them.
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Pills were used and they soon gave relief." t : - . . . . 1 1 . 1 .. ! .-. I a ..... :
n ice urn:, ill an iieaieiB. uun i own-1 ply ask for a kidney remedy get ; Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. Townsend had. Foster-Milburn ' Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. j (Advertisement) 1
EXTHA NIC!
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INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 21. Cash Grain- Wheat 98c, corn 67V-C, oats, 4OV2C.
worker, he said
Toastmaster Fahlsing defended the wage scale system under trades unionism. "This scale is established for n it .ft not- tvi y r r 5 f " r. coirl "T" hi Q T
insures such men a fair wage. The j Stein, sheet metal workers: E. S. Laybetter . workmen are rewarded by re- i man, W. A. Fahlsing, H. W. Longfel
machinists: James Coyle, Walter Hunt, moulders; E. J. Fitzgibbons, Charles Veregge, Charles Kirk, Lucius Harrison, typographical; J. C. Sauer, Harry Garvin, Harry Earnest. Ed.
TOLEDO GRAIN j TOLEDO, O., Jan. 21. Cash grain: ; Wheat 9814c, corn 64 c, oats 40!2c : cloverseed $8.87 M:- j
RICHMOND
MARKET
reiving more pay than the scale calls
for. In every union a workman when he joins it serves a probationary term and if he cannot do enough work to merit the wage scale he is apprenticed at smaller wages. If union workmen were placed on a graded wage scale there might as well be no unions, for petty jealousies would be aroused; the workman receives less wages than one of his fellows would be envious of him and the seeds of discoid would be sown at once." f-'irst Lock Out. R. G. L,eeds remarked when called upon for an address that the funda
mental ranse for unionism was the
-Inrk nut" nf Adam and Eve from the ! ijos. financial secretary;
low, C. E. Freeman, painters; William Reeser, Charles Graham, bartenders; William Porter, A. R. Rickner, William Kirckenbauer, John Helmich, brewery workers; J. M. Guyer, Herbert Inman, Villas Miller, barbers; Ed. Barth, Otto Biesman, Joseph Mulroney, John Hamilton, Charles Drifmeyer, cigar makers; William Smith, Charles Kavenv, Ellsworth Bass, stage
' mechanics; Clarence Veregge, II. H. J Pilgrim, J. C. Knight, printing pressnien; Harry Wales, Charles Muey,
i Ueorge Cox, laundry workers. 1 1
j The new officers of the council are: ! ; i William Fahlsing, president; William j Reeser, vice president; E. J. Fitzgib-!
Ellsworth :
LIVE STOCK iCcrrected daily by Anton phone 131G). Hoqs. Primes faverage 2'JO lbs) per 100 lbs Heavy mixed, per 100 lbs. . . . Rough, per 100 lbs $6
CATTLE. Choice steers, per lb 7c to 7'c Butcher steers, per lb ic Cows, per lb '. 3c to 5 Vic Bulls, per lb. - 5c to tie Choici veal calves, pe:- lb. . .SV&c to 9c
Stolle.
. . .$7.?r . . . 57. Ov.' to $C75
1 -
OLD-TIME COLD CURE DRINK TEA
Garden of Eden. Referring to the movement started last fall to thoroughly organize the various crafts of the city, Mr. Leeds stated he was in sympathy with the movement if it were carried out in a business-like, comprehensive and fa'r manner. lie said he had been an employer of union men ever since he had entered the newspaper business and regarded union labor as one of the most valuable assets of his business, because he was guaranteed expert workmanship and full service. "When you consider your wage scales, don't make them above the scales paid by competitors of your employers in other towns, because if you do that provides unfair competition for your employers," said Mr. Leeds, and he cited a few examples of the injustice of such action. This advice was received with hearty applause. Differs With Gompers. Mr. Leeds also took exceptions to the action of President Gompers of the American Federation of Labor in denouncing the efficiency wage scale, and he predicted the time when it would be generally established, to the "immeasurable benefit of both employes and employers." Mr. Jordan of the Commercial Club followed with a very interesting address, lie said he stood for the cause of union labor and that it was as un-
WHAT'S INIDGESTION? WHO CARES? LISTEN!
I Bass, recording secretary;
Trustees Benajah Thorn Sauer, J. E. Mulroney.
Clarence
.1. C.
Get a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea, or as the German folks call it, '"Hamburger Brust Thee," at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup o, boi.ing water upon it, pour through a sieve and . .-..11 I,
at Once, tO take Delineator , is most effective way to break a
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WANTED City solicitors
subscriptions at less than half price means easy money to hustlers. Miss Gilbert, Butterick Representative, Lee 13. Nusbaum Co., Pattern Dept.
congestion. Also thus breaking a
pores, relieving loosens the bowel
cold at once. It is inexpensive and entirely table, therefore harmless. i Advertisement)
vege-
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JAN. 24
Cohan and Harris Present the Sensational Comedy Success
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The Play That Causes Laughter to Become Contagious. One Year in New York, 6 Months in Chicago, 5 Months in Boston. Prices Matinee, 25c to $1.00; Evening, 25c to $1.50. Seats Tomorrow.
A Pair o! Gloves-Free With each order of one ton or more of Our Good Clean Coal Living Prices Fair Dealings RICHMOND COAL COMPANY Telephone 3165 Yards W. 2nd and PH. Ry.
18c Serpentine Crepes, Plain and Fancy Colorings, 122c Yard. Special Hosiery Savings Tomorrow.
NUSBAUM'S
25e Silk 8trlpa Voiles, many beautiful shades, 15c Yard. Special Undsrwsar Savings Tomorrow.
Del
nneator Campaimi
j a in si
a. rid Offering during our
2
all
Through the Publishers of the "Delineator" we are enabled to make a phenomenal offer for this hlgK class magazine. Richmond being one of the best Butterick towns for its size in the country, this remarkable offer is given here for the first time in the United States. "2,000 NEW SUBSCRIBERS" IS OUR SLOGAN City solicitors will call and explain this remarkable offer; give them a few moments of your time; 'twill be
worm wnue. iney ll nave somemmg interesting to ten or, wnne up town, uiup m oiw-
tkic iiniicnol ci ikc MtHr i-iviV-o rvffor fnr t Kp lifl inM trr Anv one can tell vou. We re
thused over it. You'll get the enthusiasm too. Come! Let's explain. Many are subscribing now. in tomorrow!
ii
ail en-
Drop
uantities are Larger and Savings More Extensive Than Any Previous Sale The Savings Speak for Themselves
75c, 25 and 27-INCH SILK POPLINS. Silk Crepes, Plain Brocaded Silks, Fancy Printed Silks, in all the A newest colorings, Jan. Clearance, per yard L.JKs 50c and 65c 36-INCH WOOL GOODS Fine Serges, Wool Batistes, Wool Crepes, in splendid dark shades, for school wear, house dresses, street dresses and skirts in browns.
tans, blues, red; most all good staple shades, per yard $1.00 36-INCH FINE SOFT TAFFETA SILK quite popular for spring wear. Sale price, per yd. . $1.25 50-INCH ALL WOOL STORM SERGES green, wine, tan brown, grays ; per yard only
35c
69 c 89c
$1.00 AND $1.25 FINE ALL WOOL SUITINGS, Durah Cloths, Taffetas, Ratines, French Serges, Viger- rJA eaux, Whip Cords, Crepes, etc., Sale price, yard. . I $5.00 CHINCHILLA AND ASTRAKHAN CLOTHS all colors, go at half price, jJ2 50 75c AND $1.00 SHADOW LACE FLOUXCTNGS, CAp 18 and 27 inches wide, per yard J3 FIGURED AND PLAIN SILK CREPES HKp $1.00 values, per yard only It-ll 75c AND $1.00 ALL-OVER LACES White and JQp ecru, per yard, only l
Tomorrow's Special Cleao-uip
Omr Ready-to-Wear Dep9t
Values So Remarkable that You'll Marvel at the Unusualness of these offerings. They are unprecedented in every respect and will double and triple the buying power of your dollars here Thursday.
Hn
WOMEN'S AND MISSES' COATS $10.00 to $20.00, tomorrow ONE LOT MISSES' COATS $5.00 to $10.00; tomorrow
ONE LOT WOMEN'S AND MISSES' DRESSES worth $7.50 to $15.00, tomorrow, dQ QC Sale price tJJO.IO
$4.95 98c
All Women's and Misses' Sweater Coats go at J4 Price $1.00-$1.50 Lingerie Waists tomorrow go for 50o $5.00 to $6.50 Silk Waists tomorrow, only $1.9S $1.00 Middy Blouses, tomorrow 396
(0)
o.
