Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 136, 8 June 1922 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN -TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND.. THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1922.

PAGE THREE

DRUNKENNESS CHARGE IS LODGED AGAINST GREENVILLE RESIDENT GREENVILLE, Ohio, June 8. Orville Norlacher is locked up in the city prison on a charge of intoxication and driving an automobile while-intoxicated. Norlacher -was arrested at 2:15 o'clock Wednesday morning by Offic

ers McClellan and Fierstein. He was found asleep in his car at a garage at his home, after a collision with a car belonging to Virgil Garett, which happened on Plum street between Hall and Martin streets. Garett reported the affair to the police. The radius rod on Norlacher's machine was broken, the front spring and lights knocked off and a jug of corn whisky which Orville had in the machine, was thrown onto the street through the windshield. Garett's car was also damaged in the collision. How Norlacher, who was alone in the machine, managed to get the damaged car into the garage is what is puzzling the authorities as he was alone at the time of the collision. Norlacher will have his trial before Mayor Fitzgerald when he sobers up. Driller Sues Oil Concern. Isaac Macy, of Indiana, has filed suit in common pleas court against the Greenville Oil company, Limited, for the sum of $410 and interest for labor performed on lands leased by the company in Mississinawa township, between June 1, 1921 and June 1, 1922. Macy is an oil driller.

RETAIL TRADE IMPROVING CaU hmv Irvreoee irkThre Month

PCftrlNT i

71921 im cs h i'UHE i JULY i AU$ i SEf i OCT t NOV i EEC i JAN t f SB i Hflt i APR i HW I .

PCACCMT

I3S ;i2 : 4-X ioS 1 4 - 90- ' r I 1 : do- -

150

5

Labor War in West Virginia By FREDERIC J. HASKIN

GREENVILLE, Ohio, .Tune S. John C" .-. 1 nn ' t . ... ' .

. oiepufu, a, Ansonia, inaictea by a

jrrand .jury at the May term of court

for holding up and taking away from

.lames hnitler, a erarase man at Brad

X, ford in February last the fum of $S.S0 and who pleaded not guilty when arraigned, voluntarily went into court Wednesday rnd changed his plea to

eunty. His attorneys asked that he be sentenced to the' Mahsfieia reformatory. Judge. Teegarden, after reviewing the crime of Stephen, refused to send him to the Mansfield prison, but Instead sentenced him to serve ten years in the Ohio penitentiary, which is the minimum sentence for crimes of, this character, the maximum being 2 years. Stephen is the man who set a mattress on fire in the county jail, about two wopks ago, and assaulted Sheriff Wagner in an attempt to escape from jail. ,' ' " Stephen received his sentence about. :1:30 o'clork. and at 10:35 he was en route '.to the Ohio penitentiary, in

charge of the sheriff. Recovering from Burns. Little Jack McNeeley, son of Mr. rnd Mrs. Harry McNeely, who was so severely burned a few days ago when lie caught hold of a telephone wire that was charged with several hundred volts of electricity, is gradually improving. It can not be definitely stated at this time whether the litle 4elhow will lose any of his fingers. Earl Lee, a young man about 21 years old. who is supposed to be deficient mentally, was taken to police headquarters Tuesday night on a charge of annoying two young girls, the daughters of Forrest Murphy, and J. M. Winters. Lee was identified by both girls. His case is to be heard before Mayor Fitzgerald Friday evening. He is said . to have served a term in the reform .4- school at Lancaster.

YJ Lytle-Townsend Suit. The care of Frank Lytle against C. M. Townsend for injunction and accounting, etc., was called up in common pleas court Wednesday morning before Judge Teegarden and jury, but after a little of the testimony had been heard, was settled and dismissed

by agreement of the attorneys for the ' plaintiff and defendant. Defeats Daylight Saving. At the meeting of the city council Tuesday night,, the "daylight saving'" ordinance was read for the third time,

and was defeated by a vote of three

yeas to four nays. The members voted as follows: Yes, Hartzell. Over-

holser and Warner. No, Howard. Shaf- j fer, Monger and Skidmore. The de-1 feat of the measure is a great disap-;

pointment to the citizens who were trying to have same adopted, and it is stated by some active supporters of 'he movement that they, will make an effort to have the matter reconsidered.

WASHINGTON, D. C, June 8. j Such conflicting testimony has been brought out in the West Virginia treason trials, which have been dragging along at Charles Town for weeks, that the general public is more mystified than ever as to the fact3 in this great labor conflict. Today the average man knows little about the situation other than that there has been prolonged controversy between Wesi Virginia miners and mine operators, that there have been disorder, lawlessness, and Joss of life and property, that conditions approximating civil war have existed, and that it has been necessary to send in Federal troops to restore and , to maintain order. Growing-out "of all this have come

almost countless injunction, proceed

ings and lawsuits in the courts, and

and resulted in the invasion of the constitutional and economic rights of the workers. Menace to Public Welfare "Conditions of the West Virginia non-union fields and the controversy there are a menace to the public welfare, prevent the stabilization and orderly development of the entire bituminous coal industry, and tend to foment discord and unrest in all other Industries. "Recognition of the rights of the workers to join the union will not result necessarily in the unionization of the non-union fields. "The United Mine Workers of America is a lawful organization, it does not seek the expropriation of private property, and it is not in a conspiracy with the operators of the Central Competitive Field against the non-union operators in West Virginia. "The non-union operators of West Virginia are in a conspiracy with the United States Steel Corporation, the

Pennsylvania Railroad, and closely

affiliated financial and business In

terests, in the so-called open shop movement which alms to break down and destroy all trade unions." Both sides advance solutions of the difficulty which are quite as much at variance as their general contentions.

According to the operators the only

solution is to give them a free hand

in conducting their business and op-' erating their business and operating their mines on their own terms and( conditions, and to bar the union from!

tution, to expropriate the properties of If" attempt to organize the workers;

the operators. - " u"iu"

TS

0

45

30

15

O

BASED ON REPORTS OF 189 DEPARTMENT STORES TO THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD COPYRIGHT 1922 Br SCIENCE SERVICE, VASHINGTON.D.C

Immediately interested in the conflict accepted as fairly accurate, the public may be assured of the further fact that it has been and is a costly struggle. The miners' union has expended millions of dollars in organization work, in supporting strikers and their families who were evicted from their homes, and in fighting the various legal proceedings in the courts. There has been no estimate of the aggregate expense to the operators, but their bill of costs must necessarily, be almost as large as that of the union. In addition their is the drain upon the taxpayers of West Virginia and the Federal Government, as well as a large if somewhat intangible expense to the general' public due to increased cost of coal and the effect of the controversy upon all other industry.

That the struggle will be prolonged i indefinitely is apparent from the un-j yielding determination expressed by leaders on both sides. Unfortunately.! from the public viewpoint, it is a fight! that cannot be fought to a finish with

a decision that the defeated must accept. Accordingly the public not only may be unable to decide who is right and who is wrong in West Virginia, but may never see a victor emerge from the fray. "Meanwhile, the public pays and pays.

"There is a conspiracy between th-3

I On the other hand, the union lead-

WCCU IU9I ... ,

union and the mine owners and oper- V , . IC y ,oluttuu ators of the Central Competitive Field j f?ve the miners in the non-union fields

of union membership and legitimate trade union activity.

With the foregoing presentation of

West Virginia in order to handicap or to destroy the non-union operators as rnmnotltnra in tYtn marl-fita ti-i r-V, t Vi fi

now reach, and where by reason ofjthe contending claims of the parties

their lower production costs and greater efficiency they now have an advantage over the unionized Central Competitive- Field." - Turning from these contentions of the operators we have the claims of the miners as epitomized by Vies President Murray, of the . union, as

follows

HIS FRIEND RECOMMENDED THEM "Six years ajro," writes W. H. Shadwell, Stanley, Va., "I had kidney trouble, and at times was unable to raise myself In bed. Foley Kidney Pills were recommended to me by the Chief of the Fire Department. After using 3 bottles I was completely relieved and have never had a return of the symptoms." Why suffer when you can ot relief frnm rheiimn Mf naina ttarlc

lne miners nave tne con-; ache, swollen, sore and stiff joints

CHEVROLET

Four - Ninety TO URING

$200.00 Down Balance $35.50 per month E. W. Steinhart Co. 10th & Sailor Sts. Phone 2955

I I I L T. .j , , At Kennedy's ,

Genuine Palm Beach

mil

ALSO EUREKA TWEEDS

Guaranteed to hold Priced special ' at

their shape.. S15.00

STRAW HATS At this price you. can well afford to pay

$2.00

Most Eiscr vmsvc Met and. &ovs

803 Main Street

the indictment of several hundred ! ritrht of collective bargaining, the

miners on treason and murder charg- right to join the union and the right jes. Viewed from any angle it is an to engage in legitimate . trade union

ugly mess. i activities. Their rights, it not specif - Opinions as to which side is right ically guaranteed by the organized and which side is wrong are based , law of the nation, are contemplated

StttUtional rights of free speech and sleep disturbing bladder weakness and

free assemblage in which they should A G jjuken Drug Co., 626-628 Main St. be protected. They have also the Advertisement.

largely upon prejudices. Information

and evidence upon which to form a conclusion are subject to the same bias. It is possible, however, to present a background for the current news from WTest Virginia. Thanks to the investigation conducted by the Senate Committee of which former Senator Kenyon ' was chairman, we can get at just what each side contends for and seeks to establish as the facts in the case. The contentions of the operators as shown by the record of this investigation have been summarized as follows: "The operators have a constitutional right to operate their mines on a non-union basis, to substitute the individual contract for collective bargaining in their relations with their employees, to prevent all efforts to unionize their employees, to bar union members from the mining camps and properties and even from the counties in which those properties are situated, and to refuse to deal directly or indi

rectly with the union. Their employees are contented and do not desire t$ join the union, and therefore, there i no controversy between them and their employees. "All the trouble in the non-union fields has been due to the efforts of the union to organize the workers therein. ;

"Unionization means frequent strikes for imaginary causes, with resultant increased costs of production, less of efficiency and higher prices for coal. "The union has resorted to violence and to the destruction of property in an effort to Intimidate the operators and force their employees to join the union. Claim Union Is Unlawful

"The United Mine Workers of Amer

ica is an unlawful organization b

cause it aims, as shown by its consti-

by the fundamental guarantees of the Constitution, and have the highest sanction of all law, organic or statutory, namely, the approval of enlightened public opinion and common practice in all industries in all civilized countries. "The problem in West Virginia is not a question of unionism versus nounionism, but is a question of the es

tablishment, acceptance and observ

ance of fundamental principles and practices which are essential to peace and orderly progress in all industry. "The trouble is due solely to the da-

nial by the operators of the right of

their employees o join the union, and

to the methods adopted by the opera

tors to enforce that denial methods

that were coercive and intimidating

You1!! Say It's Fine ZYVISSLERS POTATO BREAD Sold at All Groceries

ZWISSLER'S 23 S. 5th St

A Special Sale of Felt Mattresses

Not often are pure layer Felt Mattresses, wjth roll edges, biscuit tufting and fancy art ticking, offered at a price as low as

$Q50

See us now for other June bride bargains. Holthouse

530 Main St.

', .is

m

t

The ball team in action, the picnic holiday, the week-end party there are always plenty of picture possibilities for the - - KODAK With a Kodak it is fascinating fun to make pictures and it's easy, too. We have Kodaks that are admirably suited as gifts, and we will gladly show them to you.' They are priced as low as $6.50, and they are all autographic. QUIGLEY'S 4th & Main

PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRING' RESULTS

NOTRE DAME INSTRUCTOR HONORED BY STUDENTS (By Associated Press) SOUTH BEND, June S. In recognition of his 27 years of service as instructor of accounting at the University of Notre Dame, Brother Cyprian recently was honored at a banquet. One hundred and fifty commerce students attended.

To Free Your Arms of Hair or Fuz2

(Boudoir Secrets) No toilet table is complete without a small package of delatone, for with it hair or fuzz can be quickly banished from the skin.. To remove hairs you merely mix into a paste enough of the powder and water to cover the objectionable hairs. This should be left on the skin about 2 minutes, then rubbed off and the skin washed, when it will be found free from hair or blemish. Be sure you get genuine delatone. Advertisement.

How I Got Rid of Burning Feel And Patna from Corns and Bnntona Without Soaking, Powders, , Plasters, Etc., After Suffering; Indescribable Foot Miser? for 20 Teara. Prof. F. T. Mclntyre, well known world tourist and lecturer, says: "For years I was compelled to wear ehoes two sizes too larire, to be able to walk with any comfort at all. I tried soaking my feet in medicated baths, powders, plasters and foottreatments galore, but the burning', callouses, and soreness refused to go, while the pains from corns and bunions continued to torture both mind and body, which upset my entire nervous system. One day, very fortunately, I met a lady from Egypt who gave me a little box of Gypsy Foot Relief, which she said was a secret from the desert. After using It a short time, the awful burning stopped, the callouses came off in chunks, leaving the skin of my feet clean and smooth, while the pains from corns and bunions seemed to disappear as if by magic. From that time, I said a Joyful good-bye to over twenty years of indescribable foot misery. I would not take a

hundred thousand dollars to again go through those years of agony. Now I feel like telling every foot Bufferer to get a box of the wonderful Gypsy Foot Relief." Note. Gypsy Foot Relief, referred to by Mr. Mclntyre, may be applied In a minute, without fuss or bother. Cure, quick relief comes three minptts later, or the makers give back the small amount you pay. It is sold n this city by A. G. Luken Droe Co., Qulgley Drug stores I three stores), Thlstlethwalte DrnR Stores 7 stores), and William H. Sudhoff. Advertisement.

y

Now $3185

buys the Marmon, formerly $5,000 a . finer Marmon than ever dependable economical distinctive a ,wonderf ul performer America's favorite fine car. Can you be content now with a lesser car?

MARMON

Chenoweth Electric Service Co. 1115 Main St. Phone 2121

NORDYKE & MARMON COMPANY

V

H. C. HASEMEIER COMPANY

STARTING SATURDAY A Great

It's Here

SHIRT SALE

Shirt

The greatest selling of men's fine Shirts in our career. Finer qualities than ever before more tasteful patterns, larger varieties. We have here Shirt values that not even the word wonderful can express.

f. JWiZjJSlr

sea m&tmz

Lot 1 Lot 2 Lot 3 Hundreds of these high-grade Shirts, . Made of the finest Madras. These As good as Shirts can be made ; made made of fine percales and cambrics, are the kind of Shirts that ordinarily from the finest materials, and the cut full, finely tailored, good pat- cost double the sale price. Absolute- patterns speak for themselves Shirts , j i ri.j ji.j.i- not manufactured by the mile, but terns, .rresn, new, ciean ana line. lynew, , iresn ana penect-periect in tailored every inch; A special lot Men will buy these by the dozen, fit, finish and all that particular men that we could not duplicate to sell for Sizes 14 to liy. Sale price ' require. Sale price less than $3.50. Sale price $1.00 $1.50 $2.50 3 for $2.85 3 for $4.25 4 ' 3 for 7-25 ..

Work Shirts

Just 10 dozen in the lot, made from a good, heavy Cheviot ; white hair-line stripe ; cut full and large; sizes 14 to 17. Sale price. . 3 for $1.95

69c

Work ShirtS Better Quality

89c

3 for $2.50

Your choice of best grades of Chambray or Cheviot, none better made; a full range of sizes, 14 to 1714.. Sale price. .............

ATTENTION! Our Men's Department complete in every detail, including Underwear, Night Shirts, Pajamas, Neckwear, Hosiery and Shirts all priced at the usual low prices always prevailing here. See the window display. A tip: COME EARLY!

t 1

Established 1851 s INDIANAPOLIS THE STORE WITH ONLY ONE PRICE T