Newspaper Page Text
r THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER, FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1920. 11 1 fll ifrr If REDUCED PRICES ON ! igfW Dining Room L"" -"B onnortunIty to purchase :i fine dining ij " ijyr - ? . -sgiiO P I room table nt a big saving. They are all j Tjdji an !TTjE"" I AVc11 made of the newest styles. 'f tf KiBKlttits 4 'N0, 6 2. golden oak table, full quar ll llflllllKRhuiBSfi' i 4$' 1 tere(1 orik tab,e- extends to fi feet; top -15 I ' 'Jf 1 1 H JlHa I inches diameter. Regular price ?55.00 .... SJ 'No. K-2001 5 P. G-45 golden table', selected ,,-v, M(EZTX V quartered oak, extends to G feet; top 4c t f?(mF 7rtlta inches in diameter. ?47.00 values. a ? V$ W Reduced to $38 5$ No. K-2028.5-S-15 table, selected oak, f in-? Q2 jN0' K-04 3-9 P. S-54 golden oak table d?01 AH ij ished goldcu, $15 grade InpOvAo full quartered, ?100 grade iPOl.lU 4 No. K-2043-6-P. table,' y AQ( I No. D43-S-4S, lull quartered oak table, JCQ 7C $60.00 grade P40.0U '.$72.50 grade . tpOO.J a No. M-704-P. T:-S-48 Vr. O. table, C1 Qft f No., K-2095-8 P. S-48 G. O. table,, CQ IK L' $S0.00 grade pU4.0U regular price $72.50. Sale price 4DO. I J , 3J ' .... "-pal- J J Boyle Furniture Co. 3 I w Draperies, Wall Paper and Interior Decorations '-''jS?v. Pj "THESIGN OF THE ROCKING CHAIR" II i OGDEN, UTAH L HOOVER STATES I VIEWSJN LABOR mi Employes' Right to Organize II For Collective Bargaining ; Admitted Rj TYASHINGTOX, May .14. "The B '"' principle of individual freedom ro- Ha quires the open shop," Herbert Hoo-ver In doclarecl today In testifying' before the Hg ''senate labor committee at hearings on HI proposed legislation for the settlement Mm of Industrial unrest. Mr. Hoover, who was a member of President Wilson's second Industrial conference, said he did not believe' the relationship between employers and employes could be settled "by any form of legal repression, whether It ftf be injunction, compulsory arbitration or' industrial courts' : "Fundamentally," he declared, "all L such effort leads inevitably to th"e use Kv - of jails as a solution for disputes as P? to respective participation of labor and capital in Industrial profits and proceeds swiftly tpward .compulsory : labor, or compulsory wages, or niar- Ilyrdom." "No one doubts that the modern consolidation of tho employers over large units of employes giveB every justification and right for the organi zation of employes similar into units for the exertion of equality in bargain ing powers. Such organizations have I he light to present their own repre sentatives in bargaining. On the other hand there should be no compul uinn tn Inin aiinli nn nrfnTilrQ c Tim - principle of individual freedom re- quires the open shop." r ; Plan Is Approved. Mr. Hoover heartily approved the jl plan of the second Industrial confer enco for voluntary settlement of labor jyj troubles through cooperative agree- raj Senator Jones, Democrat, Now Mex- En ico, yanted to know Is labor had not am beca disturbed by excessive profits. BB.. "It has," replied Mr. Hoover, "but 93 it is difficult to say how far this has 'AJ helped to cause Industrial unrest, now 5T , Cheap coffees are not soj f ( very bad. All they do is 1 1 ' 1 1 to waste your money and jgr"'1-- spoil your breakfast.' : . But cheap . tea that's ; awful I s Cheap tea is loaded with" R j - tannin, which is bad for r the stomach and hard on the nerves. 1 Cheap tea isn't what it H pretends to be. It actually H costs more per cup than H fine tea even at a much H higher price per pound. B Avoid cheap tea by I getting Schilling's the H money-back tea, at your HL . rrroccr'w H k. 4- Schilling & Company H Sail Francisco ' with thev rising cost of living. There is no question as to the enormous in creasein profits, but what weight is, to be, given this requires very careful attention. There has been a big in crease In profits over the cost of labor but I cannot say to to proportion." On the question of strikes Mr. Hoover said a distinction should be drawn between conditions in this country and Europe declaring that; strikes for political ends had been re-j ported to in Europe, which had caused unnecessary alarm in this country. No Such Strltks. "There has been no taiiit of such strike order in this country," he de clared. "No attempt has been made by leaders of organized labor in the United States lb over-ride the ballot and labor leaders have discouraged! that use. There seems to be a mis representation as to whether the strilrn mav -Invplnn tntn n nnllllnfil weapon. But certainly that has not) been the case in the United States." Mr. Hoover thought it was almost impossible to legislate as to hours, of labor. Wages, he said, should lake into account the cost of necessities, savings and the enjoyment of all benefits of tho civilization of the time. Senator Phipps, Republican, Colo rado, called attention to the bonus paid employes by many industrial en terprises and to reports that labor 'leaders felt it should be discouraged. "-"In the aotual practice of the opera lion of the various devices, they fall into two general classes shaving of profits and sharing of savings," Mr. Hoover said. "It is difficult to reach a fair basl6 of settlement. The occa sional misuse of the system has led to the opposition of organized labor. "If profit-sharing is to be based on the conception thaht wages are to he just and that .profits are to be just and that profits nro to be an addition to pay. then it would be in proper form, but not when used as a weapon to hold down a man's pay. Theintangible agi tation in industrial life concerns the question of a division of surplus, not ; the question that employers want to manage the business." CALF WITH EIGHT LEGS AND TWO BODIES BORN PORTLAND, Ore., May H. A cair with eight legs, two bodies and of the size of an ordinary calf two months old, was born at the state asylum farm, east of Salem, of a Holstein mother. The freak calf died fifteen minutes after birth. Tho "main" calf was of normal shape, the extra four legs and small body growing between the legs of tho larger body and on its stomach. All of the legs were fully developed. It is being mounted at a local estab lishment. oo DINE BRITISH MERCHANTS. WASHINGTON, May 14. Hope for continued friendly business relations between Great Britain and this coun try, was expressed by Secretary of Commerce Alexander, at a dinner giv en in honor of the British merchants now touring the United States, Exten sion of foreign trade by this country may result later in friendly coopera tion, he said, but the present friend ship should never decrease. uu BREAKS 3HS ARM KATSVILLB, May 1-1. Grant, the young son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wil liams, while playing at the high school campus yenlcrday morhlng, rell and broke his right arm near the elbow. uu CONSUMPTION OF COTTON. WASHINGTON, May 11. Cotton consumed during April amounted to 567,839 bales of lint and 29,965 bales of llnters, the census bureau an nounced today. .nn For Subscription and Advertising Deportment, Call Phono No. 56. RANDOM REFERENCES Theft Reported The Ddmke. Floral Shop on Twenty-fourth street reported tho theft of $25.04 to the police to-l day. The money Was contained in a leather bag, Phone 22. Taxi, day or night. 1010 Card Party Brotherhood of Ameri can Ygomcn, No. J 505, will give a card party this evening in'tliiTw". O. W. hall. High Five will be plaved during the evening. The parly opens at S o'clock. At Salt Lake Joseph B. Bates, county attorney, was in Salt Lake on business connected with his office yesterday. . Prompt service; "cleaning, pressing. Phone 513. ' 1509 Lost Large maltese cat-. Reward if returned to 1203 Twenty-fifth street or phone 157S. 1483 Takes Ogden Job Royal C. Younger, of Provo has arrived in this city and taken his newly appointed duty with the railway mail service. PAPER cleaners. Lowe-Greenwoll. Telephone 2724-R. Sli Building cermns I'ernm iq uunui la one-story frame residence on Ches- Iter avenue between Jefferson andi Madison avenues, was granted this' morning to Roscoe M. Morris by the city engineer. The building will cosii $3500. Permit was also granted to J. S. Peterson to erect a frame residence on B avenue betweon Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth street n.t a cost of $1500. Florists Telegraph Dollvery Assn Dumke Floral Co.,-Plion5-250. '560 Fails to Appear Chee Maggee, Jap anese. Avho was arrested last night on a charge of drunkenness by Officer Ezra Fair, failed to appear, this morn ing to answer the charge before Judge D. R. Roberts of ths city court. His bail, amounting to $60, was declared forfeited. Maggee declared last night that he had been drinking saki. Coal Vc can take Caro of all short age; 1200 tons in shed. Phono 27. John Farr Coal Co. S2( Case Dismissed Upon recommend ation of County Attorney Joseph B. Bates, the case of John H. Johnson was dismissed by Judge D. R,. Roberts in the city court this morning. Attor ney Bates said that Mrs. Johnson had made a complaint alleging wife deser tion but that in the meantime Johnson and a minor child had returned and effected a reconciliation. Ogden Typewriter House for type writers and repairs, 2422 Hudson Ave. Phono 236. Call Offerman, the plumber. Phono 2631-J, 045 Ice. Pure distilled exclusively. M. L. Jonea Coal & Ice Co. 1264 Arlington Hotel, under new manage ment. A clean and refined home for ladies and gentlemen. Hot and cold water in every room. Private tele phone and baths, 2439 Washington ave-! nue. 137u ran, MOOSE Special feature tonight. Everybody out TED "YV ATKINS, Consul. Ray Rceder, Secretary. 1510 t - 1 1 4 I Bramwell's I 9 Desks, Chairs, Filing- Cabinets J and everything for the office 1 I Office Supplies I Fine Commercial Printing g Good Printing Costs Less CHAS. DEE PRINTERY 2428 Hudson Phone 792-M PERNELL FOOT SPECIALIST Phone 260 Over Western Union, Stevens Bldg. v '. . j I'lR'S EFFECT ON j BRITISPNOSI I Don't Believe That War Has I Wrecked British Neutrality, I Says Marie Corelli j 1 By MARIE CORELLI j a Famous Authoress, who Wrote "Thel- 3 p ma," "Barabas," "Soul of LHIIth" i Q and "The Sorrows of Satan." a (Copyright 1920, by the Newspaper En- 3 s terprise Association LONDON, Way 14. Some of our Eu- g lopean friends, and many of our trans 3 g Atlantic ones also, have expressed a fl quite reasonable fear that "the nien-'J 5C tality of the British people has beenM seriously, even dangerously affected fe by the war." i One leading French journal recently i devoted three columns to "Le Peril h 1 Mental," .that is, the mental peril of - 3 S . Great Britain. I 3 W This is no cause for wonder. The p I British brain would truly seem to be Hj j 'wavering in the balance and the Brit- I W ish common sense degenerating into a senile decay. j jfe What with the wide and ridiculous j P3 publicity given to the self-delusions ; p and wilful hallucinations f neurotic h ' persons craving for notoriety, and the ! tlamboyant advertisement bestowed K on the despicable and unfilial conduct i of a girl who ran away from her par- I yC ents on the wicked pretense of com- 5 K mitting suicide, merely to be away 3 p with her lover, and tho disgustingly in- 3 jC accent pictures of semi-naked women i in the journals of "society and fash- t h ion" it is only natural to conclude that 1 J'C the once restrained, reserved, dignified 3 SS. and home-loving people of Britain 2 win; inn twuuuh. nue ine uncivilized j savages or wild beasts in a jungle. g But let me assure my American J readers that it is not the "peoplo" who' J are to be judged in these matter?. S They are not insane. They are not 1 3 scuttling about naked and unashamed 'I as the low pictorials represent them.'X They are altogether isolated and apart is from such antics. j 3 -The whole degrading business is I started and kept by the press ; and not a every quarter of the press cither. Only 5 those particular sections which emplov C Cheap Small Boy. The Cheap Small j Boy is taken on the staff of certain t I journals to create "sensations." " k I Oliver Lodge, Conan Doyle and Vale l I Owen are all "nuts" to the Cheap I Small Boy. He cracks them with avid- S ity and divides their kernels over g whole areas of newspapers. Z "Strained Relations" Made to Order i j The vagaries of "spiritualism" and "spiritualists" would all have been ig I kill fi-.. t , HI. . , UUL iui -luu VI1UHI OIIIUI1 iJOV. The "strained relations" hinted at aY becoming manifest between Great Brit-1 iaIn and the United States are the work jof the Cheap Small Boy. ! I Seeing and knowing this, I, as an in-! dependent author, bound by neither' ' fear nor favor, earnestly ask all my readers to realize the Cheap Small iBoy's existence, and not to put his I muddle and meddle down to tho people of Great Britain,, The people are not the pres. t tlie present juncture, "especially, they should be wholly dis sociated Trom It. " I Tho people of Britain are as good,! as Tine, as sane and sound a people as can -be found anywhere the so ! called "popular" press is as bad, cor rupt, aa time-serving and unprincipled as any profiteering business In all the world. And the people know iL j The plain British "man-iri-the-street"j ;has a wholesome "contempt for it and, for the Cheap Small Boy it employs! to raise "scares" and exploit frauds, nnrl tnk-pR i! nf tic . w vfii iniuuiiuii. Lor him if he believes In the spiritualism of some of tho people he exploits and he smiles compassionately. As a matter of plain fact, it is the Cheap Small Boy that works up all our international and home dissensions. He blazons a lio today in order to con fute it by another lie tomorrow. In tho "spiritualistic" craze he finds a field for his mock-serious and utter ly stupid vaporings, and he has neither conscience or considerattiqn for the things adjudged sacred by the bulk of the British people. He knows well enough that the "mediums" who take money for fooling neurotic .people are only the Inferior imitators of similar imposters who have In previous ages sought to delude mankind such as Cag liostro and others skKilled in trickery. And he calculates (as unfortunately ho Is able to do) on an only too evident phase in tho social ethics of the hour the laxity and general flabbiness of the churches. If ho rrn r-.:rnnrn rn hlnonlmmv nnA j atheism lie docs it gladly. One may . ,think of stern old Carlylo's adjuration "Oh, it's fl 'htful when a whole na- m Hon has fc otten God! has remem- m bored only ..fammon and what Mam- if rann leads to!" H This is the chief cause of the mad- 3 ness of "spiritualism" not only one nntion, but many, have "forgotten g God" and thfe Cheap Small Boy press is the aider and abbellor of the disas- 1 trous forgetfulness. Those who adjure H the Higher Spiritualism invariably B deal with tho lower, and he who shuts 5 the door ngalnst God, opens It to the S devil. It has always been so and al- T ways will be so. No ono has oven been a more devout B disciple of spiritualism in its highest, 1 moat divine sense than myself and in 1 every book I have written, I have I sought to raise my renders above the level of materialism to the height of those loftier sciences which tproVe the soul's advancement, and the happiness of the Hereafter, which could not pos sibly be Interrupted by a compelled re turn to each through any "modium" whatsoever. To begin with, a released soul does, nob speak uny known lnng- uage centalnly not bad English 1 But I am not. (thank God) a favorite Q : wth the Cheap Small Boy, on the Brit- 1 ish press. He has never read anything I have written, and boasts of It, I 1 boast of it, too! It's a rare thing (0 I be proud of. I I do earnestly request our American I friends to set mischief down to the 1 source from whence it springs, the 1 Cheap Small Boy. H0 aid more to fo- 1 r meht the Groht War than anv othdr K .influence. He is doing more 'now to B sow discord among our people than U can bo easily Imagined. 1 .Influenza "Spread" His Invention 9 Our govomnienls may have as mnnv 1 faults as they have difficulties, hut the 1 Chimp Small Boy will make their Case 1 aM'criss-croSss" as be can. He sonic- 1 limes uscsUhe editorial "We" but he'e R only I he Cheap Small Boy playing SPECIAL v p 1 I ' " FOR " H My SATURDAY : J.ilM ' ' ONLY ' ' 1 ' 1 A BIG REDUCTION IN, MILLINER?! jj I I HATS FOR LESS THAN ONE-HALF THEIR REGULAR . PRICE Here's your chance to buy a new hat. A wonderful line of trimmed hats in all the new shades, '.tailored IH F suit hats and dress hats. Divided into three lots. x 5 r H I - : 5 : LOT 1 LOT 2 LOT 3 1 - ! Hats up to $22.50 Hats up to $16.50 Hats up to $12:o0'' $9.95 $6.95 $4.95 ; I I I ?j . BANDED HATS A Ji k. In 6nc lot white Ulans, white ribbon hats, light colored sport hats, also a nice . line of -navy, b'rqyii.'and j i (t black sailors. Values up to $15,00. V. I v UNTRIMMED SHAPES ?B I I I J list 0 1 i C"Jii Jco 1: shapes left, in all shades and all sizes- will go 'Saturday for only .ij 4 t COME AND SEE THEM "1 LASX & THOMAS II I MILLINERY II peok-a-boo. He's the wicked "sensa tion seekCi" the exploiter of murder, j ! bigamy and low sexualism, taking a1 fevered delight in selecting cases of moral and menial lapses In members of the social community, and giving them "scare" headlines in the same style as he trealr an outbreak of Influ enza. (It may be Baid that the "spread" of influenza itBelf has always been largely due to the Chea,p Small Boy's "spreading" of it). It would be well It we could tie the Cheap Small Boy up In a sack and drown him in the deep sea only the probability isthat he would rise like a cork and wave a new "scare" head ing as to his "spiritual" visions! Anyway, good American friends, learn to know him when you see or hear him bellowing lies through a newspaper megaphone. Don't mistake the British public for the Cheap Small Boy of the Brtish press! 00 MINES AT BUTTE NOT HIRING LATE STRIKERS BUTTE MONT., May 14. The Butte mining companies have not begun to take on men since the managements recently announced that they would no longer employ members of the I. W. W. The members of that organization arc holding daily meetings, but they have not been well attended since ac tion was taken declaring the strike off. Because of tho strike of the work iugmen's union, street car service re mains suspended in Butte. The team sters' threatened striko will not come to a head until tomorrow and in the meantime there is some possibility; that it will be averted. In other re spects tho labor situation in Butte re mains without change 1 FIGHT FOR PROCEEDS ! OF PASADENA GAMES 1 . SAN FRANCISCO. May 14. A defi nite ruling on the controversy over an alleged guarantee by Pasadena, Cnl., business men of expense money for athletavcompeting in tie Pacific coast tryout June 2C for the American Olym pic games this year is expected today or tomorrow from the Olympic games 1 committee, at New York, according to officials of the Pacific association of the A. A. U. Sam Goodman, member of the local Olympic games committee, said today that at a conference In New York the southern California men were awarded I the Pacific coast tryouts with the un derstanding that they pladge 2500 for (expenses of athletes and that the gate 1 receipts should go to the national com mittee. The present controversy arose, he said, when the southern -officials announced they would reimburse the men, guaranteeing the expenses out of the gate receipts. STElSIi WOKIvKKS DEMANDS. SCRANTON. Pa.. May 14. A 15 per cent advance In wages Is to bo demanded for every iron, steel and tin worker affiliated with tho Amal gamated Association of Iron. Steel and Tin AVorkers, according to the report of tho scale committee presented to the convention In session here today. nn ABOLISH SECRECY. CLEVELAND. May 13. The Inde pendent Order of B'nai B'rlth conven tion closed yesterday after abolishing secrecy in the ritual and opposing tho admission of women As members. Tho resolution to adopt socrecy was re considered and adopted after its de feat yesterday. EARLY SURRENDER', I OF CARRANZA , IS LOOKED FOR EL PASO, Tex., May AdpUO de la Huena. supreme commandpr jH of the revolutionary movcment0ln jH Mexico, has issued a call for he jH Mexican congress to' convene and name a provisional president, it jJ was announced here tody Surrender soruo time today of President Carranza and his forces, jH said to be surrounded near Pjp IH conada, Puebla, was predicted 'iii jH a telegram from General Obregon, former candidate for the presi dency of Mexico, received todaj by Luis Monies dc Oca, Mexican revolutionary "consul" at .El Pa,s,0. FREE POLICE INSPECTOR' H OF NEGLECT CHARGES H NEW YORK, May 11. -Police In spector Dominick 'Henry, formerly commander of the tenderloin district, I today was acquitted by order of Judge Malone of a charge of neglect of duty in connection with New York s xxlc0 crusade. The Judge directed tho jury in the court of general sessions,, which ha5 been hearing allegations that Henry failed to close hundreds of vice re sorts in his district, to bring in a ver diet of not guilty after seven charac ter witnesses had testified and dUn scl had moved to acquit. 00 H I Considerable deposits of marl JYaYe recently been disvoered in Finland. I 4 NO W Is the Time To See I COFFEE IS SO HIGH ' I I Yoil will find our Coffee of highest grade and moderate price. A trial pound 3 will convince you of its rich flavor. Our prices are: j Very Best - - 50c lb. I I Good t - 45c lb. j I I I Pacific Coficc Stores Company 1 1 I Reliable Coffee Merchants 2350 Washington Ave. -