The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925, February 23, 1922, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE FOUR
TILE GAZETTE-TIMES. 11EITNER. OREGON, THURSDAY. FEB. 23, 1922.
MYSTERY ABOUNDED IN MOVIE MURDER
m D.Tajlcr T!
L. MONTERESTELLI
Marble and Granite
Works
PENDLETON, OREGON
Fine Monument and Cemetery Work
All parties interested in getting work in my line
should get my prices and estimates before
placing their orders
All Work Guaranteed
i:2; J
The Byers Chop Mill
(Formerly SCHEMPP-S HILL)
STEAM ROLLED BARLEY AND WHEAT
After the 20th of September will handle Gasoline, Coal
Oil and Lubricating Oil
You Will Find Prompt and Satisfactory Service Here
!l!lllllinil!!l!l!!lll!Uliili!II!!llll!!llillM
i ! To the Automobile Public ! i
s Have the NO NOK self-adjusting bearing
S bolts installed, and eliminate your bearing trou-
EE bles. They have been tested and give perfect
J satisfaction. Made for all cars and trucks.
g J WE SELL ZEROLENE OILS
J 15c per quart. Over 5 gallon quantities 5iy2c
EE j per gallon. Differential and jtransmis-
sions filled at 15c per pound.
1 1 Fell Bros.
EE 1 Block East of Hotel. Auto Repair Shop.
EE
EEETif if iiif f ill ttriif iiiiittiitiiirif lttiiiif iitiiiiuf f f iifiiitfiiimtllf ill tf llliilllitim
niuiMtnuiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiuuiuiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiuiiiiiiHiiiuiiiiiiiuiHiiiiiiiiiiR
mm
Ex-Service Men
You are to get your Oregon
State Bonus next month.
Are you going to follow the
old saying
"EASY COME, EASY GO,"
or are you going to make that
money work for you?
Save It
Why not put it into a SAV
INGS ACCOUNT IN THIS
BANK and draw ifo interest
over' six months. Then when
opportunity presents itself you
will be prepared to meet it.
FARMERS & STOCKGROWERS
NATIONAL BANK
Heppner
Oregon
iy.v
ft? i.i v. r f
the worker and his employer is no
longer possible. Great manufactur
ing plants with thousands of workers,
with managers, superintendents, and
foremen, have destroyed the spirit of
association which obtained in the
past. Association of manufacturers
and trade unions, increasing as the
years go on, present new problems to
be solved, such as wages, hours of
service, output, and many others too
numerous to mention.
Many of the present day employ
ers object to and will not deal with
labor unions; others recognize and
deal with trade unions, while still
others, though having no direct deal
ings with unionized workers, yet have
jfSrfrjN Poem 2)
lly, jllncle John
- 11 r
STILL A HERO
tP
EdVai'd F. Sanded
Perhaps no murder mystery of re
cent years has so stirred the inter
est of the nation as the shooting of
Win. D. Taylor, Lasky movie di
rector, at his home in Hollywood,
Calil. Infatuation ci Mabel Nor
rnand and Mary Miles Minter, two
celebrated screen stars, for Taylor,
the lacl that he had formerly been
married, and was the father of a
Ethel D. Tanner
19-year-old daughter living in New
York, were only incidents in the
gripping tale of love, adventure, ro
mance and murder. Picture is of
the home where Taylor was mur
dered. Inserts are of Taylor, his
laughter, and Edward F. Sands,
former valet to Taylor, for whom
police of the nation searched in try
ing to clear up the mystery.
Community Service
i
CITY VS. COUNTRY
You can fool around the city, till
you're old enough to die, with yer
soul a-gettin' smaller every minnit;
ycu'l ketch yerself a-longin' fer a
stretch of azure sky, or a medder
with some clover-blossoms in it. . . .
You can hang around the shady-spots
an' loafer dens of town, tryin to
make 'em think you are contented,
but don't you sorter realize you're
tryin' to swaller down as big a lie
as ever was invented?
You can jog around the pavement,
not enjoyin' any load, an' pretend
that you are happy though retired,
but, blame it all, you'd ruther trot
i Charles Brickley. Harvard grad
Mate and great hero of the football
pridiron. i still a hero. He has
donned overalls and gone to work
as a common laborer in a ConnectU
cut carpet factory to earn a living
for his wife and two children. H
tried New York, after graduation a
few years ago "but a college edu
cation without funds," V says,
"don't mean anything." So now
he is going to learn the carpet
business from the bottom up.
along a country road, where licenses
an' policemen ain't required. . . .
You can speed up all you want to,
or slow up like a snail, -or take a
nap I reckon if you're sleepy, you
dream about the city man a-sweatin'
in his jail, an' the very idea starts
you feelin' creepy. . . .Now listen
to a feler that is able to advise, it
wouldn't be the truth if I denied it,
the little farm you live on is next
to Paradise don't pine .fer city life
until you ve tried it.
MAKING
M N ID
MANAGER FRIENDS
Government Conciliation Head
Outlines Work of Depart
ment in Settling Labor
Disputes
Council Table Held to Be Log
ical End of Misunderstand
ings Rising from Indus
trial World
By Hugh L. Kertin,
(Director United States Conciliation
Service, Department of Labor.)
Editor's Note: Hugh L. Kerwin
is the director of the United States
Conciliation Service, a phase of the
work of the Department of Labor.
His division has officiated in nearly
5,000 industrial disputes brought to
the government for settlement. He
holds that man and manager can be
friends and in complete sympathy if
they will take the trouble to consider
the problems of one another around
the council board.
The question of the relationship
between the employer and employee
is nothing more or less than the
PIUS XI
From Bishop to Pope in about
two years' time is the rise of his
Holiness Pius XI, who was Cardinal
Achille Ratti, Archbishop of Milan.
He was born in Italy, October 12,
1858. He received the Red Hat ai
Cardiral only last year.
question of man's relationship to
man, and as far back as history re
cords the worker and the man for
whom he works have been troubled
in arriving at a solution of this great
est of all economic problems.
In the early days of our Republic,
when industry was in a formative
stage and the population for the
most part located within confines of
what is now but a small portion of
our present domain, labor troubles
were few and far between, the rea
son being that our industrial enter
prises in those days consisted all to
gether of small shops or factories un
der the personal supervision and
management of the owner. On the
other hand mechanics employed at
these establishments were generally
workers skilled in their trade or call
ing and able to perform all or any
part of the work in the building or
whatsoever the plant turned out.
From the tree in the woods on
through the various stages until the
wood in the tree came out through
the doors of the little shop or factory
in the form of a wagon, every man
who had to do with its manufacture
had contributed his part in the mak
ing of every part of the wagon, and
the essential thing the fine spirit
that existed between the employer
and the employee grew out of the
fact that the owner of the plant work
ed side by side with his workers,
knew all of his people, and thereby
contributed that personal touch which
in later years has been lost to Ameri
can industry. As our population in
creased with its increasing demand
for the output from mill and factory,
both for the use of our own people
and for export trade, these industries
grew slowly at first, it is true but
in later years with a rapidity which
made necessary a complete revolu
tion in their conduct and manage
ment. With the American inventive
sjenius continuously at work perfect
ing machines to simplify and increase
the output in all branches of indus
try, there came the specialist the
worker who is now forced, for rea
sons of increased production, to con
fine his labor to making a particular
part of the wagon or other product
of the plant until the finished article
in later years is the combined effort
of scores of workers, each making
the small parts, perhaps in plants sit
uated many miles apart, these units
being brought together and assem
bled into the completed product.
The Personal Touch.
The personal touch which contri
buted towards a fine feeling between
no objections to their workers affil
iating with such unions. All sorts
of conditions are met with in the con
duct, from a managerial standpoint,
of our great business enterprises
many and complex are the agree
ments in existence between the work
ers and the employers. Agreements
in modern industry in America arc
generally for a stated period. Con
tractual relations between employer
and employee are for the most part
religiously lived up to by both the
worker and his employer. The Am
erican working man has developed
into the most efficient worker in the
world, and his daily output on the av
erage exceeds that of the worker of
any other country. The American
manufacturer has developed into the
most wonderful genius in world in
dustry, and surely with this combin
ation it would seem that a commun
ity of interest should obtain that
would make for unbroken and profit
able employment and for peace in
American business.
The Big Problem.
The great problem comes after
production a division of that which
has been produced. There arise dif
ferences of opinion between employ
er and employee; contention as to
wages, hours of employment, griev
ance committees, conditions of labor,
bargaining, and many others. Now
instead of precipitating strikes or
lockouts why not sit down like sensi
ble business men around a council
table and in a spirit of understanding
and good will settle the wage and
other differences on as nearly an
equitable a basis as the industry will
permit. This is the conciliation way
this is the common sense way.
It is conceded that independent ar
bitration commissions, shop commit
tees, adjustment boards and joint
bodies representative of the workers
and management have been valuable
aids in making for peace and indus
try. This can also be said of scores
of plans proposed for bringing closer
together the manager and workers.
But after all is said and done, the
best method so far devised is that of
conciliation. Conciliation in the ad
justment of industrial disputes lays
down no hard and fast rules for the
guidance of the parties to the dis
pute. It meets the situation face to
face, and by advice and suggestions
garnered by the conciliators from
previous experiences and situations
he proves his competency by being
able delicately to meet and handle
esch delicate situation as it arises
during the process of negotiations.
The nice thing about settlement of
I f CAN I TRUSTI YOU TO I iPjOHMISSO M lVf
mailt,..son'iwr 1 sure MRGETFUL . , Hfe TH!i, r
HOME H WAV TOE OFFICE? J U,N3 J 1 SKFffbit R )
onrrT 1 ' 1 XP UPE I letter did voy ?
SWEET SURE HEilLET jl
I Cucar cam - H WHVMV DEAR, HOVV CUJUi I-
k n SLlS I A U THINK ."DfORGET
M LETTER QUICK -I THAT YOUR LETTER IS ,
As:- J7 Ni
EnmirfifiTiiiiiiM ; J
J' " S,- """"" 'Autoounil
Pretty Theresa Katona. of Brooklyn, N. Y, offers herself in mar.
nage for $1,000, the money to aid her father, mother and six matt
brothers and sisters, the latter all under IS years of age. The father
is ill and out of work. Theresa's only qualihcations for a husband,
(other than the $1,000) are that he be healthy and a Christian. She
agrees to wed on her 19th birthday. November 28. this year.
industrial disputes through concilia-1
tion is that at the conclusion neither!
party feels aggrieved. They have
been brough together and have been
advised by an impartial third party
who has no power other than one
suggestive and advisory. They have
taken up one by one the matters in
dispute, they have come to an under
standing and reached an agreement,
and every one connected with this
council table procedure feels that he
has had a part in the agreement be
cause it is based on understanding
and good faith.
Some Statistics.
To prove conclusively that concili
ation is effective, the United States
Department of Labor has since March
1913, through its division of concilia
tion, utilized the good offices of its
commissioners of conciliation in
nearly 4,800 industrial disputes in
volving directly and indircetly over
7,400,000 workers. During that per
iod they have been unable to adjust
but a few more than 400 of the cases
presented. As an outstanding exam
ple of what can be and has fceen ac
complished along the lines of concil
iation in industry by an impartial gov
ernment agency, the copper industry
may be cited:
In 1917 the President's Mediation
Commission and the Deparment of
Labor set up in Arizona machinery to
adjust any dispute that might arise.
A commissioner of conciliation of the
Department of Labor was selected
and named "Administrator" with an
agreement between the owners and
workers to accept his decisions as fin
al in a dispute, and further that
strikes or lockouts were prohibited
during the life of the agreement.
After 4 years we find that since
the creation of this plan only 2 or 3
strikes of minor importance have
been reported, and those were settled
in a very few hours. An unusual
feature of this solution developed af
ter the Armistice, or in February
IS19, when in the face of a tremen
dous surplus of copper on hand and
a restricted market, the employes
without question accepted a decision
which meant a reduction of $1 per
day in "wags and prevented a general
suspension of the industry.
Another Example.
Another case in point is the oil in
dustry of California, which has been
since late in 1917 a brilliant example
of what conciliation can accomplish
for permanent industrial peace,
where nearly 20,000 contented work
ers and many satisfied operators have
had no troubles that were not speed
ily and fairly settled by a "Commis
sioner of Conciliation" accepted by
both interests as the final referee in
all grievances submitted. This official
designated "Federal Oil Adjuster"
has handed down over 300 decisions
some affecting a few and some
many workers and companies, every
decision being cheerfully accepted.
Production was thus augmented
wages for various gradations were
specified, and the classification of la
bor defined, working conditions were
vastly improved and all interests
benefitted in consequence.
In the great packing house indus
try of Chicago and at many outlying
places throughout the United States,
since 1917 no strikes of any grave
concern have been recorded. It is
true a few incipient or sporadic
strikes of little consequence have
occurred which were of short dura
tion. Through the agency created by
the Department of Labor, Judge Al
schuler was selected as the adminis
trator, and he not only has stabilized
the industry, but has maintained
peace and continuous operation and
made it plain to all that there is a
better way of settling disputes and
grievances than striking the plant or
plants involved.
To accomplish this great achieve
ment has entailed upon Judge Al
schuler a tremendous amount of
work on minor grievances, extensive
hearings on general issues but the
net result, steady employment, sta
bilized production and general satis
faction is certainly worth while.
The solution of the industrial pro
blem lies not in carrying on the age
old battle between employer and em
ploye as though they were hostile fac
tions with irreconcilable interests, but
in recognizing the fact that capital
and labor have common interests,
each depending upon the welfare of
the other.
Clean-Up Spray Due.
The clan-up spray of lime-sulphur
should be applied this month or ear
ly in March, choosing days when the
weather is good. This spray will rid
the trees of scale, spider mites, and
aphids, and is especially necessary
for blister mites. On prune, peach,
and apricot trees it is also needed
for the twig miner. Oil sprays may
be substituted for the lime-sulphur
application as a scale spray, but
lime-sulphur 1-8 is to be preferred
for control of blister mite and twig
miner. 0. A. C Experiment station.
Dwarf Essex rap seeded in late
April, May or June on rich land
makes excellent sheep or hog pas
ture for late spring and summer. One
acre usually carries 10 to 15 ani
mals. Plan now fqr a place for this
crop. 0. A. C. Experiment station.
FOR SALE Thor electric vacu
um sweeper. Inquire at this office.
FOR SALE 1 set demountable
wheels, 2 extra rims suitable for
Ford, Maxwell or Chrevolet. Price
$18. Phone 824, or write Box 73,
Heppner. 4t.
A KIND WORD TODAY
WILL MAKE YESTERDAY
a happy memory,
tomorrow;