PACE SIX THE GAZETTE-TIMES. HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1922. ROADS STAND BY loyal mm Tell President Harding Old and New Men Must Be Protect ed In Strike Settlement the dnir:lst. who fcsd overheard, re irnrlcd: "You didn't do any good, did , you?" "Yf. sah," cim the reply. Ts dat icullud boy what's workin' down there. 1 l'!e jest chcckin' up to sec how I stand. Los Angles Time?. Slats' Diary. By ROSS FARQUHAR. NOT A MATTER OF CHOICE Faithful Employee Hav Both Legal and Moral Rights to Seniority and Other Benefit. New York. Th keynote of the reply made by railway executive representing more tban ISO Class 1 railroads of the Cnited States to the proposition of President Harding that "All striker be returned to their work and their former positions, with sen iority and other rights unimpaired,"' lie in the last paragraph of their reply to the president, as follow: It Is submitted that the strikint former employee cannot be gnvt-n fu-eferciwe to employee at present n the service without doing vio lence to every principle of right and Justice Involved In this matter and without the trossest breach of faith on the part of the railroads to the men at present In their service. Tnder these circumstances, it becomes apparent that the rail roads cannot consider any settle ment of the present strike which does not provide protection In their iresent employment both to the oval employees who remained in the service and to the new em ployees entering- It." The executives had accepted the first two conditions proposed by the president, namely, that both employ er and employees accept the deci sions of the labor board, and that ali law suits growing out of the strikt be withdrawn; and Id relation to U,t third condition state, not only as above, but also as follows: Agree With the President "The railroad executives and man agers agree entirely with the pr; dent's statement tn his letter that is wholly unthinkable that the ra road labor board can be niaie a u ful agency of the government in m taining industrial peace in th-- . way service -mess employers workers are both prompt and ulc; tioning in their acceptance of 1 decisions. "Many men in the service refus to join the strike and in so do . were assured of the seniority righ accruing to them and of the perma. ence of their positions. On some 1l portant lines 50 per cent or m ire rt fused to join the strike. To these ol loyal employees have been aide thousands of new men who were en ployed and could be secured only u on a definite promise that their sir ices would be retained, regards i the settlement of the strike, with a the rights appertaining to such e' ployment, including that of seniorii under the working rules and reguia tions previously approved by the rail road labor board. "Just the Opposite Effect" "We especially point out that a re fusal to the old men who remained in the service and to the new men wh accepted service of the rights of sen iority incident to their employment would have just the opposite effect to that desired by the president, and would most seriously discredit the labor board. "The board itself prescribed the rules of seniority under which the man referred to have secured their seniority rights, and the rail road companies have neither the legal nor moral right to deprive these men of those rights. By public utterances since the strike began the board has recognized and emphasized these rights, and to deny them now would, instead of upholding the authority of the labor board, overthrow its rules and discredit Its authority. The chair man of the labor board at the time the strike was called made the fol lowing public statement: " t'pon one question the striking employees should not be deceived! Their leader has said that the strikers are no longer employees of the railways, and they have thus automatically abandoned all the rights they possess under their agieemems and under the decisions of the board. Including their sen iority. This Is not the board's ac tion. It is their own. Many car riers are giving their former em ployees the opportunity to re-enter the sarvice within a limited time It must be understood now that men who remained In the service and those who are now entering it will have rights of seniority that the board could not Ignore ' What the Proposed Plan Means. "It must be understood that an) proposal that employees now on strike shall be permitted to return to the service without impairment to their seniority, is merely another way of suggesting that those men who took employment in this crisis in good faith, relying on the promises of the railroads to protect them in their positions, these promises being justi fied by the authoritative utterances of the labor board, and thus have made possible the continued operatlor. of the railroads, shall now be sacri ficed in favor of men now on strike, who not only brought about the crisis, but by their own action and declara tion, are no longer employees of the railways, under the jurisdiction of the United State Railroad Labor Board, or subject to the application of the transportation act. "In addition to the necessity of up holding the labor board and maintain ing the pledges made by the railroads to the men now at work, there f the practical effect on the superviaory of ficer of a violation of the pledges they were authorized to make. Their discouragement and demoralization would be far more disastrous than this or any other strike." CHECKING IP, A negro boy walked Into a drug store and asked permission to use the tele phone. Then th following conversation took place: "Is that you Mistah Jones?" "Yes," apparently was th reply. "Well, Mi tah Jones, I saw your ad in de paper the other day and yo wanted a cullud boy. Did you get one?" "Yes," seemed to b th answer again. "Well, Mistah Jones, is h givin per fect satisfaction?" The reply named still to be affirma tive. "Well, Mistah Jones, providen dis cul lud boy dont give perfect satisfaction you call at 64." Th boy turned and started out, and it : i C i 1 1 " Friday Ant Emmy is kind of ele fash ioned witch is visiting at are home wile she is ma's (rest rnaue asi me wnat f I 'took was I reading this evning and rhen I informed her -t was named When N'ighthood was in Flour she curls op ler nose and claim ed she had no use 'or all these new angled names of :he present day and Age. She sed when the was a little girl f yung yrs. they jailed them Night Caps and letter go it that She says rloods was only vore in cold Climets ike Greenland and Canady. Sat Blisters got the gang to gather today and sugested that insted of playing base ball we shud ought to form a yung boys wirking club and em money cleaning up the town, but he changed his mind because he seen his idea was about as Popular as a re publican in Alabama. t-anday Mr. Gillem was out of luck tcoay. They got up before daylita to take a trip and he told pa he had made a mistake and pored milk in hi crank case and when he got a few mi. out in the country he discovered that he had churned it into butter. Ma sed he was a lion. Monday Past bills all the after noon 'or the store and got paid ten cts. I gess t';ij store is what you wood call a Clow Corporation. Only it isnt any jokeing n-aticr with me. Tuesday Ant Emmy hassent saw are new hou.-e yet witch we are bilding. She ast pa what it was going to look like and he told her it would probly look like a peace of difficult music. She ast why and he sed Because it would have so many Notes on it Wedne day Ma is trying to get me to p ay with Edwin Smith on acct he uses good Er g ish hut I druther lissen to sum 1 I can understand what he is tawking of. Thursday Ma tuk sum pears over to o.e man Hix and he sed he wont never eat pears because his grampa died of Pearitonitis. Maternity Nursing will go to home. Mrs. M. L. Oney, Heppner. 3t GRAVE CRISIS FACED (Continued from Page 1.) a thriving business. In the dry-goods, clothing and shoe stores the most fastid ious find French and English and to a .esser degree American goods, for which GILLIAM & BISBEE'S jz? COLUMN j& Obituary IN 1921 Our Business DIED NOW SHE'S DEAD AGAIN We don't know where she's gone to, only trust for the best. But trusting won't do: that is what caused her death. 'Bring some money instead of flowers to the funeral. Gilliam & Bisbee Legal Guarantee Givero fo nW of KnUm no pain coatinoe work. Ask to see 01-o-ni Pile Treatment. PATTERSON Tt SOU Main Street -:- Heppner, Oregon FELL BROS. Auto Repair Shop Fords A Specialty Oils and Grease No-Nock Bolt Fell Bros. End of Willow Street, East of Patrick Hotel they did not even look in pre-war days. It is interesting to note the chances in the villagers. Formerly they nearly ait walked to Jerusalem, even from a dis tance that took them four or five hours. Now public automobiles run out into the country for ten miles and have largely monopolized transportation. Wages for skilled and unskilled labor have risen several hundred per cent and good me chanics now demand $o per day. The hour of labor used to be from sunrise to sunset but by the organisation of labor unions, they now have in Jaffa an eight-hour day. Ruaaiaa Reds Isaac Bread Loaa Cer tificate. The Berlin correspondent of the Lon don Daily Mail reports that the Bolshe viki are floating an internal loan of so fantastic a character that if it were, not vouched for on the authority of the Communist paper "Bote Fahne," on would think the tale invented by their enemies. The loan is called a "bread loan" and certificates and shares are made out in pools of rye instead of in rubles. A subscriber of 000,000 rubles, or, in the new monetary system arrived at by cutting off noughts, 400 rubles) no exchange value) the present price of a pood of rye (thirty-six pounds) receives a certificate entitling him to receive full value in rye at th end of the year. This is a powerful appeal to speculators. They know the ruble falls consistently and are certain that rye will be consid erably dearer in a year. The Moscow government guarantees the loan by a special corn fund created for the pur pose and by a reserve of 10,000,000 gold rubles. Philippine Coal Offered. It is reported that General Logan, agent at Manilla for the United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Com merce, has cabled to Secretary of Com merce Hoover offering Philippine semi anthricite coal to assist in meeting the coal and railroad emergency in the Uni ted States. General Logan suggested that if a handling and shipping organi sation were perfected in the Philippines, and shipping board vessels were made l)NIYni5nYr()REC0N The UNIVERSITY OREGON contini The college of Literature, Science and the Art with 22 department, The professional school of Archi tecture Business Administration-Education-Graduate Study -Law-Medicine Music Physical Educa tionSociology. The 47th Year Opens October 2, 1922 Foracatalojui or any information Writ Th Reiiitror, UnititriitS of Oregon, Eujtnt, Oregon. available for transportation. 20.000 tons could be shipped monthly to America. The commerce bureau agent is holding informal conferences with mine opera tors to perfect tentative plans In ease the offer of shipments from the island is acceptec. Note of Cheer from Germany. The report last month that a printers' strike was :n progress in Berlin was th signal for much sarcastic comment on the part of paracraphera. Th New York Tribune commented as follows: "Our next ray of sunshine comes from Berlin, where the printers have struck and the billions have ceased to flow. In the last week in June, the increase in paper cur rency was just 11,250.000,000 marks. This is fur ahead of anything that the wildest greenback prophet ever dreamed of as these time excel the Dark Ages. Th situation is such as would please the nio't fertile brained cartoonist but it has actually happened. The German, who are an active and laborious people, now depend on the printing press to turn off morning and afternoon editions of the national wealth and no doubt call sometimes for extras. 'Making money' is the literal word for what is taking place in Berlin and when their secretary of the treasury needs a few billions, he doesn't go through the tiresome formal ities of the old regime. He simply writes what he wants, marks the stuff 'Proofs ! to th Reichbank at one o'clock sharp,' sends It up th tub and in a short time Germany has some more billions ready. Th French, who have less sense of hu mor than the Germans, do not like this at all, for they pretend that it is simply a game on Germany a part It is strange that an art-loving people like th French do not recognii th admirable work in these German banknote, but then to be really humorous requires a philosophic sense. llT wr ... r T-T n"T'9 T !) - tt T- tt -' t v f TT -T Si Four good work horses for sale. See Frank S. Parker below depot Heppner. f none our s. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that the under signed has filed his final account as ad ministrator of the estate of Bernard F. Doherty, deceased, in the County Court of th State of Oregon for Morrow County, and the said Court has appoint ed Tuesday the 5th day of September, 1922, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day as the time, and the County Court room in the Court House at Heppner, Oregon, as the place, oi tearing and settlement of said final account Objections to said final ac count must be filed on or before said dati. JAMES G. DOHERTY, Administrator. Date of first publication August S, 1922. CASE BUS & TRANSFER COMPANY WM. M. KIRK, Proprietor Prompt and efficient service at all times, both day or night Leave orders at Case Furniture Co., Hotel Patrick, or Phone Main 845. BAGGAGE : EXPRESS : FREIGHT COUNTRY TRIPS GENERAL HAULING " iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iimis Harwood's Diamonds -:- Watches -:- Jewelry WATCH REPAIRING Guaranteed THE NEW JEWELRY STORE Odd Fellows Building Heppner Ore. niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiip Shell Fish! DO YOU ENJOY SHELL FISH! Oysters Clams Crab Served in any style to your order. Our Sunday dinner should also attract you on these warm summer days. Bring the 'fe and have dinner with us. Elkhorn Restaurant Heppner NEW PRICES ON MAD)N C0W MASON CORDS HEAVY-DUTY OVER SIZE SIZE PRICE SIZE PRICE 30x3 '2C1. $13.95 32x4 $30.75 30x3'2s.s 15.80 33x4'2 31.55 32x3'2 19.35 34x4'2 32.40 31x4 23.10 35x4 '2 33.20 32x4 24.50 33x5 38.95 33x4 24.70 35x5 39.95 34x4 25.35 37x5 42.10 FORD OWNERS! Remarkable Prices on Mason Oversize "Maxi Mile" Fabrics 30x3 - $9.25 30x3'2 - - - $10.60 C. V. HOPPER TIRE SHOP FOR REAL TIRE SERVICE WE HANDLE The Champion Header It's a good one A MACHINE IS NOW SET UP. COME AND LOOK IT OVER We Are Agents For the Colfax Drapers Made for all makes of machinery. You can huy cheaper drap ers than these, but no better drapeers for the money. . Materials are 18-oz. double faced duck, first quality leather and genuine Belata belt ing, sun seasoned hardwood sticks, and hand made by expert workmen. Peoples Hardware Company Star Theater PROGRAM FROM AUG. 11th TO AUG. 13th FRIDAY, AUGUST 11th That Revolution in Reel Fun "RED HOT ROMANCE" The story of a boy who made a fortune insuring the life of the King of Bunkotiia. Then someone started a revolution! Full of grins and girls; drama and whirls. Wow! What a movie! Red Hot Romance is right. AESOPS FABLES SATURDAY, AUGUST 12th Constance Talmadge in "WEDDING BELLS" She got a husband in half-a-day, a divorce in half-an-hour, but when she wanted her husband back, it took her a year to find him! And then he had been married to another girl. The Happiest, Snappiest Connie-Comedy Yet! MOVIE CHATS SUNDAY, AUGUST 13th Love, Honor and Oh, Baby ! May Collins in.... "ALL'S FAIR IN LOVE" As exciting as a divorce scandal, and 100 times as funny. If you like a llveiy melange of pep and laughter, spiced with a thrill and shot through with romance, you'll thoroughly enjoy this amazing adventure of an amateur vamp. Also "Edgar's Feast Day," by Booth Tarkington The show will be closed Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, August 14, 15, 16 and 17; but there is enough fun, laughter and thor ough entertainment in above three programs to safely carry over. EVERYONE A SCEAM. Dont miss them. G.-T. WAN-f ADS ARE SURE RESULT OETTEES. Use th WHEAT RANCH BARGAIN 850 ACRES All Tillable, with good buildings and all kinds of water; reservoirs; small orchard; fenced and cross-fenced. 320 acres in summerfal !ow. 13 miles from station. Price, if taken at once $16.00 Per Acre $5,000.00 down, terms to suit on balance ROYV.WHITEIS Real Estate and Insurance "7 UNIFORMITY Every gallon like every other gallon. Every drop ca pable of vaporizing rapidly and uniformly in the carbu retor, and being consumed completely in the cylinder at the jump of the spark. That's "Red Crown." That's quality in gasoline. Use "Red Crown" and nothing else, and your car will develop the maximum power that its makers de signed it to give. Fill at the Red Crown fy. n . sign at Service Stations, WJ4? (jaSOItne garages, or other dealers. VT tMMM STANDARD OIL COMPANY