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Show FRIDAY, U THE SUN, PRICE, PAGE TWO IN L LEWIS HIES BOOK TAH-EVE- JOBih. -- FRIDAY RY 5! IN WHICH BE Change Important in Policy INDIANAPOLIS. ImL, June 14. MINER RESCUED AFTER John L. Lewis, president of the Unit- BURIEDFIFTY-FOUHOURS ed Mine Workers of Ameriea, in a The Miners Fight For Ambook GRASS VALLEY, Cala., June 14. erican Standards, published today i'iftv-sihours of imprisonment two ears that if ihe American people are hundred feet underground in a dismal flow of a to be assured of constant Baltic gold mine ended tunnel the of eoal, priced to secure a fair return for at 11:40 oclock last night for Robert mines the and own the who the men miner. hour Iiill a comAt that Hill, Ben who man them, uneconomic mines rades, who had been digging away savmust be closed and unscientific frieght slide Above all, the agely at tbe last few feet of the rates be aholieheL into broke that him, through trapped American constitution must mean the rock of chamber beyond. announces the discontinuance of the custom coal field in of herewith what it says every AKER DEB There stood Hill, haggard, hungry American America, he declares. each year. Instead of bnngmg Stude-tak- er cheerful. I but almost and blinded, automobile, of line remotest corner the to new ruu a must law knew from the first that you would of America and American political save me once in twelve months we ihall keep them and I had no fears of the outdramatically value Car. as have must everyequal rights hand where as the American dollar. The come, he said as he clasped therescue every of the titne-w- ith the leader of of Joe the Solari, tales of outrage and tyranny coming crew friends. II closest one and ills of weakn have manufacturing resources. This policy not only fields and the from our able engineering children Mrs. her Hill three and great by ened respect for government everyStudebaker owner, but it also enable. pnrchaKt. of new where. What Lincoln once said of were waiting at thq mouth of the tunbenefit, present directly nel. Word had gone out that a break or the nation applies with poignant force the necessity of was expected momentarily. model, drat are alwaymodem-witK- out obtain to car. to the eoal industry today it cannot through darkhen came flash out of the the new car. becotmng obwiete. lire half free and half slave. of the tunnel: Weve got him. annual change., and without the danger of their The opemuinded reader should ness Unable to restrain herself any longdiscover that the policy of the Mine Mrs. Hill rushed down the passageer, Workers is not to steal mines from shadow of doubt that Studebaker Cars are so their uwners, the book says, but way, followed by her oldest son. In of this new policy is an HACK few were minutes with the they to make it possible for the owners of soundly engineered and manufactured and so amazing story of interest to economic and properly equipjied mines lusbaud and father and were helping A rim tunnel narrow out to the open. eminently satisfactory in the hands of owners, that who owns or expects operated by free labor under an Am- of more than sixty-fiveveryone e in feet length erican system of government to make drastic annual changes are not required. to own an automobile. reasonable and continuous profits. was hewn from the rock and fallen The owners of such mines in all the material to effect Hill s rescue. Improvements and refinements will be made from The dramatic success of the It was just a few minutes after midunion fields could help bring about (im- - to time. New features will be added. When present line of Studebaker Cars inch a situation if they choose. The night when the party emerged. Hill in their midst. Hill was smoking a big, our engineering department (maintained at a cost is one reason for this imporindustry cannot function properly in black his his first from request cigar, essential can the nor union the fields, tant change. Month after month of more than half a million dollars a year) devises rescuers. He waved a cheery greeting necessary to efficient an improvement in any model, it will be made to the silent miners about him. we keep breaking records sales keep piling up. production be obtained as long as the rescue doubted have never I n my as without regard to the calendar. onion operators permit the many This year we will sell almost four times interests to occupy the position of 'rom the cave, he told his companautomobiles as we produced in the big boom year ions. As in the past, we shall continue to pioneer vital I could hear the miners work spokesman for the industry and to knew how material much loose I ing. which followed the war. mislead the public. betterments that have proved their merit through lay between me and them, and so I An Economic Attack. practical use. Alert, aggressive, receptive to new mew I could be saved. Owners report endurance records, even beyond interThe acts of the ideas, resourceful in executing them, guided by our greatest expectations. Out in the rugged mounests are an attack upon the declared raits in ifimrifie research and spurred by imagination, the the times sells four management fact, is, tain regions where Studebaker economic purposes of the American tion the the with workers of manageimmithese Studebaker organization proposes to build better normal proportion of cars, owners talk about people as enacted in tariff and ment to insure profits to mines whieh been walls These have laws. gration motor cars than ever before. are not entitled to them at the workmodels in the most extravagant terms. In 1924 erected to protect American capital- ers form of this expense. Obviously the Corporations sale of repair parts dropped But Now you may buy a Studebaker on any day of ists, traders and workingmen. industry is merely wage within these rsmparts that we liave stamina Mechanical car to $10 the year with the confident assurance that the per year. per social proreared for the protection of our deli- cutting camouflaged as remarkable t under severe usage performance sturdy, thrifty, car you drive away will cately balanced machinery of produc- gress. n difficult travel conditions these interests and their theTurning to mechanization of mines, most under the tion the be not stigmatized by any act of dura as a last writer Mine xailroad allies- have created similar Workers says the policy of the about have Cars Studebaker which the for are will inevitably qualities years model. Today, in even more generous systems to those which we have sought the utmost employment ofbring ' machinery long been noted. measure than in the past, Studebaker Cars offer to bar from our shores. These centers of which coal mining .'a physically of disturbance are unbalancing all our the utmost value for the money. The policy of those who Surely these significant facts prove beyond any business relationships as the result of cajiable. seek the the of existing disruption their lowpaid labor and the unscieuti-fiwage structure would only postpone en rates of that freight system mechanization of the industry and THE STUDEBAKER CORPORATION OF AMERICA, SOUTH BEND, INDIANA ablea this cheap labor not only to com perpetuate obsolete methods. with terms the favorable more on pete The Checkoff System. labor of sections in which normal industrial conditions and civilzed gov'The United Mine Workers has inernment prevail. American industry sisted on the checkoff, because it it cannot allow the continued existence the most efficient instrument by wliirb of these local areas of strife,- - uncer- the industry can be kept functioning tainty and value destroying fluctuaat maximum efficiency under the systions of wages and prices in the busi- tem of employment it has sanctioned. ness of supplying the most important Under such conditions Jhe checkoff raw material, physically and financial- becomes of the very essence of ly, that. enters the channels of com and mutuality. The history Lewis meets the suggestion of the merre. shows that it is as industry of wage reduction in the union fields essential to the continuous prosperity cThis with this statement: of the operators as of the men. PriWith an adequate coal supply marily, it is the means by which the n nor the union neither the Banetity of the contract under which ran hope for the high prices the industry is conducted is maintain operator WESTERN UTAH caused bv the annual ear shortage. ed. The reason the anthracite operaCO., STUDEBAKER DEALERS, With a three-yea- r wage agreement in tors have refused to grant the checkthe union fields, whieh forestalls any off is that their superintendents am Brocket Garage Bldg., North Ninth St strikes and leaves no hope to the non- spies working among the mine work PRICE, UTAH union operator of profiteering at the era endeavor to induce as many nun expense of the union fields during sus as possible not to pay dues into the dinn killed by accidents. As the production interests have union, Cure for that tired, bored feeling pictures of tbe aame typ a pensions, the therebv to lessen union hotel is completed, kitchen and hoping will into this it the be moved and totaled nndertaken to bankrupt the operators activity. Today, however, the paid' ingroom 191,370,000 most during period eiJe experience after a run whether observers retain ST of the union fields. But in so doing up membership in the anthracite re boardinghouse used as a family resi- tons, the fatality rate to date for 1925 inelnfaWs through an art gallep- - ig lieing sought preasiona if a tour they are gradually bankrupting them- gion represents all of the eligible men dence. In the meantime the work on is 3.85 )ier million as against 5.11 for of kinds ferent picture! i the smaller upier vein is being con- the same months last year. For an- by the American Association of Mu- labels selves in the vain effort to overcome in the industry. are a employed help. seums and Prof. Edward S. Robinson, geograjdiy by selling enslaved manThe United Mine Workers is fully tinued and the eoal produced there- thracite mines alone the fatality rate from, which was of the highest quality is 6.08, based on a hundred and seven- - noted psychologist of the University lawmakentJ power in competition with eoal. At ,ustificd in insisting that the chc-Anyway, tbe of Chicago, has undertaken to find it. deaths and an output of the same time the struggle in the un- off be a contract provision in the from the start, is better today than to us never compel black diamonds It is an established fact, says Rub- ion fields is slowly weeding out un- agreement between the operator mu alien the first tons, while for the first four kindness. human milk of month of 1924 the corresponding r.ite economic mines, obsolete equipment the United Mine Workers of America. were taken nut. that the casual tourist comes The directors listened to the rejort was 5.42. The rate fur the liituninous .out of 'in art gallery all ready for bed and incompetent management As for the bituminous operators the Bulgaria has three tbo'fsL mines alone is 3.45 us compared with ,,n,i retaining little information about with a great deal of interest and u in Prolonging Maladies. majority want it. prison. That country ' 5.IMI Inst and gave Lewis a vote of year, this yeurs output to wlmt he has seen and no aesthetic Americanized. ing for his efficient and ecolieing 162,245, (Hill tuns anil the prcHtion. 'Any wage reduction would serve SEVIER VALLEY PEOPLE FLAN Laboratory experiments fatulities nomical only to prolong the maladies of the management. five conducted hundred nuniltcring to detremine how and ,iT' being Intuition may be EARLY PRODUCTION M numbers industry, while sacrificing the rights e but how are some men pictures viewed afreet of the miners. The rate question is of RICIIFIELD, June 13. With J C ACCIDENTS AT THE MINES ON record for Ifti whether the nd of len-npersons; seeing many winner? peculiar interest at this time became Sumner, vice president in the chair, April shows four major disasters nr DECLINE IN APRIL rates low aceidenls killing five nr mure mm enjoy the directors of the Sevier Valley Coal for long hauls to markets belonging company held a meeting here the othc which oceri ,m Accidents at eoal mines in the Unit- - u,,e uggnL'u ikof niin.ty-1'iv- c geographically to union fields have day and were unanimous in approving ed Stales in the month of April chus- M ir ug the tonbeen led to pour ever increasing months t the plans worked out by the manage' ed the death of a hundred and forty- i!.re were five eoal into Nuiih-er- ment for similar ri- nage of an early start am two men, according to rejsirts U t'.e assuring This and Northwestern markets. completion of railroad construc- ly made by the various state insjmet- - i'd thro hund-c- d and The situation has suited admirably the rapid tion up Salina Canyon aa promised by or to the United States bureau of fatality mt!: renc! on the in the faction reactionary purpose of the Denver and Rio Grande Western. mines The deathrate for the month niujor I.s t the union fields, which clamors for a At a stockholders meeting to he held compared with 6.58 in April ln0.50 million to,,-- - j it jr ;.r, i i year. inreduction. The and eopIe wage here 2d the plans will be discuss- The output was 41,174,UHI net tons in lur 19V4. , the dustries of the United States can and ed inJuly detail and when authorized by April, 1925, and 37,215, (KHI in April, by ami- - to the bn-- ! will consume in any given year only the stockholders action, will lie taken 1924. The murh 1925 lor lnm n deathrate lor rcluc-- i larger the amount of coal they need. Rite immediately. Regarding the activities dcatt.r, was due to tbe los of tmn in April year exr..,.i.iw changes may for a time make this or in developing the projierty of the a hundred and nineteen lives in an ex- of gn- - ami ,.'is:. n,i cming. rll of that district prosperous and inqmver General Mnnuger Lewis report- plosion at Bcnwood, V. Va., without roof and cmd nd n .-it imtwi-- . in Hceiil'-ntiah others, but in the end the favored ed that ir.irn h; things are progressing in a which the rate would have been 3.3(1. cvplo.-n- : s and districts will repeat the vicious cycle most satisfactory The sec- Reports made to the bureau for an- eleclricitv. manner. Concentration of the needs of customers enable of over development and uneconomic ond section of shaft is completed and thracite mines showed that thirty-fou- r offer a line of general merchandise that guppli operation to a (mint where rate favor- another fifteen feet of it cemented so fatalities occurred in April, indicat- STATE CHAMPION TEAMS to the WILL greatest number of individual wants. Whet itism will no longer benefit them, evet. that tbe walls are now reaching to a ing a fatality rate of 4.55 ENTER THE CONTEST million ht man, woman, boy or girl, with us you will if it has first ruined their competitors depth of e feet. Every sec- tons, based on a production of 7,472,-00- 0 for apparel SPRINGFIELD, Unless all industrial history leads tion will be so treated as work prouse or of finer quality that everyday month. III,., TLis Juno the 14 during compares the will Ninety judge, ns to a false conclusion and all that gresses and fifty-si- x highest style standards, yet is not priced big" feet of the sink- with a rate of 4.99 in Apirl last year n t le ltamhrC of tcuriis cn- we know about human nature is ing is now done. It is an absolute and an average of 6.08 for the month YjJ?.r.e alwa-- able to Ret seasonable & wrong, the Rockefeller plan in Colo- certainty that the big vein will be ar- of April over a ten years iieriod, nu ne rescue . , us, in addition to staples that are available, at tM inrado (where company unions were rived at in time when transportation nnd;7 V !r ht,(l heTe troduced in mines) or any other plan facilities will be there to start produc,u prices. Supplies for the hastily prepared lunch, t The reports for bituminous mines Fieh.T V11' inclusive. teams make a delicious originally dependent upon the initia- tion on a substantial scale. showed a death list of a hundred and u meal out in the woods. M(.hj tive of the employer alone, will alThe new boardinghouse is so far up eight men and a production of 33,702,-00- 0 ing champion B Iron, manv htates,i have im.ieatcd tUir Kettles, pots, pans, buckets, dippers, basins ways fail to establish anything like an and equipped that it will be ready for tons, indicating a fatality rate of irjti'i.tionof com-- ! J buiM and industrial constitution by an actual occupancy by tbe end of the week. It 3.20 per million tons, as eoinjjared T. Read llf many other kinds of useful utensils for the . . Washing- a I may be purchased here. partnership of labor in the enter-- will bouse the kitchen and diningroom with 6.04 for April but year (includdivine director of Everything to eat, wear The with a seating capacity fur thirty-- ) wo ing the Bcnwood explosion) and an thef dera, burpaB 'f mines, said the writer continues. .tat. C'ise," scheme to evade a union conpersons, lluns also are ready to build average of 4.31 for April during the tract by a socially advanced industrial a big camp hotel of permanent charac- ten years 1915 to 1924. During the ginia, lcst Wgiuia, Pennsylvania, scheme is ruining of un- ter solid, modern and comfortable first four months, January to April Ohio, Indiana. Keu.imU.. iVL economic and bankrupt mines. The as soon as the railroad gets in there of the Kntir.RJ' i Winter Quartera, Clear Creek, Castle Gat present year, seven hundred Oklahoma, in this form of mine to transport the material. After the and thirty-seveemployee have been and Sunnyiide. tl'oi.linu-- d On P!Ige rourJ R x STU up-to-da- te upute'oU non-unio- unung non-unio- non-uni- on co-o- pt one-profi- non-unio- e STUDEBAKER MOTO CARS R is aStudebakerYear non-unio- MO PIE, non-unio- in-'o- r eat-ifarti- ap-da- te I'? dif-Th- t ) non-uni- on x os-rator- a , la-- e serf-produc- We Are At ve.-i- n re-,:,- it I c:pl.ty-.,ujr- ll!-- . !u.-.-i dLii.-fo- r, Service Always, the-"-:'n- io r -t j (air-incni- ig caiiM.1-.- Folks rr-a- ti-- Imi-- com-pan- i tr y, ri-- Yom i s . I fJ fifty-thre- 1915-192- v 4. Tt'U i n l, WASATCH STORE Cft Pi a i |