Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 41, Decatur, Adams County, 17 February 1937 — Page 5

SEEKS h' om rAGE ONE) B unde: secretary B.'*:;; nN “' |^Kc!i' ,nI . i(i IO gather B””7"h*"‘>“ '‘"tain baa 4,1 B**’ -mam K.f-.a. Hal.''M o and S'.v-ib'ii would Bo nd rcthaps a few .1,,. Russian plan ■ 'and nauee. B’J tnnifd s . east offer their aid tn B~ o ■e treaty. —-o BtfOST OF G. M. it?’M r v;r: JJSJ'L court. The B/'o" ' ,u ' ge ,l, " i “ M ,„ ..war before me. declined to reveal wha. By b . ...Ken ibuuld -be G. M. exo. ilW\,.,.president, ami Homer B youthful president of the V; ,-,1l r.m participate m ■, the General bunding here. Bcerporattot* will be repre■;c E Wilson. vhe-presi-Jno Tabb ■■ director ol B-- s ' phen , nu l br l ?2' ML- and Charles J. Jolly, K r \>f the l.s«l department. Heating the union will by |KL Mortimer, first vice|H(lir Larry Davidow. attortvo others. learned that the union w would present a detail |K E i n -which tribunals repreK..'t. •>.< corporation and Kw would be set up to decases of alb-ged disci iminagainst union employes in ■many's 61* plants. ■the r...Jtia'ion> . mitinued. all Bof the corporation's plants Those awaiting before oper ng are at AtBloo : Id, N. J . Kjapolia. Janesville, Kis.. Kan Kity, Memphis. Norwood, <).,' S u, and Tarrytown. N- Y. Kidseu and Martin, having ■id negotiations into channels ■fed in the long peace confer-

S)nik r ht A. Thursday ■Special note - i : ■first Show TONIGHT ■at 6:3(1. Come Early! Matinee at 1:30 Office Open until 2:30 | fl * bov * lh * ■<' ai »•»! Bk I THI II Rural K1 S J£ N f OSTIR /JI ■ O'CONNOR ~,d fl ■ "‘/•'•from th, Ftmout .. Jg ■ 9 f | H P>etcft£Sy JOHN II £Ew e ‘ 0 ■ 7* MDIO / if » Mr M P'tlU’tyL IB • JtP r ■dmi ■Z/«■ wm. jr to "«■ > '*/.'} naiui>V jpg; .. a& _ .gdJgBH! M ’ »" 1 ■ UaaMß m R W blown tn W W3Bh» M HOMUCt'lt '*'" CM fctf tofc« rt s,*. X" Fre ’ Sent” Tom Kennedy “Court of Human RelaNovelty; 4 Pathe Topics. 10c -25 c L 4 Sat.—Richard Oix, Chester is. Dolores Del Rio in VILS PLAYGROUND.” “■Mon. Tues. — Cociel B. DerWt. S mi 9hty American epic! , . Pi - a INSMAN” Gary Coopean Arthur, huge cast.

lencete that brought an abrupt coni I elusion to the strike last week, explained they would be unable to attend today's resumption of the bargaining sessions. Each gave conflicting "other business" as reason. Git Bowners Out Dint, Mich., Fob. 17.—ffU.Pj The last of this city's sit-down strikers inarched out of the Standard Cotton Products company plant ut 4:15 p. m. today to celebrate the end of a 4'J-day strike. United Automobile Workers union representatives said workers who sat down for 44 days in Fisher Body and Chevrolet plants and who were returned to their jobs by settlement of the Genera! Motors strike, would be asked to partltipate in a joyous demonstration. The Standard company makes padding for upholstery in Fisher bodies. , Settlement of the strike was ananouuced at midnight. . —<>.■ — — — MINERS DEMAND ICONTINUKD FROM PAGE ONE) had announced that the committee for industrial organization, of which he is an official, soon would intensify its attempt to organize the steel industry, which is closely tied up with the coal mining inI dustry. He alluded to a survey conI ducted by the University of Pittsburgh which recommended union organization along industrial lines in the mass production industries. He said the results of the university's survey would be presented to the steel industry for acceptance soon. 1 Approximately 500 operators and ' union men attended the opening session of the conference. D. C. Kennedy, executive secretary of the Kanawha coal operators association of Charlestown, W. Va., was unanimously elected chairman jof the joint conference Lieut, i Gov. Kennedy was unanimously elected secretary. 6. C. Higgins, secretary of the New River Coal operators’ association of Mt. Hope. W. Va., was unanimously ■ elected assistant secretary. o AMENDMENT IS —— FROM WAGE ONE) judicial'’ and in conformity with i the "ambitions” of a tew thousand . slave holders. i It resolved that the Dred Scott decision should not be considered binding on the nation. Rep. Maury Maverick. D., Texas ; conferred with President Roose- ! velt today’and told him that he i would "win your fight for judiciary i reorganization because the people ! are strong for it.’* Maverick said the mail he is reI reiving after two nation-wide broadcasts supporting the plan, ie ■ “running two to one for the president.” At first, Maverick said, liis majl was three to one against the program. JAB LIBERAL i CONTINUED FKOM_ PAGE ONE) the formation of a new cabinet headed by Premier Gen. Senjuro Hayashi. War minister general Suglyama answered Ozaki's attack. Sugiyama charged that the so-called February 26 “incident” a year ago—when several statesmen and cabinet members were assassinated in an army uprising of younger officers —was i caused "by corruption and the degredation of politics.” Ozaki during his diatribe against the war office questioned the newly signed German accord against the spread of communism- He said that «,000,000 German communists voted ■in the Reich's last election in 1932 before the rise to power of Adolf Hitler, adding that Japan should

| CORT TO NITE - THURS. DARING! THRILLING! DRAMATIC! James Dunn - Mae Clarke “HEARTS IN BONDAGE” David Manners - Charlotte Henry - Smiley Burnette. PLUS—Special Aided Attractions j — Mr. and Mrs. Jess Crawford “Poets of the Organ” — Song Hit A Novelty. 10c-25c FRIDAY TWO MAJOR FEATURES Jane Darwell “Laughing at Trouble" and Constance Bennett in “Every Thing is Thunder." .*Z ♦ I T Matinee Friday at 2:00 —10c EVENING 10c-15c * _ ' Sun. Mon. Tues. — Sonja Henie I “One In A Million" Don Ameche, ■ Jean Horsholt. Ned Sparks. Arline Judge. RiU Bros.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1937.

President Lauds Farley at Testimonial Dinner ? Bib / wßwq HI " v V --gy -4. IB ■■Tvk* President Garner _ ' »» ■ Sr= — —t— / 1 s —— 11 n: —rr — 1 Postmaster Parley P £ ’. - v ' ■ jSWfc

More than 1.700 guests jammed one of Washing- s ton’s swank hotels to join in recognition of the political achievements of James A Farley, postmaster general and Democratic national chairman, at a testimonial dinner in hia honor. President Rooas-

eupress communism without foreign assistance. "The army recently has shown a trend to move without the supreme command of the Emperor,” Ozaki ■ shouted. LABOR MEASURE FROM, . AC>E ONE) names of presidential electors. The senate confined itjelf to I receiving 12 new bills, hearing > committee reports and considering measures on second reading. A bill to place all coal mines, regardless of number of employes, under jurisdiction of the state division of mines and mining, was eent to engrossment. o —-— McNUTT IS NAMED cCONTINUED FFUjM PAGE ONE) act, adopted by the 1933 legislaj ture, which eonsolida.ted the state's 169 departments into eight and gave the governor the power to hire and determine the tenure of all employes except chief deputies of elected officers. Legislation controlling activities ' of banks, building and loan associations, ctedit companies, insurance companies and milk marketing sheds were enacted during his administration and several of the measures were used as models for legislation by other states. — o WILL PRESENT . . i Vi KI , r'K< >M FAGK yNW) .Mountain College—Deloris DailyDroopy, the colored man of all work—Grant Smitley. Jimmy, a stray junior from the State University Dave Maeser , Prof. Frazier. Rhode Scholar and i instructor in English — Comelious i Gable. : This play is produced by special agreement with the Northwestern Press, Minneapolis, Minnesota. o Girl Narrowly Escapes Drowning I Richmond. Ind.. Feb. 17.—iHJ.RX— Doris White. 7, narrowly escaped drowning late yesterday when thm' ice on a four foot pond on which she was skating gave way. Site, was rescued by two playmates. j

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velt, principal speaker, paid tribute to the ability of Farley and stressed his record as a "political prophet”. Here are the three principal guests, left to right. Vice President John Gamer. President Roosevelt end Farley as they appeared at dinner.

Pearl Farm Flourishes in West t ■ HF V 1 H I Isa"”Place Bontwick |B JBtW ' . vr- - na „t. - 5 fiihß •JV 1 ai™ Im > 1 JSWtANILk ?t "Domesticated” pearl Bv performing a series of delicate surgical operations, a California scientist once a jeweler, has succeeded in growing and produc ng nearls in several colors La Place Bostwick "grows the pear)? at P hls "farm" near I* Jolla. Cal. His method is to take an italone a type nx» lusk - and P ,ace within ** * P ‘hf l This sets U p an irritation, causing the abalone to cover the foreign matter with a secretion, the result being a pearly •brmat.on to wh"ch new layers are added as time passes until a sizable peart is produced. •

II 77 »“j£S| BL HH UtBIB ri. rrDRIVE YOUR CAR RIGHT RD St R PRYOR * MIS ORCHiSTRA WITH THI CRAZY SHOUI 1700 ROOMS QU | Q Q Q 1100 BATHS

MILITARY AND (rV,NTtNTTFp FROM law.” "The right to a writ of habeas corpus and Its Inviolability Is guaranteed by the constitution and no military officer can violate the constition You can’t deprive a man of his constitutional rights t>y u mere martial law declaration,” lie continuefl. The visitation order directed the sheriff to permit Siegel to see the prisoners In "the presence of the sheriff, his deputy, or national guard officers." Since their arrest on Saturday and Monday, no one has been permitted to see the men. They are all members of the union. arrested, presumably, for participating in an affray in a local case Saturday morning in which nine union men were shot and which caused Gov. M. Clifford townsend to declare martial law. No formal charge has been ent--1 ered against the men. The bartender, who wounded the two men, has not been arrested. He said he fired to protect his property against illegal entry. Meanwhile, the plants of the Delco-Remy and the Guide Lamp companies, both Genera! Motors subsidiaries, continued to be operated peacefully by union and nonuniort men and the military relaxed its restrictions to permit beer taverns and pool rooms to reopen. Victor Reuther, union organizer, charged that ten union men had been laid off at the Guide plant. "The company is giving the reas- : on that production is being curtail-

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ed." he said. "That reason is certainly absurd in the face of William 8. Knudsen’s (exeshtivs vice president of General Motors corporation) repeated predictions that General Motors would need to reach record production to make up for time lost by the recent strike in their plants.” F. L. Burke, manager of the Guido piuikl, said: "So far as I know, no men have been laid off and certainly no men have been laid off because we have been curtailing production.” Reuther said shop committees would confer with plant officials about the alleged lay-offs. Approximately 11,000 men were J working in the local plants. At the very beginning of tbe automobile strikes, sit-down strikers occupied tbe Guide Lamp plant. After they evacuated, non-union men restored production. Since then, there have been a number of fights between the factions, culminating in Saturday morning's shooting affray. No Comment Indianapolis, Feb. 17. — (U.R) — Gov. M. Clifford Townsend returned from Washington today and refused “in the absence of official reports,” to comment on a clash between civil and military law in Anderson. "I want to get the militia out of Anderson as soon as it seems wise to do so,” was his only voluntary statement. Under questioning in press conference he said 17 union members now held in Anderson at Request of military authorities are kept in jail “principally for their own

PAGE FIVE

and probably will be turn-' ■ ed over to civil authorities when * martial law Is lifted. South Bend Sit-Down Strike Is Settled South Bond, Ind., Feb. 17.—<U.R> , —A four-day sit-down strike of employes of the South Bend Balt , company, manufacturers of srtli tidal fish bait, ended today when , 250 striking union employes returned to work. ( Unfdn representatives and cont- ! pany officials signed an agr'ement last night recognizing tbe union as bargaining agent for its members. ' Other union demands cf a 60-cent ’ minimum hourly wage for men and 40 for women employes will be 1 arbitrated later at joint conferen- ’ ces of union and company officials. ; 0 Beef quarters for canning. ID/ic - 134 lb. — H. P. Schmitt Meat Market.

WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILEWithout Calomel-W You’ll Jew? Out of M iu the Morning Rifin’ Io Co Tbe h<er obould pour out two pounds of liquid bila into your bowata daily If thia bilo la not flowing froely, your food doesn'td<wi. It juai decays in the bowel* Gas bloats up your stomach. You ret constipated. Your whole system is poisoned and you feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk. Aaxatives are only makeshifts. A mere ©owel movement doesn’t get at the cause. It takes those rood, old Carter's Little Liver Pills to get these two pounds of bile flowinr freely and make you feel "up and up" Harmbaa. gentle, vet amazing in making bib flow freely Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pilb by name. Stubbornly refuse anything else. 26c.