Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 149, Decatur, Adams County, 24 June 1937 — Page 7
Halt Cars En Route to Strike Zone Mfe l *•?!{( ** k lNNsKx?t .1 i&’«s§3viW |< W& V iSyßroMflyy & TEf laraffiol '* •<£ ';!& ::■ W-.-g|H *%s* < BB* \s & «■<; jßjffiffißffiffiaßfcX .$> ■.■ ''?s?% <%K>l'- J > >«» A xwwffiffiSS JSg S&X* L ’’ Os - M|r $f- z - w BT _ *’ )T V > • ■b*T ; ■•.:■ .~ - ry ;a . BB '—— I Armed deputy sheriffs halt and warch cars at Younestoun
deputy sheriffs halt and search all cars for on roads leading to Youngstown. O . site of the strike-bound Republic Steel cor-
■o STRIKERS I ABANDON CIO B o Weeks Strike On InWdiana Railroad Is J Settled Today ■"^■ r .., !; , !r nlis. June 24 (U.R) Ap workers prepared to re-1 work on a special construe between Terre Haute and today following setKent of a two weeks strike in tor increased wages and hours. K- me time the walkout, which June 10, threatened an of violence when "stilke were imported by the fKlrnad. Thomas Hutson, state K- , ommissioner, indicated that u strikebreakers, now at a construction camp K- Greencastle, would bo disimmediately. |K'nd>-r terms of the agreement Kmitil late yesterday, the 4"t» JKkerit aligned themselves with K Brotherhood of Maintenance Employes union, an affiliate American Federation ot i.a- --: severed relations gHr.:r.:■■ ■■ for industrial orgaiiiza •' The brotherhood will opui I with the railroad in : five days in regard to demand for increased Ks an(l shorter hours. jH?-. 4<iO workers were signed a special construction job K.h entails laying of new tr:u k Ming the N. Y. C. right-of-way
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t i uii, u.| poration and Youngstown Sheet * Tube company. Ohio National Guard troops moved into the strlka zone at Youngstown and at Warren, O.
. from Terre Haute to Indianapolis and previously had no union affiliations. Company officials agreed not to discriminate against the strikers . when they return to work, Hutson i reported. I Originally the strikers filed a petition with Frank Barnhart, president of district No. 11, United Mine Workers, and district representative of the CIO for a charter with the CIO. Affiliation with the American , Federation of Labor was decided, * however, after a conference between Barnhart and Daniel Conzo and Ralph Frecchia, New York Central division officers of the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes union. Hutson reported such action was necessary because the brotherhood already had jurisdiction , over railroad maintenance-of-way employes. Union officials said the men now are working 10 hours daily at a rate of 33 cents an hour. Conzo : reported the brotherhood already has a contract with the New York Central in other divisions for an eight-hour day and 45 cents an I hour wage rate. I.a«t week several truckloads of WPA workers fro.nt Brazil picketed the camp of the alleged "strikebreakers” but did not attempt to molest the workers or halt conJ struction. Q PARKERS FOUND — .(CONTINUED FROM yOB ONB), announced that it had arrived at a verdict. The three co-defeudants, Murray Bleefeld, the governments
PgCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1937.
star witness, and Harry Weiss and Martin Schlossman, who were not called to testify, already have been convicted of the kidnaping in Brooklyn, N. Y. Weiss and Schlossman are serving 20-year i prison terms in connection with the New York prosecution. Tho Barkers were not tried in New York because Gov. Harold G. Hoffman would not grant extradition. The fantastic Wendel case, although onl/ dating back to Wendel s abduction Feb. 14, 1936, J .really reaches back to March i.j 1932, the night on which the infant Charles A. Lindbergh. Jr„ was kidnaped from the Hopewell, N. ' J., home of his parents. It was after Bruno Hauptmann had been convicted of the Lindbergh crime and while he awaited execution in the New Jersey state 1 prison, that Wendel was kidnaped r Wendel was taken to a dungeonlike basement in Brooklyn, strapp,ed on a medieval spread-eagling machine and tortured for ten days ' until he signed a “confession'' of the Lindbergh kidnaping. Then his abductors delivered ' him to Parker, Sr., at the Parker 1 j home in Mount Holly. N. J. ParkI er transferred him to a state institution for the feeble minded. Wendel was kept there 34 days—- '! until the eve of Hauptmann's ’'execution — and then dramatically 'turned over to county authorities. Although Wendel repudiated the 1 ''confession,'’ the incident inimed- : lately caused a sensation and the i execution of Hauptmann was post- ' poned three days. • o Save money on footwear by buying during our remod- ■ eling sale. Winnes Shoe Store.
NATIONS WARN NAZI GERMANY Great Britain, France Warn Against Belligerant Action London, Juno 24.— (U.R) - Great Britain and France have warned Germany that any belligerent ac- ! tlon against loyalist Spain would be regarded with the greatest gravity, it was reported touay. It was asserted that the warning covered any aggression against the loyalist fleet or any blockade of the loyalist coast. The warning was understood to have been sent through Sir Neville Henderson, ambassador at Berlin. Authoritative sources said that Baron Constantin von Neurath, German foreign minister, informed Henderson that Germany in-
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. tended to confine its preaent action | to withdrawal from neutrality patrol work, and hence that the I warning waa unnecesaary. | Evidences Increased of the eleci trie tension us the result of Germany's and Italy's withdrawal from I the international neutrality control plan —a withdrawal, however, i which left powerfully reinforced | fasciat-nazi fleets within striking distance of the loyalist coast ready ’ for action. A strong German fleet assembled 'at Lagos, on tho south coast of Portugal just outside the Straits of Gibraltar. It was perhaps the J strongest German fleet in foreign waters since the reconstitution of the nazi navy. Loyalist Barcelona reported that an Italian warship tried to Halt a British merchantman inside territorial waters on the Catalonian coast and was thwarted only by the arrival of loyalist planes. Gibraltar advicos, unconfirmed but quoting a Brilon regarded as reliable who arrived from Malaga,
asserted that 15,000 Italians land-1 ed at Malaga during the week eud-1 nd June 12. France began to show frank alarm at the situation because of the danger to her Mediterranean communication — German and Italian warships In Spanish nationul- ' Ist harbors which are on tho di . rect route along which In event : of war France would want to send her crack native African troops to a continental battle front. Britain moved slowly, seeking to ’ find how far the non-intervention i powers would support any determI ined policy in support of peace. i Foreign Secretary Anthony Edon ; began conferences today in an effort to find away out. The whole non-intervention plan i was threatened. Collapse of this . plan would leave all the 27 sigi natory nations at liberty to frame r ' policies of their own as regards | the civil war, to send arms as they II wished to either of the Spanish >, factions. , I There were reports that Britain
' had threatened to leave the non-1 I intervention committee if Germany ' | took any quick-tempered action in Spain. o - .) SUPREME COURT i' -{rpyriffH WP- FMgw- saw. pnb> January, 1937, some weeks before J tho 1)111 became effective. M. V. Skinner of Fortland represented Tucker. Tod Whipple, and Roscoe D, Wheat, both of Port- ' land, represented Klater. Whipple has led the fight for the petitioners. Local attorneys who have I been Interested in the suit on the ' behalf of the remonstrators did not I ■ appear in the suit in the supreme court this week. I i Indian Crain Slab Found Holdenville, Okla.—(U.R)—An an-' )' cient Indian grain slab, believed II to have been used to grin'd grain r | by tribesmen many years ago, has i been unearthed in east central | Oklahoma by Clarence H. Edge, )' Holdenville city engineer.
PAGE SEVEN
Educational Needs Cited Colorado Springs, Col. (U.P.)— The challenge of leisure must be met by modern education, according to Dr. Thurston J Davies, president of Colorado College. HELP KIDNEYS PASS 3 LBS. A DAY Duclora My your kiuneya contain 15 fr.JM of tiny tubea or filtara whies help to purify the blood and keep vou healthy. Moat people paae about 3 pinta a day or about 3 nounua <4 waste. Frequent or ecanty paMatea with smarting and burning ahowa th*”*» may be something wrong with your kkhMyg or bh ! Wte An eireaa of acids or poisons in your blnod, when due to functional kidney disorders, may be the cause of nagging backache, rheumatiu paina, lumbago, leg f ’<*, lom of pep and energy. getting un nights, swelling, puthnMC under the eves, neaiuebes and durineaa. Don't wait! Aak .your druggist for Doan’s PiDe, used su crew fully by milnoM fnr over 40 years. They give happy relief and will help the 15 nnlea of kidney tubes flush out poisonous west* from your blood. Get Doan's Pills.
