Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 301, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 April 1928 — Page 3
APRIL 13, 1928.
UNION LABEL WEEK OPENS WITHJMADE City Labor Organizations to March Saturday; Pageant Is Planned. Organized Labor and Union Label week will open with a parade of members of local labor organizations Saturday at 2:30 p. m. The parade will form in front of the National Headquarters Bldg,, the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, between Delaware and Alabama Sts., on Michigan. Practically all the local unions will be represented with floats, and hundreds of marchers will parade through the business district to West and Washington Sts., where they will disband. Friday evening, April 20, the pageant “The Wheel of Industry,” will be presented under the auspices of the United Garment Workers of America, local union No. 127. Every local industrial workers’ group will be represented in the cast which will include more than 500 participants. The production will be under the direction of B. Burton Henry, veteran producer. A delegate from the labor organizations is to call on Mayor L. Ert Slack with an invitation to attend the pageant .. nd to view the parade. The purpose of the week is to promote general interest in the products of organized labor which bear the union label. Mrs. Mabel Lowe of the United Garment Workers, is chairman of the committee in charge of the celebration. Tickets for the pageant may be obtained at the Union Label Store, 6 Pembroke Arcade, the Cadle Tabernacle and the various union headquarters in the city.
WATSON, ROBINSON GET INDORSEMENTS County Chairmen Back Native Son; Club for Senator. Senator James E. Watson, seeking Indiana’s presidential preference vote, and Senator Arthur R. Robinson, seeking renomination, each added an indorsement from Republican organization groups to their lists today. Tenth district and county chairmen and vice chairmen meeting at Lafayette Thursday, adopted a resolution indorsing Watson’s candidacy, saying “his leadership has been of that character that inspires confidence and redounds to the credit of the party of which he is such a worthy exemplar.” Robinson’s indorsement came from the Washington township Republican Club. “He stands upon the rock-ribbed principles of our Republican party,” said the resolution, “and in defense thereof he has fought fearlessly without regard for sqlf.” Robinson’s public record was indorsed over objections of members who questioned the propriety of the club indorsing any candidate before the primary.
“It’s the Little Things” By Times Special SOUTH BEND, Ind., April 13.—A narrow escape fom injury was experienced by Alex Creutzburg in a fall from a five-foot step ladder while he was engaged in putting up awnings, although he celebrated his fifty-seventh birthday a few hours before by standing on his head atop a pole sixty feet high. Gland Expert in Car Crash By United Press PARIS, April 13.—Dr. Serge Voronoff, gland expert, has arrived in Biarritz after a motor car smashup in Spain in which his machine was destroyed by fire. The doctor was uninjured.
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Interlocutor
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Sam Richman, who will play the part of interlocutor in the fifth annual minstrel show to be given by the Pals Club, Jewish organization at 8 p. m. April 19 at Kirshbaum Community Center, 2314 N. Meridian St. Hyman Granopsky, Isadore Stein, Rudy Klapper, Sam Cohen, Lou Kassef, Nathan Aesnick, Jack Kollinger and Joe Burnstein are end men.
OHIOAN URGES SHIPPING BILL Asks Unified Support for Merchant Marine. “American farmers and manufacturers lost a billion dollars during the war because they couldn’t deliver to overseas markets,” Malcolm M. Stewart, Cincinnati, Middle West foreign trade committee chairman, said at the Chamber of Commerce open forum luncheon today. Stewart praised the Jones bill
pending before Congress, which he said would help the American merchant marine, authorize the Shipping Board to proceed with a replacement program, and take other steps for meeeting foreign competition. “In the fall of 1926 and the winter of 1927 our farmers would have suffered tremendously if the Shipping Board had not provided an American fleet of 397 vessels to ship his products, when the foreign shins were carrying coal during the British coal strike. “The merchant marine will not maintain itself, but must have the sunoort of all American citizens, imnorters and exporters, farmers and others. It is of great value to our commerce and as a naval auxiliary, and' Justifies the annropriation of manv times the cost of administration.”
JORDAN ADMINISTRATOR John W. Cantor Will Probated: Personal Property, 510,000. John W. Jordan. New Auguste wes named administrator of the estate of John W. Castor, former Marion County recorder and president of the Castor Brothers Printing Comnany. when his estate was probated Thursday bv Judge Mehlon E. Bash. Mr. Castor died April 1. Personal property in the estate is valued at 510.000, and no real estate is listed for probate, because it was held jointly by Mr. and Mrs. Castor. Plan to Aid Park Project By Times Special ROCHESTER, Ind., April 13. Representatives of clubs, fraternal orders and other organizations are engaged in forming an organization here today to advance plans for the Tippecanoe River State park.
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