Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 294, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1929 — Page 7

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BAYONETS USED TO HALT MILL STRIKE PARADE Deputies Use Revolvers and Clubs Against Women and Children. BY ROSC OF B. FLEMING Time* Ftaff C orre*fH>ndent GASTONIA. N. C.. April 30 Deputy sheriffs, armed with bayoneted rifles, revolvers and clubs Monday night broke up a parade of frikers near the Lorav cotton mill here and arrested three. The deputies apparently were angered because the strikers, abandoning their daily line of march had penetrated another street, away from the mill. Half of the ninety paraders were herded in one group away from the mill and the other half herded in the opposite direction. Mrs. Callie Martin, who saw' her 15-year-old son in the roundup, trove to break through the deputy lines to reach him. After a struggle, he was shoved into an auutomobile and taken to jail. The charge against her was profanity. Two other strikers. Everett Haseldean, 15. and Walter Loyd, 16. -were in jail today, charged with violating the hastily prepared anti-parade ordinance which city council passed as a civic weapon against mass picketing, and which is under at~ tack by the strike committee and the American Civil Liberties Union. Mill Resumes Work The arrests followed the usual strikers mass meeting at which addresses ’were made by Fred E. Beal, organizer of the National Textile Workers’ union, and Carl M. Reeve of the International Labor Defense. The Chadwick-Hopkins mill at Pineville, thirty miles from here, resumed operations Monday after a three-week shutdown, due to a walkout of 190 of its 273 operatives. “Starved out” was the explanation of the local strike leaders, who said they had not obtained sufficient food or funds from the Rational Textile Workers' union to continue. Carl M. Reeve of the International Labor Defense, said that the union had found it impossible to keep extending relief to Pineville. explaining that the feeding of 500 at the Loray mill at Gastonia, center of the strike agitation, and the 500 at Bessemer City, where there are strikers in four mills, was all the union could manage for the present.

Grand Jury to Report Tire Gaston county grand jury, which has been investigating the breaking up of the strike and tactics of the communist strike leaders, was expected to report t day. The North Carolina situation sums up as follows: Strike at Loray Mill. here, considered by both sides the fecal point, continues, apparently indefinitely. At Bessemer City, the Osage, the largest mill, is shut down: two others are running, although crippled, and a fourth is running full force, with outsiders having replaced the strikers. The Rex Mill, near here, has discharged thirty-one persons for belonging to the union. No strike has resulted. Two mills at other points are still partially crippled, and two more, where a few workers walked out in each, are running full , :me, although with the strike unsettled. At Forest City, fifty miles away, a strike was ended when the northern efficiency expert was discharged and the “stretch-out” abolished. PAUPER IS BOOTLEGGER Poor Farm Inmate Jailed for “Trading” Drinks. Bu T'nitt tl f’l'. JOLIET. Til.. April 30.—George Pozek. 74, an inmate of the Will county poor farm, must serve six months at the Vandalia prison farm for bootlegging among fellow inmates. Authorities learned Pozek sold liquor by the drink from his bottle in return for clothes, books or any article of merchandise hee could obtain from other inmates.

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PUPILS TO GIVE SHOW Minstrel Performance of School 54 to Be Held Wednesday. The minstrel to be given by pupils of School 54, Dearborn and East Tenth streets, will be pre-ented only at tho school. Wednesday evening, and not at Brookside park at a later date as erroneously announced. SHUTINS WILL GET FLOWERS Distribution tc Feature May Day Celebration. May day. the feature of Child Health week, will be in Indianapolis Wednesday with all child health promotion agencies and more than fifty thousand school children participating. Distribution oi flowers to crippled and shut-in children by the Public Health Nursing Association, the Red Cross and Girl Scouts will be part of the celebration. Mrs. Harry G. Leslie anfl Mrs. L. Ert Slack will be among the fifty women who will assist in distributing the flowers. One hundred Girl Scouts collected flowers and potted plants from city schools today. A “health fair” will be held tonight at the American Settlement, 617 West Pearl street.

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JEWISH LEADER PRAISES YOUTH Welfare Organizations Elect Directors. Modern youth was praised by Leonard A. Strauss, president of the Jewish Community Center Associa- , tion at a joint meeting of the association. the Jewish Welfare fund and the Jewish Federaticn Monday night at the Kirshbaum Community Center. “Youth is full of energy and it is the task of the older people to develop and direct that energy into healthful and proper channels,” Strauss said. New directors elected for three years by the federation were Louis J. Borinstein, Edward A. Kahn and Philip Greenwald. Dr. Reuben A. Solomon, Mrs. Louis Wolf and Saul Solomon were re-elected. Directors elected for three years by the Jewish Community Center Association were Miss Esther Arnold. Dr. J. K. Berman. Dr. Philip Falender, Dr. Elliot Hirsch, Dr. A. S. Jaeger Carl Lyman. Henry V. Kobin, Rabbi Milton Steinberg and Mrs. Louis Sereinsky. Man Struc' by Auto Dies VINCENNES, Ind., April 30. Spierce Hollingsworth, 77. died today of injuries received when he was struck by an automobile driven by Charles Thompson. The latter was exonerated.

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DUB BABY.UNIS DEPGUX It Was Found Abandoned at St. Paul Union Depot. B / ( nitrrt Prt * ST. PAUL. .April 30.—A baby girl, about two weeks old. was found at the St. Paul union depot. City hospital attaches named her “Unis Depoux" and took ber “foot prints" for possible identification of parents.

200 RADIO MEN GO TOMARION Dealers Leave City After Inspecting Robbins Plant. More than two hundred jobbers of the Apex division of the United States Radio and Television Corporation left on a special train this morning for Marion, where they will inspect the Case radio plants of the company and look-over the new line of radio equipment on display at the Marion Country Club, where they will have luncheon. After a business meeting in the afternoon they will attend a community party at the factory and the Marion coliseum tonight. The jobbers visited the recently acquired Robbins Body Corporation plant here Monday. This factory has been equipped as the world’s largest and best equipped radio cabinet plant.

KOKOMO ASKS ‘CLEANUP' AID Attorney-General Promises to Investigate. Petition of forty-t.wo Kokomo citizens for the attorney-general's office to take a hand in Howard county “clean-up” prosecutions, said to be the result of political quarrels of long standing, was answered today

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by Attorney-General James M. Ogden. with a promise he will send Deputy Merl M. Wall to investigate. Ogden declared that he was "giving the matter due consideration," but pointed out that the statutes only provide for his office to take a hand in liquor law violation prosecutions. The petition alleged that Kokomo is rife with lawlessness (liquor and gambling), and the the city government or prosecutor wiil do nothing about it.

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It recited the fire department scandals and the indictment on liquor charges of Chief John Asby and fireman Floyd Morgan. They were convicted, but Asby has anew trial pending in Grant county. George Gibbs, member of the board of works, took a change of venue to Miami county and was acquitted. The petition alleged that five other criminal charges are ready to be made, but the citizens can not Interest the prosecutor In them.

PAGE 7

56 HELD IN TRAFFIC NET Fifty-six persons, two of them women, were arrested Monday rlight by police, charged with violation of the city traffic law. Thirty were arrested for speeding, nineteen for failure to have proper lighting on their cars and nineteen for failure to stop at perferential streets. All were slated to appe'ar in municipal court today.

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