Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 240, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 February 1932 — Page 14
PAGE 14
ROOSEVELT TO BACK BILL FOR JOB INSURANCE New York Legislature Will Be Asked to Spare Labor From Contributing. Bi/ Vni-fd Frnn ALB'*NY, N. y., Feb. 15.—Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt will ask the New York state legislature to adopt an unemployment insurance plan requiring employer contributions but none from workers, he has announced. In making public the report of the interstate commission on unemployment insurance. The recommendations Include: Contributions by the employer of 2 per cent of his pay roll to a reserve fund; reduction of the payment to 1 per cent when the accumulated reserve amounts to SSO per employe; limitation of the fund required to $75 per employe. A maximum benefit rate of $lO a week or 50 per cent of the employe's wage, which is lower; a maximum period of benefit of ten weeks in the year; limitation of the employers’ liability to the amount of his reserve fund. Each employer’s reserve to be kept separate, and not pooled with the funds of others. Creation of an unemployment administration of three members representing labor, industry, and the public, to receive, invest and disburse the funds. The commission was created at an unemployment insurance conference called by Roosevelt in January, 1931 It consists of six members, representing the Governors of the six industrial states participating. The members are New York—Dr. Leo Wolman, chairman; professor of economics, Columbia university; Massachusetts—A. Lincoln Filene, merchant; New Jersey—Labor Commissioner Charles R. Blunt; Pennsylvania—C. A. Kulp, professor of insurance, University of Pennsylvania; Connecticut—Deputy Labor Commissioner W. J. Couper; Ohio— W. M. Leiserson, professor of economics, Antioch college. ‘ The employe should not, in our judgment, be required to reduce his earnings further by the payment of contributions into unemployment reserves,” the report states. -A further important reason for not recommending contributions by employes is that a purpose of our proposal is to encourage the adoption of measures of prevention. ‘‘The employers’ financial liability under our plan should operate as a continuous incentive to prevent unemployment so far as practicable.”
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Tech Editors
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Upper Photo—Warren McDermed. Lower—Beatrice Roehm
(left) and Thelma Coleman. Warren McDermed was named editor of the June magazine issue of the Technical high school paper, the Arsenal Cannon, in an announcement by Mrs. Gladys Brewer, temporary faculty sponsor of the publication. Appointed to associate editorships were Beatrice Roehm and Thelma Coleman. Charles McLaren was selected as art editor, and William Weaver received the post of assistant art editor. Editors of the two weekly staffs are Martha Mayo and James Burrell. Associates are Katherine Ross and Robert Lybrook. Francis S. Nipp was named general manager; Robert Chupp, business manager, and Joe Childers, circulation manager.
'|P': $ - '>; J& -■f' - \ S >|WJmel^Mb Jm IKH| mgM^M i J i TV |in filyifPF Uli W' WT i...w.- A ..,. iffSFiiSPSt rnaww- -*•- vuhbihihhi r . i -7 w- jH|L fcv — i * -~—*£ ■■ \ KilFx%liilP 'V'S-SKaMiHI WSr ■:■ . / / ■,■:■ '■••'<■■'■ \ 7“? , '"?'■ >, <• <J ' \T’ 7 ■"s' - X A SECTION OF A LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO WAREHOUSE WHERE TOBACCOS ARE STORED TO AGE AND MELLOW 'W/iy CLfaduA/s ale. SeffeA / Just think what this means for Chesterfield be about four miles in length. From floor to ceil- 1 smokers. It means that the larger part of 90 million ing they are filled with these casks of fine tobacco, dollars is invested in Domestic and Turkish tobac- ageing in Nature’s slow but sure way. *4^oßl^^ cos that are being properly aged in Nature’s way, It a lot oft 0 make a gaod and • "Musi* that Satisfied aud cured so as to make them sweeter and milder. . i a* -u j & rITF „ TF _„ TFTn . ... ■ —money to buy good tobaccos and money to age Hjg IttnKfMlM! *JM piece orchestra aud Alex CHESTERFIELD tobacco is packed m wooden them properly. wPßff fSM‘J\~!/ JIhHH Gray, soloist, every night casks.eaelicontainingaboutl,OOOpoundsandstored rTTFdTrPTnrT tnc -n , x x except Sunday—entire for two years in tnodern, up-to-date warehouses. ter twl aQO Z fn Wf mJMi C.luu.biaNcJrL ,0:30 These warehouses, if placed end-to-end, would Just try them! trr4 Ns j * THEY’RE 11DER .. THEY’RE PU R E • •TH E Y TAS T E BETTER • - O l;3- Ligcitt & Mtxm Tobacco Cos. ” j^^MSMEaUa^BM^SIF
OUTRAGES LAID TO JAPANESE IN LEAGUEREPORT Extraordinary Session Plea of China Gains Support in Geneva. BY SAMUEL DASHIELL United Press Staff Correspondent GENEVA, Feb. 15.—Official league reports that ‘‘open warfare” was a fact in Shanghai, and charges that Japanese excesses” included summary executions, have strengthened China’s demand for an extraordinary session of the League of Nations assembly to consider her troubles with Japan. Scheduled for today, a secret session has been postponed to Tuesday. The report said at least 100 Chinese lives were “unaccounted for.” It did not place the blame for breaking the Shanghai truce, which has been abandoned, but said the offensive was entirely in the hands of the Japanese. “The Japanese consul admitted that excesses were committed by his nationals,” the report said. It was signed by Robert Haas, league representative now at Shanghai, and Count Galeazzo Ciano, Italian consul-general and son-in-law of
Premier Mussolini of Italy. "It is impossible to determine who really broke the truce,” the report said. “The offensive was entirely in the hands of the Japanese, whose declared object is to capture the Woosung forts and drive all Chinese forces a considerable distance from Shanghai.” The report said Chinese snipers hid in houses and on roofs and fired at Japanese patrols and that Japanese reservists, armed civilians, responded with machine gun fire and searched and burned houses. “The Shanghai municipal council was forced to evacuate its headquarters. There were numerous excesses, including summary executions committed by Japanese marines and reservists actuated by a spirit of revenge against the Chinese. Sniping has been greatly reduced, but the Japanese control still is severe. “The Japanese authorities, con- ] cerned with the excesses committed j by their nationals, deported a con- i
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siderable number of undesirables,”! the report said. The commission of ministers at * Shanghai, which made the report, was formed at the suggestion of Sir! Eric Drummond, secretary-general l of the league. It was one of the provisions of Article XV of the league covenant under which China appealed against the Japanese occupation of Shanghai. The commission is composed of representatives who have been at Shanghai since the trouble started there. “A complete truce never existed," ; the commission reported, “but it is impossible to determine who should j be held responsible for the attacks, ! and it is even possible that they were started by agents provocateurs. “From Jan. 28 the Japanese section of Shanghai has been invaded by Chinese troops in plain clothes, who fired on Japanese patrols with automatic pistols,” the report said. The Japanese consul was quoted as saying that conditions had improved recently. The ministers said they would issue no further report unless fresh information made one necessary.
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SELECT JUDGE FOR GMIL CASE Hendricks County Jurist to Hear Bondsman’s Plea. Judge Jewel Stevenson of the Hendricks county circuit court has been selected to sit as special judge at the hearing at Lebanon this week bn a petition of Eli Gmil, Indianapolis bondsman, for an injunction against Police Chief Mike Morrissey and Municipal Judges Clifton R. Cameron and William H. Sheafler. Gmil seeks to lift an order banning him from signing bonds in police courts. Stevenson was selected as judge after attorneys met Saturday at Lebanon to argue the petition before Special Judge Benton Devol of Franklin, who disqualified himself. Stevenson is the sixth judge to be selected. Previously Judge Joseph R. Wil-
liams, George Rinier, attorney, and Judge John Hornaday of the Lebanon court disqualified themselves.
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English Writer I. U Lecturer BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Feb. 15. John Langdon - Davies, English
-FEB. 15, 1932
writer and lecturer, will speak Wednesday at the Indiana university convocation.
