Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 138, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1932 — Page 5

OCT. 19, 1932_

LABOR TO ASK CONGRESS FOR JOB INSURANCE Federation’s Stand Altered by Study of ‘Dole’ in Britain. By Scrippt.fiaward Xncspaprr Alliance WASHINGTON, Oct. 19.—Union labor, which early in the depression opposed unemployment insurance as a “dole,” will lead a fight lor it at the coming session of congress. At its annual convention in Cincinnati next month, the American Federation of Labor will lay its •plans for the campaign. Follow-' Ing his instructions, voted at the Atlantic City meeting of the executive committee, President William Green will have prepared a bill officially to embody the federation's views. Industry Fails Labor This will resemble the Dill oldage pension measure, and will provide for federal aid to states for compulsory unemployment insurance. Senator Robert Wagner, whose minority report on the subject favored such plan, may father the measure. A number of developments will put power behind the labor drive. One is failure of private industry 1b take substantial steps toward j jobless reserves. Another is an independent report on the workings of jobless insurance in Europe, made by the federation's two fraternal delegates to the British Trades Union Congress this year. These delegates, Joseph A. Franklin, president of the Boilermakers, and E. E. Milliman of the Maintenance of Waymen, will present their formal report to the convention. It will cover not only England’s plans, but those in other countries of Europe. Briton* Better Fed "If it were not for unemployment insurance, or the so-called ‘dole,’ conditions would be infinitely worse in Britain today," skid Franklin. “The ‘dole’ at least has eliminated breadlines and afforded workers a chance to eat.’’ Milliman says that British and continental workers are better fed,

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Virginia Dawes By T.'nitcd Preen CHICAGO, Oct. 19.—Campus gossip at Northwestern university today had it that James Martin, who is working his way through the university by dispensing gasoline at a filling station, has supplanted Ensign John Gardner Tennant, U. S. N„ in the affections of Virginia Dawes, 19, adopted daughter ot former VicePresident and Mrs. Charles G. Dawes. General and Mrs. Dawes announced Miss Dawes’ engagement to Tennant last June 26. Tuesday, Mrs. Dawes, when asked w'hether the engagement had been broken, said: “Publicly, she is engaged to no one.” clothed, and housed as the result of systems of jobless insurance. “The ‘dole,’ as our newspapers insist upon calling unemployment insurance, undoubtedly saved England from industrial revolution," said Milliman. “It is infinitely better than the kind of ‘’dole’ we have in this country.”

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TAX EVASIONS UNEARTHED IN NORBECK QUIZ Startling Evidence Reported Dug Up by Senate’s Bank Committee. By Scrippn-Hoiacrd Xewnpaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Oct. 19.—Startling evidence of tax evasion is said to have been unearthed quietly during the last summer by the senate committee on banking and currency, under Chairman Peter Norbeck (Rep., N. D.). It is understood that the inquiry has been so effective that efforts have been made to change the personnel of the committee’s staff and hamstring the inquiry. Belief has been expressed by those interested in the secret activities of j the Norbeck committee that the j most sensational disclosures to be 1

ADVANCE

~v . . - V ,yTHE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Honored! By Vnited Prttn H“"“jjSjl AMPTON, Mass., Oct. man year at Mm 4 8 Smith coils "da stance Morr ''*W est daughter ' \ of the late k Senator IP Dwight W. V X Morrow, was - ' •- - dent of her * Constance class. Now she’s been chosen president of the sophomore class.

offered when it resumes public hearings will relate not so much to stock market deals and trading pools as to alleged methods by which huge investment trusts, and other corporations, have endeavored to beat Uncle Sam out of millions of dollars in income taxes.

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FIVE TO ENTER JACKSON RACE Aviators Will Contest for Trophy Sunday. Five national guard fliers today were grooming an equal number of guard airplanes in preparation for the annual twenty-five-mile race *for the Chester Jackson trophy, to be

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held at 2:30 Sunday at municipal airport. The race will be over a five-mile closed course used during the municipal airport dedication races. Each guard flier will use the same type plane, Douglas 0-38, each powered with a Hornet motor, leaving the victory based on skill and the brakes. Captain Earl R. Sweeney, who won the race both in 1930 and 1931, is the defending champion. The other four pilots, selected by lot from the guard officers, are Lieutenants W. E. Brown, Cecil F. Reynolds, Sidney Stout and Stanley Lefeber.

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