Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 312, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 May 1933 — Page 11

MAY 10, 1933

REVIVAL BILLS AWAIT ORDERS BY ROOSEVELT Industrial Recovery Plans Up to President for Future Course. (Continued From Page One) anti-trust laws, but that “the kind of competition that results in Ion? hours, starvation wages and overproduction” was not intended. The labor committee, according to present indications, will report a strict thirty-hour week bill, with power to make specific exemptions vested in a federal regulatory board composed of the labor secretary, and

TODAY and THURSDAY at 2 P. M. The Indianapolis Times FREE SCHOOL

MISS RUTH CHAMBERS EPkS > >. . v.. '. * * * ‘ Miss Ruth Chambers, nationally known Home Economics expert, will be in charge of each session. Her pleasant manner in demonstrating has won her hosts of ardent followers—

MISS RUTH CHAMBERS Whose chatty lectures and excellent recipes have won her many friends will be in charge of each session. On a model stage in full view of her audience, Miss Chambers will demonstrate the latest meat cookery recipes. Remember, the doors open each afternoon at 1 P. M. Demonstrations start promptly at 2 P. M. Miss Chambers will also conduct an evening session Thursday at 7:30 P. M.

THREE HOURS FREE PARKING—CENTRAL PARKING GARAGE, 39 KENTUCKY AVE. 1 The Indianapolis Times B

representatives of trade associations and organized labor. This board will license all industry selling in interstate commerce. It will not limit total production in any plant, as Labor Secretary Perkins suggested, permitting plants to work four six-hour shifts a day within the confines cf the thirtyhour week if they see fit. Plants in which workers are not affiliated with the American Federation of Labor will be given the choice of permitting such affiliation or accenting a minimum wage fixed by the federal board. According to present indications, a fight on the foreign embargo clause will be made in committee. The measure which is being laid today before President Roosevelt is j the joint product of two different groups. One. composed of Donald Richberg of the Railway Executives* Association; Lewis Douglas, budget director, and General Hugh John- ' son, chief of the research staff of ; Bernard F. Baruch, favored emergency legislation, in which juris- | dictiOn over industry should be j centered in the hands of the Presii dent for a limited period.

The second group, including Senator Wagner, John Dickinson, assistant secretary cf commerce; Meyer Jacobstein, former member of congress; Harold Moulton of the Brookings institution, and a number of business men, favored permanent legislation, with control vested in a board similar to that favored by the house labor committee. The bill in its final draft is reported to follow' this second line of thought. It provides that trade associations shall agree on production quotas and prices in each industry, and that the board shall enforce such agreements. It declares the right of labor to organize and bargain collectively. The Wagner bill includes a $3,000,000,000 public works proposal, a figure larger than the administration previously has indicated it would favor, and only half as large as that proposed Monday by Senators Edward D. Costigan (Dem., Colo.), Robert L. La Follette (Rep., Wis.) and Bronson Cutting (Dem., N. M.i.

; THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ',

NURSE OFFERS HOME TO YOUNG ‘MISSNOBODY’ Tried to Adopt Child 10 Years Ago When She Was Abandoned Here. There’s a home in Indianapolis for little "Miss Nobody.” It is the same home that was waiting her ten years ago, when, a baby a few days old she was found in an abandoned suit box by Mr. and Mrs. J. Hart Hayes, in the alley at 3046 Central avenue. Little Betty, who gained the name of “Mi'iS Nobody” at that time, was adopted informally by Mrs. Harry L. Faulkner, who is now Mrs. Orvall E. Tincher of Los Angeles. When Mrs. Tincher took Betty,

of MEAT COOKERY Admission FREE—Everybody Invited ENGLISH THEATER Wednesday and Thursday Afternoons 2 P. M. Thursday Evening 7:30 P. M. Many VALUABLE GIFTS Awarded Each Session

Here is an attentive audience listening to the helpful ideas and excellent recipes that have won for her national prominence. The valuable homemaking suggestions offered by Miss Chambers will make it worth your while to come early—bring notebook and pencil. > * . * j $ g

Mrs. Zonda L. Martin. 621 East Thirteenth street, a nurse at the city hospital, was one of fifty persons who wanted to give the nameless baby a home. Because Mrs. Tincher had asked previously to adopt a child, she was permitted to take Betty. Tuesday word was received in Indiapapolis that Mrs. Tincher is seeking Betty’s mother, since misfortune has made it impossible for her to continue to give the girl a home. Mrs. Martin wrote to Mrs. Tincher today, asking that she be allowed to have Betty. “Zonda fell in love with the baby when she was first brought to the city hospital,” Mrs. Lily Nelson, Mrs. Martin's mother, said today. “She called me and told me what a darling baby she was. The nurses at the hospital had named her Virginia Mayhouse. They all loved her; she w r as so pretty and so little trouble. “Tuesday I called Zonda, who is at work on a private case, and asked her if she had heard that Betty's foster mother wanted to give her up. Then she told me that she still wanted to take her into our home. “This morning she is waiting to

Mrs. ‘ Tincher, offering to take the little girl. We would be happy to have her all the time, or we would keep her until her mother claims her. “Zonda never has been able to forget her; she had the care of twenty babies in the ward at the city hospital when little Betty was brought there, but she always has remembered that one little nameless baby. We call her ‘our baby.’ ” Mrs. Martin lives with her mother, and her 86-year-old grandmother. All of them are anxiously waiting to hear if they are to be allowed to make a home for Betty. “She needn't ever be called ‘Miss Nobody' again,” Mrs. Nelson said. GIRL MOTORIST HURT Cut on Head When Auto Plunges Over 20-Foot Embankment. Cuts on the head were incurred Tuesday by Miss Helen Mitchell, 17, of 506 Warren avenue, when an automobile she was driving, with the owner, Ray Sheppard, 659 Birch street, plunged down a twenty-foot embankment at Kentucky avenue and Drover street. Sheppard escaped injury.

CITY WATER CO. LAND APPRAISAL PUT UNDER FIRE Cross - Examination Ends and Engineer Takes Stand in Court. Second step in the Indianapolis Water Company's effort to establish a rate-making valuation of not less than $26,000,000 was taken todav when George W. Fuller. New York, consulting engineer, took the stand in federal court to testify as to value of the company's improvements. Fuller was sworn shortly before the noon recess and by recess time had not completed recital of his qualifications. Most of the morning was spent in continued cross-examination by

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George W. Hufsmith. assistant at* tomey-general. of Emerson W. Chaille, one of the water company'3 two appraisers of its real estate, exclusive of improvement*. Hufsmith elicited from Chaille j statement that he had appraised ! canal lands on the basis that the 1 canal would be abandoned as a i water supply source, then read from the record attempting to show that | Chaille last week testified he had evaluated the lands as potential water front home sites. Attack also was made on Chaille's $l5O an acre valuation of the 4.800acre Oaklandon reservoir project which, the witness said, he valued as potential water front estate sites, i for which he said there is great demand. He testified the company | paid an acreage of $146 88 an acre for the land. Hufsmith renewed attack on the Dawson tract valuation, asking the i witness if he knew half the tract was under water Sunday, he still would value it at SI,BOO an acre. • The witness said that if the flooded section were the part in the rear of the tract, it would not l change his opinion.