Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 72, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 August 1933 — Page 3
AUG. 3, 1933.
NRA ACTS TO HALT PENNSY COAL STRIKE Johnson Suddenly Takes Hand in Dispute After Trip to State. tt, t WASHINGTON Auk 3 General High 8 johnv>n. exerting all the power of th* national recovery administration. hammered at union labor leaders and mine own* rs toda> for a speedy set'.lenient of the Pennsylvania coal strike "Some progress w a.s reported by Johnson after a five-hour round of aecret conferences Wednesday night. Although the general seemed worried he resumed the sessions this morning with the hope that thtre mas be some announcement soon." President Roosevelt was kept in touch with the progress of the negotiation.'- Frank Walker, executive secretary of his super-cabinet, sat in at the conferences. Suddenly Intervenes -Johnson suddenly intervened in the Pennsylvania labor war after flung to Harrisburg Wednesday to deliver an address. He induced Governor Gifford Pinchot and Thomas Moses, president of the H C Frick Coke Cos . to return here with him by airplane The strike, growing out of demands of th-* miners for recognition of the United Mine Workers' Union, had begun at the Frick mines, which, through many labor disturbances, have held to a nonunion policy. John I. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, already was her’. Another participant in the conferences was Edward McGrady. official of the American Federation of Labor and member of the NRA labor advisory board The dynamic Johnson threw all his energies into the effort to adjust the dispute. He viewed it as a major threat to the 5. nera! recovery program Advance Code Hearing Johnson sought a settlement which would send the m*tiers back to work and leave 'he union labor issue for determination at hearings here next week on proposed codes for Ihe coal industry. Originally scheduled for Aug 14, the hearings We re advanrd to Aug. 9 The coal situation is one of the most, difficult with which the administrator has to deal. Eighteen different codes have been submitted so far- They propose widely varying scales of hours and wages. In addition to adjusting these differences. Johnson faces the prospect of a fight similar to that over the steel industry's attempt to maintain company unions. Negotiate in Secret The law requires that industrial codes guarantee the right of labor to bargain collectively. It is this provision that has encouraged the Un.ted Mine Workers in their present campaign to unionize the Pennsylvania fields. Johnson conducted the arbitration negotiations with the utmost secrecy The various individuals concerned were placed in separate offices in the Commerce building. Johnson went from one to another as he sought to find a common ground. Newspaper men were barred from the adjacent corridors. ICKES DECISION TO END COLORADO RIVER ISSUE Prosperity of Farm Lands at Stake in Irrigation Wrangle. h" Srrii'in-lfoirni'l \ irnpapcr Alliance WASHINGTON. Aug. 3 A thir-teen-year fight for possession of Colorado river water, which means desolation or prosperity to farm lands in southern Arizona and California will lx* derided by Interior Secretary Harold L. Ickes and iiis public works board within the next few weeks The decision, one of the most complicated the administration has been called on to make, involves relations between this country and Mexico, use of cheap foreign labor in competition with American farmers. the administrations farm relief and recovery programs, and compact relations among western states. Five years ago congress ruled, in this same controversy, on the .-ide of American farmers in the southwest Since then, the Hoover administration. by refusing to follow that decision, has interenched those who want to use the water on Mexican soil. The immediate decision to be made by the public works board concerns expenditure of money to start work on the all-American canal, authorized by congress in 1928. to carry water from Boulder Dam to the Imperial valley, in Arizona and California.
I LIKE TO SMOKE A LOT, ■L. I ESPECIALLY AFTER A ■g* GOOD SWIM. I HAVE . I TRIEO ALL POPULAR 9RANO^ ANO CA^'£^ 1 cosdi&r lokucos M*le* cjeTcm ijCrurlieevcS...‘liciier'Cre ijourTaite^^^^'
Three *Horses on Him, ’ but He Wants Parole
(Continued From Page One! diana state farm for vehicle-taking he took a horse and buggy, the board surmised. Then hi 1 - horse mama was repressed for a time He escaped from the farm but kept away from the horses heads until he got drunk Then his emotions were released. He went on a regular horse stealing spree. First he stole a horse at Cloverdale and rode it to Brazil. There he abandoned the nag for another and better onp on the same terms. At Jasonvllle he quit the second horse and took a third with a buggy and harness thrown in.
U. S. TO GUIDE CONSUMER ON ‘FAIR PRICES’ Weekly Lists Will Show What Should Be Paid for Necessities. BV JOHN A. RF.K HMAN'N, I nitfd Pres* St;*fT ( orrrvnondfnl WASHINGTON, Aug 3.—Weekly lists of fair prices for necessities of life will be published by the government to protect the public from possible profiteering, it was announced today. The administration recognizes that higher commodity prices, processing taxes and higher wages under the recovery program will increase the cost of goods to the consumer. But it is determined to prevent gouging that would nullify Ihe benefits of increased buying power. Arrangements for the weekly price lists were announced by Frederic C. Howe, consumers' counsel of agricultural adjustment administration. The figures will be compiled by the administration with the aid of the agriculture department's economic bureau and the bureau of labor statistics. Show Who Gets Money Tlie special bulletins will show not only what a fair price should be. but will indicate how much of the higher prices go back to farmers and th# laborers who produce the finished goods. At first the figures will be confined to brpad, milk, meat, and other foodstuffs. Clothing and textile goods will be taken in later. The data will be gathered from fifty cities and from more than 1,000 independent, chain and specially stores. Factors to be shown in their relation to price, acrotding to How’e, will include: The amount the farmer receives for producing the raw materials that go into the finished goods. Bulletins Every Week The amount labor receives as a result of the increased wages under the industrial program. The amount farmers are obliged to pay for the goods they must buy. These calculations wil! give an indication of the progress of the drive to increase purchasing power of farmers and laborers. The weekly bulletin was chosen, Howe explained, because ''conditions are changing so ratndly that month old figures are of little use to consumers.”
GETS $200,000 ESTATE Student-Father of 4 Sole Beneficiary in Grandmother's Will. Hti I niti 11 I’ri *. PERU, Ind.. Aug. 3 Clinton Schenck Wainscott, father of four children and a student at Cornell university, was named sole beneficiary of the $200,000 estate left by his grandmother. Flora H. Schneck. Peru, according to terms of the will on file for probate here today. Dr C. C. Wainscott, Peru, father of Clinton, was asked to create a trust fund for his son to terminate Dec 31. 1947. Young Wainscott's wife and children live here. A giant block of coal, 22 feet square and 10 feet high, is a railwayexhibit at the Chicago fair, and is hollowed out to contain a miniature mine. Asthma and Hay Fover Disappear Like IVEagic! New Mono-Back Remedy Afford* Quirk Relief. Calafo liauid relieve* the distressing symptoms of Asthma and Hav Fever or tnonev hark No questions vou are Judge Calafo liquid a different remedy, promises vou relief. You breathe freely—sleep all night regain health! The distressing symptoms disappear! Don't suffer longer •ry Calafo liquid, tl 00 Hook's Depenriab.e Drug Stores and other druggists.— Advertisement.
Tired of riding astride he later tired of riding in the buggy, and proceeded to sell it. Having disposed of the buggv and harness, he was caught when he tried to sell the third horse With three "horses on him." the judge ir. Clay county gave Kelley twenty years. That was in Feburarv. 1932 Hf pleads now that he must be a bit buggy for stealing so many horses, and asks release on the grounds that he is a mental case. No one in their right mind would be a horse thief these davs," Kelley contends.
PROSECUTOR RETURNS FROM VACATION TRIP Wilson Reports Fishing Grand After Month in Florida. With a repertory of stories of big ones that got away, ' and of a few smaller ones that didn't. Prosecutor Herbert E. Wilson returned to his office today after a month s fishing trip and vacation at Miami Beach. Fla. Wilson said he fished for big fish such as tarpon and barracuda, but failed to land anything resembling a sea monster, but did ca'ch twen-ty-seven fish weighing eignt or nine pounds each in one hour. He was loud in praise of the summer climate of Florida, and of the cheap rent available in the summer months. ASKS $25,000 IN SUIT Damage Case Against Milk Firm Filed by Infant's Parents. Suit for $25,000 damages for injuries received by an infant as result of particles of glass alleged to have been in a bottle of milk was filed in Marion circuit court today against the Polk Milk Company. The suit, filed by Mrs. Minnie Matheson. 316 1 - Virginia avenue, on behalf of her 15-months-old daughter Ellen Fr’nces. charges that the baby's throat was lacerated and she was injured internally. Tlie milk was purchased Jan. 19. The complaint states that the child •still is under a physician’s care, after having been confined for a time to a hospital. 3.2 GETTING ‘STOUTER’ Gradual Rise in Alcoholic Contents Since April Reported. fl/i ' Hitrrl rerun NEW YORK. Aug. 3.—The beer is getting stronger. The American Brewer, organ of beer makers, announces the following alcoholic percentages by months, obtained by sampling an average of about fifty brews a month: April. 2.83 per cent; May. 2.89 June. 2.95; July. 3.00.
[gas m B (7 Gallons 97c) Oil-390 1 1 Kero Vh ne GaT[ 5 Gal.49c I 1100 E. 30th St.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
GIRL JOINS IN CAFE BATTLE, COURT LEARNS Pretty Miss Wields Gas Pipe to Aid Father in Fight. The story of how a charming young woman came to her father s rescue with a big piece of gas pipe m a fight he was having with a disgruntled patron of his restaurant was aired before Judge Dewey Myers in municipal court three today. It was the story of an alleged short-changing and an altercation that followed. When the tale had been told, the judge pondered deeply. and then withheld judgment until Aug. 14. Harold Sudith. R R 11 Box 339-S. told the court he had purchased three bottles of beer in Philip Sorrentino's restaurant, 5529 East Washington street. He said Miss Ruby Tenwick, waitress, handed him only $2.75 change out of a $5 bill. Slammed Door in Face Discovering the loss wh-’n he returned to his car in which his wife was sitting, he said, he went back to the store. He claimed Sorrentino met him at the door, and slammed the door in his face. H° admitted hitting Sorrentino. Then the fight started. The court heard both sides. One thing was agreed Miss Gladys Sorrentino came to her father’s rescue with the gas pipe. Someone, who later turned out to be Ed Fitzgerald, custod.an of a Masonic temple across ti:e street wrested it from her. after sh* had tapped Sudith on the head playfully. Then Gladys went for a gun. She returned and thrust in into papa s hand. "I Dare You to Shoot" ‘One step and I’ll kill you,” said Sororentino. drawing himself up. Then Mrs. Sudith came into the scene. She stepped between the two men. "I dare you to shoot.” said she. A minute later, more or less, the Jawarrived. Sudith was slated on an assault and battery charge. Myers discovered a slight discrepancy in cross-examining pretty Miss Tenwick. She was in confusion regarding how much money Sudith had given her. So the judge decided to hold matters off for a while until he gets things straightened out a bit.
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TAKES OLD POST
Is * m
George M. Ringer
Tlie William H Block Company today announced the reappointment of George M Bmger as publicity director for the company. He held this position seven and a half years prior to his resignation a year ago. Binger assumed his duties at the store Tuesday.
U. S. REJECTS UTILITY ‘CODE’ ON RECOVERY Proposals for Participation Returned as Unacceptable. Hu Srrippn-Hnirard A rrrniinprr A llinncr WASHINGTON, Aug. 3. The only proposal made by electric and gas utilities for participation in the immediate and permanent recoveryprograms has been returned to them as unacceptable, it was learned today. While the terms of the proposal were not made public, officials of the recovery administration took the position that they did not even constitute a basis on which discussion of a code or compliance with the President's emergency agreement could start. Administrator Johnson has not. however, changed his belief that utilities, except steam railroads, which come under the interstate commerce commission, are required to comply with terms of the recovery act. He said that he had no reason to be gratified by the response of the utilities so far. Reunion Planned Present and former residents of Lawrence county will hold their annual reunion at 2:30 Sunday in Riverside park.
BEER CONTROL IS FACING TEST Constitutionality of State Law Is Issue Before U. S. Court. By ' mini rr. . SOUTH BEND. Ind.. Aug. 3 Constitutionality of the state beejcontrol law faced its fiist federal court test here today. The action was brought in northern Indiana district court by Abe Rosen. Gary, who has been selling beer without a state license under protection of a restraining order issued in Lake countv sunerior court. The suit is aimed principally at Sheriff Neal Fry of Porter countv but it also names Attorney-General Philip Lutz Jr.
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TRAFFIC VICTIM
f
Mrs. Elizabeth llawley
Injured fatally in an automobile accident at Southport, Wednesday. Mrs. Elizabeth Hawley. 71. mother of traffic patrolman C. C Crouch, will be buried Saturday at Crown Hill.
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