Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 94, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 August 1933 — Page 5
AUG. 29, 1933
NRA BOARD TO | OPEN INQUIRY! ON VIOLATIONS Bureau of Complaints Will Be Ready Friday to Start Probe. (Continued From Page One) ters, according to Wells, merely is to insure employers and workers the right to bargain, collectively or singly, the manner being left to discretion of the individual. At the same time. Wells an- 1 nounced that in the matter of hours for stores in the retail trade, the' district board contemplated only j that the maximum would not be less; than the minimum number of hours prevailing before the NRA program went into e fleet. Maximum to Be Asked Nevertheless, establishment of maximum hours for retail stores will be asked of the NRA offices in; Washington by the Indiana district board. Wells announced, following a meeting Monday in the Chamber of Commerce. The request will be sent to RepLouis Ludlow to convey to General Hugh S. Johnson, nation recovery administrator. Indianapolis Retail Hardware As- j sociation abandoned a uniform hour schedule adopted some time ago, after a meeting at the Severin Monday. Manv Workers Added Codification of reports from volunteer NRA workers, filed at headquarters in the Chamber of Commerce, show that 3.387 Indianapolis Arms visited in the local campaign have added 4,848 workers and $93,124.27 to their weekly pay rolls since inauguration of the NRA. While J. E. Fischer, “colonel” in charge of the survey, stated that a much larger number than the 33,895 consumers whose signed pledges are on file, actually had signed cards, the survey to date shows that only 35 per cent of the city has been subscribed. Fischer said that many workers have not brought their completed surveys to headquarters. RIGHT-OF-WAY IS SET FOR U. S. AID ROADS Indiana Cities and Towns Must Provide 36-Foot Space. Indiana cities and towns petitioning the state highway commission for paving or resurfacing of federal aid highway routes through | their limits must be prepared to provide a thirty-six-foot right-of-way, James D. Adams, commission chairman, said today. The federal government has notified the commission that no funds will be allotted for routes through municipalities without a right-of-way of at least thirty-six feet. The commission has set aside $4,800,000 of the $10,000,000 allotted by the government, for improving highway routes through cities with populations of 3,500 or more. Projects approved by the government will be constructed without cost to the city or state. Thief Drops Loot in Chase Although the thief escaped, state policeman Ernest Pierce recovered a traveling bag taken from the automobile of W. H. Faust, Los Angeles. Monday afternoon. During a chase of several blocks, the thief dropped the bag.
School Board to Sit Tonight on Cut Budget
Proposed $5,755,583 Designates $780,000 Slash Under Last Year. School commissioners tonight will consider the proposed $5,755,583 school budget for the 1933-34 school year, showing a reduction of $780,000 under last year’s budget. The budget, to be introduced formally at the meeting by A. B. Good, school business director, was prepared in tentative form last spring, but since has been cut $16.000. The exact levy necessary to raise the budget is difficult to determine. Good said, because reduction of $60,000,000 In city property valuations. Public hearing on the budget will be held Sept. 12. at which time it formally will be adopted. The school city will receive ap-
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Harold G. Walton Announcement was made Monday of the appointment of Harold G. Walton as actuary of the Buffalo Mutual Life Insurance Company of Buffalo, N. Y., beginning Sept. 1. Walton was actuary of the Indiana State Insurance department for six years under ex-commission-ers Clarence C. Wysong and John C. Kidd. Prior to his post with the state insurance department Walton was in the actuarial department of the American Central Life Insurance Company of Indianapolis for seven years. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Delta Phi and the American Institute of Actuaries.
MAYOR HURLS ANGRYJEPLY Tax Strike Challenge Hit by Sullivan; Scoffs at Default Plea. (Continued From Page One) the minimum amount possible for each possible job. “If that is true, if you have reduced salaries to the lowest possible figure then the next step is to eliminate salaries. Eliminate enough of the least needed functions of government until you have balanced your expenses with your income.” Making a demand that the city debt be repudiated, Miles said: “You have said, in substance, to the 41,000 families in Indianapolis, who own their homes, that the city, government is not interested so much in you as in maintaining the multitudinous functions of government and in paying nonresidents the interest on their bonds and in protecting wealthier people from paying taxes. You say you utterly ignore the $1.50 tax law your legislature passed. Only two other suggestions were made at the hearing for cutting the budget. Walter C. Rothermel, attorney, recommended abolition of the municipal airport and that the $17,000 contained in the budget for its maintenance be diverted into other channels. Rothermel also advocated the $36,000 interest on the $1,000,000 indebtedness for the airport be defaulted. Walter E. Hemphill, president of the Enterprise Civic League, urged abolition of the city drill tower for firemen at South and New Jersey streets. “The drill tow r er is a needless expense and a burden on the 45 or 50-vear-old men who are required to use it,” Hemphill said. Final hearing on the budget will be held Monday night and action must be taken at that time or it will become effective automatically.
proximately $87,000 from the beer excise tax which will be paid on the basis of average attendance, $1.20 in November, and 50 cents in May. Schools will get $115,000 from the intangibles tax. but will lose $105,000 from the common state school fund, since the legislature passed the bill that cities and towns no longer may benefit from this fund. However, the school city will receive interest from the common school fund amounting to $1.24 per capita.
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WRECKED PLANE FOUND WITH 4 PERSONS DEAD Passengers, Two Pilots of Air Liner Die in Crash in New Mexico. By United Press AMARILLO, Tex., Aug. 29.—A wrecked tri-motor plane of the Transcontinental Western Air Lines was found near Quay, N. M., today, with all aboard dead. Two passengers, the pilot and the co-pllot had been killed. Reports of the wreck were received at local offices of the air line. The passengers killed were Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Erwin, said to be from Los Angeles. They had boarded the plane there. The chief pilot was Howard Morgan, Los Angeles, and the co-pilot, W. G. Barcus, anew than on the line. Army Fliers Killed By United Press SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Aug. 29. Three army fliers were killed in a mid-air airplane collision near Randolph field today. Those killed were Lieutenant Harley R. Grater, Lebanon, Ind.; Cadet William Pasche, Chicago, and Cadet Harold R. Sandberg, Denver. JUDGE DEUPREE DIES Former Johnson - Brown Counties Jurist 111 for Long While. By United Preen FRANKLIN, Ind., Aug. 29. Judge William E. Deupree, 69, former judge of the Johnson-Brown counties circuit court, died at his home here Monday after a long illness. Funeral services will be held here Wednesday. Judge Deupree served on the circuit court bench from 1906 to 1918 and was a former grand master of the Indiana chapter of I. O. O. F. lodge*
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
‘Roasted NRA ’ Menu for Irvington G. 0. P. Gridiron
FILM STAR TO WED
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Hollywood doesn’t feel so cheerful about her departure, but Benita Hume, English actress, was in high spirits when, as shown here, she sailed from New York. That’s because she was on her way to England to wed Jack Dunfee, English sportsman.
CLEANERS WILL MEET A mass meeting of the Retail Cleaners’ and Dyers’ Union will be held soon to discuss provisions of the code which is being drafted by Fred S. Galloway, state representative. Galloway was authorized to draw up the code at a meeting of the board of directors of the union Monday night. W. D. Hancock is president of the union.
Two Lonely Democrats Hear Program Draw Fire of Republicans. The annual watermelon feast of the Irvington Republican Club turned into a “gridiron” feast of the first rank as speakers alternately praised and condemned the NRA program Monday night. Four hundred and ninety-eight Republicans and two lonely Democrats attended the meeting held in Carr’s hail, 5436 East Washington street. To say that the Democrats were embarrassed would be putting it mildly. Both begged reporters not to disclose their identities after they had heard the volatile speeches. But observers noted that they recovered rapidly when the “eats” were served. pr. J. Raymond Schut of Manchester college, Republican nominee last year for Fifth district representative in congress, attacked the crop curtailment plan, calling it “ruthless destruction.” The NRA, he said is taking away from industry its age-old right of initiative. “I am not for the NRA as a way out of the depression,” said Schutz, “but I have no other remedy and, perhaps, I had better not voice opposition to the plan. I only wish we never had started it. But we have started it and we must put every influence we have behind it. It must not fail.”
BUILDING CODE SIGNED 1,500 Workers Affected by Pact of Owners and Managers. Members of the Indianapolis Association of Building Owners and Managers, representing thirty downtown office and loft building owners, unanimously signed the NRA agreement at a, meeting in the Indianapolis Athletic Club Monday. William F. Wagener, chairman of the local association’s code committee, estimated holdings of the members represented an investment of $20,000,000. About 1,500 employes will be affected, in increased wages and employment, by adoption of the NRA program, Wagener declared.
FAMOUS FLIERS WILL DEDICATE S. BENOAIRPORT Roscoe Turner Heads Group of Aerial Daredevils Sept. 5. By Times Special SOUTH BEND, Ind., Aug. 29.—A large group of the nation’s most famous fliers will take part in dedication of the South Bend airport Sept. 5. These famous daredevils of the air will be brought here following the international air races at Chicago by Vincent Bendix, manufacturer and financier, to open the new airport formally. Among the most famous in the group will be Colonel Roscoe Turner, who won the Bendix trophy this summer when he set anew east-to-west-coast record of 11 hours 30 minutes, breaking the old record of Frank Hawks, who also is expected to attend. Major James H. Doolittle, one of the most colorful figures in aviation, has promised to participate, to-
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gether with Captain James H. Haizlip, and possibly his wife, Mrs. Mae Haizlip, who holds the women’s speed record. In addition to a number of other American aerial luminaries, the visiting fliers will include several famous foreigners, including Major Ernst Udet, German ace; Major
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Alexander A. De Severskl, Russian ace, and Lieutenant Tito Falconi. noted Italian flier. Infrequent changing of contaminated crankcase oil Incurs serious risk in motor lubrication, according to H. C. Dickinson of the United States bureau of standards.
