Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 97, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 September 1933 — Page 12

PAGE 12

RECOVERY ACT ' POWER TO GET A MAJOR TEST Westinghouse Firm Will Not Meet Union on Work Conditions. ft u Prt,pp.-Ho>rr4 smpnprr AHinnr. WASHINGTON. Sept. 1. The first ma ior test of the recovery act's guarantee to labor-, precipitated by refusal of the Westinghouse Company to recognize anew organiza- ■ lion of workers, waits action by the national labor board. Westinghouse Company has signed the electrical manufacturers' rode of fair competition, effective Aug 15. which contains a pledge that its workers shall have the right j to bargain collectively through representatives of Its choosing. Acting on this guarantee, the American Federation of Labor has organized Westinghouse workers who now complain that the company management refuses to meet them to discuss working conditions Mediator Dispatched The labor board is sending one of its members. Louis E Kirstein. manager of Filene's in Boston, to Massachusetts to investigate the rase. If the board fails to obtain an agreement, it probably will fall j to the recovery administration or to President Roosevelt to take action. ; The electrical manufacturers’ code contains no wording qualifying in ! any way the law s promise to work- ' ers that they may organize as they see fit. The Westinghouse A F. of L union is one of hundreds formed; within the last two months. Federation President William Green estimates that a million new members have been added, making its total 1 membership probably between three and four million. Green reports rapid progress’’ in organize in steeel, automobile and rubber, nil industries, like electrical manufacturing, where there has been no organization up to this time. The new' unions are of the i industrial type, including all em- j ployes of a plant in one local, regardless of occupation. Hope to Avoid Unionizing Meanwhile, at least ten industries are hoping to avoid unionization of their plants by inclusion in codes' of wording similar to that approved in the automobile code, reserving to, employers the right to select, re- 1 tain or advance w-orkers on the ba- ! sis of individual merit. Codes for the air transport, periodical publishers, copper arid brass | mill, commercial refrigeration, agn- i cultural implement. typesetting, boiler manufacture, cast steel, grey j iron and electric storage batteries ' have added this language to codes set for hearing in the near future. | The glass container industry withdrew wording of this kind after in- j serting if just before its hearing. The labor advisory board intends to fight vigorously to prevent approval of any more codes with this j wording, even though it has been assured bv counsel that the language does not modify in any respect the wording of Section 7 <Ai of the recovery act. guaranteeing the right of collective bargaining.

Allez-Oop! But Young Acrobat Misses Home Trapeze, Goes to Hospital.

WITH memories of Barnum and Bailey fresh in their minds, four boys engaged in acrobatic feats Thursday afternoon that resulted in the downfall of one of the performers. Perched high in a tree on a vacant lot in the 2100 block. North Riley avenue. Ralph Hodgson. 15-year-old Cathedral high school youth, was poised carefully as he waited for a rope trapeze swinging back and forth from another tree While his companions looked on with admiration and wonderment Ralph yelled "Allez-Oop'' and leaped out into space His outstretched fingers failed to grasp the device and he fell to the ground, rolled down a twentyfoot embankment and landed with a thump againsr a dead limp. Officer Cv Mary took Ralph to city hospital where he was treated for a broken wrist, cuts and bruises. The tigon is a hybrid animal, offspring of a lion and a tiger.

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STATE FAIR ENTRANTS CONTEST FOR COVETED RIBBONS

Upper— These coveted ribbons of blue, held by Miss Marybelle Long, of Thorntown. will be the goals of many exhibitors in agricultural displays during the Indiana state fair, which opens Saturday. She also holds a bottle of

ADVICE IS GIVEN ON NAY FEVER Stay at Home and Consult Your Doctor. Sufferers Are Told. Bjj f nitffl Pm* HARRISBURG. Pa.. Sept, I.—Hay fever sufferers, who have asked the state department of health to recommend localities where they may go to escape their discomfort, are advised to “remain at home." Dr. J. Bruce McCreary, deputy secretary of health, advises victims to consule their physician so he may make a careful study of the particular polens to which each is susceptible. “It is possible to determine by testing the patient." Dr. McCreary said, "just what pollens caus* his trouble and afterward to treat him with preparations made from those pollens. Such treatment diminishes, or removes, the susceptibility. “To b? of value, however, the inquiry into the cause and the application of treatment always should be undertaken weeks prior to the hay fever season, that the victim s resistance may be built up. LEGALIZE EEL CHUTES Law Affecting Fishermen Enacted in Pennsylvania. ft<! r nlirri Press HARRISBURG. Pa . Sept. I—Eel chutes are now legal equipment for eel fishermen on certain streams in Pennsylvania. A law. enacted by the state legislature, designating streams where eel chutes may be used to take ells from the 'aater. became effective Aug. 1.

ACID-KNOX INSTANT RELIEF From IMIIIiEsTIOX jm GASTRITIS /\ K. A SOI K STOMM H Op GUARANTEED U ON SAI.E AT AIX H \AG DRI'G STORES

corn, entei’ed in the exhibit of Clarence Bowers, Washington county, who is a consistent winner. Lower—A. D. Stanley, Indianapolis florist, shows Miss Aneta

TRUCKERS ASK FEENEY FOR DRASTIC ACTION Urge Stringent Enforcement of State Speed Laws. Plea for stringent enforcement of all statp law's regarding trucks w r as made Thursday to A1 Feeney, safety director, by representatives of trucking interests, at a conference with the director arranged by Regulated Motor Carriers. Pledge of full co-operation in a safety campaign to open Saturday under Feeney's direction was given. Feeney was told that forty miles an hour is a proper speed for trucks on highways in rural sections and tw'enty-five miles an hour in cities. The representatives declared they desired enforcement of trucking

Taxpayers Pledge: 1 1 Will do everything in my power to convince J the taxing officials that they must obey I the $1.50 tax limitation law. || I Will use all my influence to force State, City, School and County officers to do away with extravagances and inefficiencies. I Will help the organized Property Owners in our fight for tax reduction. 9 NAME—ADDRESS • MAIL TO: PROPERTY OWNERS'DIVISION I Indianapolis Indianapolis pi Real Estate Board Home Builders Assn. 704 Inland Bldg. Riley 9575 B

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

I Beadle, of the Purdue university | home economics extension staff, | how the placing of rocks makes j an attractive rock garden. This 1 will be one of the features of the i fair.

I law's not only as a general safety | step, but also for their own protection, CALL SAFETY SESSIONS I i Annual Congress Will Be Started in Chicago Oct. 2. | By Lnitf'd Press CHICAGO, Sept. I.—Thousands | of delegates and leading executives from many industrial organizations j from all parts of the United States and several foreign countries will 1 assemble here Oct. 2 to 6 at the ! tw'enty-second annual safety con--1 gress and exposition. Future action to be taken in con--1 trol of accidents throughout the 1 world will be the general topic to ! be taken up by more than 350 1 speakers at the more than 100 programs, it has been announced.

BUDGET BATTLE OPENS ON COST OF AGE PENSION

Commissioners Seeking to Retain Entire $400,000 Appropriation. County commissioners today battled for their budget and a $74,000 increase in the cost of upkeep of county institutions, when they met with the county council in secret session on the fourth floor of the Marion county courthouse. Dow Vorhies, Ernest K. Marker and Thomas Ellis, the commissioners. fought to retain $400,000 as an appropriation against a proposed $200,000 slash for the first year of the old age pension payment. But. although the commissioners cited the reasons for appropriating the entire pension fund, they did not argue in favor of the $104,000 appropriation for the voters regis- j tration law'. Earlier this week the county council by resolution decried the rigistration appropriation and intimated they would make it, but practically invited some agency, civic body, orj group of taxpayers to enjoin them j from adding it to the city’s tax rate. Commissioners are in accord with j the council on the registration law' and one commissioner is said to I feel that the pension law' was passed , at an ill-advised time and should not be “saddled op the taxpayers at the present time.” The commissioners believe, however, that if money is appropriated for old age pensions, it should be made in its entirety and not halved and money borrowed to make up the difference until the state pays its one-half share of the pension cost. Increase in food costs, maintenance of county institutions, due to rising prices formed the major battleground of the commissioners and the council at today’s meeting. Council sessions are expected to end today with the first formal meetings scheduled on the county budget for Tuesday. A new' hope to cut the county budget was seen in repeated rumors that superior court judges w'ould get together and agree not to accept their statutory salary of $5,800 but | would continue on their present salary basis of $4,350.

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SCREEN STAR SUED

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Irene Denny, above, former w'ife of Reginald Denny, screen star, is suing Denny in Los Angeles courts for $14,763. She alleges Denny ;s that far behind on a $40,000 property settlement made between the Dennys when they separated in 1927.

KENTUCKY WILL GET BANK BANDIT SUSPECT Orville Mohler Will Be Turned Over to Neighbor State. Clifford Mohler. Ft. Wayne, bank bandit suspect, will be turned over to authorities at Gravel Switch. Ky.. to face bank banditry charges, today or Saturday, it w'as announced today by Captain Matt Leach. Indiana state police. Mohler and Samuel Goldstein, also of Ft. Wayne, w'ere held by state police in connection with tw'enty-four bank holdups in Indiana, Illinois, and Ohio, and Michigan, but no positive identifications were obtained. Goldstein is being returned to the Indiana state prison, w'hpre he was paroled several months ago.

SPECIAL , THE PEOPLES DENTISTS W. WASHINGTON gT.

SEVEN SCOUTS BACK FROM TRIP ABROAD Attend Jamboree, Spending Two Months in Europe. Returning from the international jamboree of Boy Scouts, held in

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SEPT. 1, 1933

■ Oodollo, Hungary, seven local Scout* and F. O Belzer. city Scout executive, arrived in Indianapolis today. Completing nearly two months in Europe, seven members of the Indianapolis Speedway patrol and Belzer sailed Aug. 25 on the Bremen of the North German Lloyd line and arrived in New York. Wednesday. The oldest evidence of man using lead is a leaden figure found in an Egyptian tomb of about 3800 B. C.