Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 12, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 May 1934 — Page 26

PAGE 26

WOMAN TO RUN FOR COLORADO GOVERNORSHIP

Union Coal Mine Operator Expected to Receive Labor Vote. WASHINGTON, May 25.—Miss Josephine Roche of Denver, probably the best known woman industrialist in the nation, announced here today as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Governor of Colorado. She will run on a platform supporting President Rooseevlt and his new deal policies. Union coal mine operator and widely known as a liberal industrialist, Miss Roche captured control of the Rocky Mountain Fuel Cos. in 1928. She is now its president. Because of her espousal of the cause of unionism in the operation of her mines and her adoption of a contract with the United Mine Workers in a competitive field formerly dominated either by company unions or open shop, her supporters here expect her to have the backing of progressive Democrats in her state. Among her backers here is assistant Secretary of Interior Oscar Chapman, who had been urged to run for the governorship, but who declined and announced his indorsement of Miss Roche. Her opponent for the Democratic nomination probably wall be Edward C. Johnson, present Governor, serving his first term. Former Governor William H. Adams is being urged to run, also, but has not announced a decision. Miss Roche, a Nebraskan, has lived in Denver since 1906. She served as the first woman police official ever appointed in Denver, as probation officer of Judge Ben Lindsey’s juvenile court, as nn industrial investigator for the Russell Sage Foundation and as a special agent for the relief commission in Belgium.

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PLANS FOR CLASS DAY PUSHED AT SHORTRIDGE Chairman of Stunt Committees Announce Participants. Preparations for the Shortridge high school Class day stunts June 5 are being pushed rapidly forward. The chairman of the girls’ stunt, Marjorie Zechiel, has anounced the participants as Louise Edwards. Nellie Ittner, Madeline Trent, Lola Lennox, Helen Taggart, Sue Osier, Betty Renn, Ruby Lou Lillard, Peggy Paul, Betty Schissel, Jane Ferguson, Eleanor Hopwood, Beth Ann Williston. Dora Ann Day, Janet Meditch, Jane Cooling and Caryle Gaines. Participants in the stunt to be given by the boys, as announced by John Sutton, chairman of the stunt, are Jack Berns, Bob Faris, Eugene Yockey, Bill Merrill, Jim Birr, Bob Bryant, Wilton Clary, Dick Clay, Henry Nolting, Morton Davidson and Norman Brandt. A wild turkey, “volplaning,” can attain a speed of a mile a minute.

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ROOSEVELT TO LOSE BIG STICK OVER INDUSTRY

Licensing Power of Recovery Act Will Expire on June 16. BY HERBERT LITTLE Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, May 25.—President Roosevelt’s big stick over industry, arbitrary power to take over control of any industry or any part of an industry, dissolves into thin air at 11:55 a. m. June 16. This, the licensing power conferred by the National Industrial Recovery act, is the “pistol on the hip” that General Hugh Johnson talked about so menacingly when he first became NRA administrator. It

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

turns out that it Is a pistol that was never fired; not even brandished, so far as the official record shows. The licening power expires by the act’s terms at the end of one year, the rest of the law continuing for another year. Its expiration will remove from the law its only jail penalty. This clause has been surrounded with secrecy since NRA went into action/ Even its origin, and the reason for it, are mysterious, and equally hazy the public statements of re-

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cent months as to whether it shotrid be continued. But in the senate debates just a year ago, the administration fought a hard battle for its inclusion over protests by Republican conservaties. The drafters of NIRA insisted upon the licensing power because they feared a tremendous crisis. In April and May, 1933, there were possibilities of barricades and bloodshed, in the minds of many. In our highly-organized economy,, the disruption of one basic industry

might easily have tied up the whole productive system, it was argued. So the President was given this power in cases where “destructive wage or price cutting or other activities contrary to the policy of this title (the NRA) are being practiced in any trade or industry or any subdivision thereof.” The provision, after requiring public notice and hearing, specifies that after a licensing plan is set up, “no person shall engage in or

carry on any business, in or affecting interstate or foreign commerce, (as specified in the President’s licensing announcement) unDr. HENRY M. SCHMIDT OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined-Glasses Fitted 106 N. Pennsylvania St. Ground Floor, Fletcher Trust Bldg.

.MAY 25, 1934

less he shall have first obtained ■% license issued pursuant to such regulations as the President shall prescribe ”

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