Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 41, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1934 — Page 8

PAGE 8

HOSIERY MILL LOSES EAGLE, CLOSES DOORS Tennessee Town Divided on NRA Action: Union Head Kidnaped. HARRIMAN Term. June 28.—A star department o i justice agent was on his way to this mill town today to investigate the kidnaping of a union official, newest flareup in the bitter controversy between the Harriman hosiers' mill and the NRA. Fred Held, vice-president of the American Federation of Hosiery Workers, was taken off a train by a mob near Harriman yesterday and released several hours later. He was threatened with death if he returns here. Police Chief Creed Mabry said the kidnapers were employes who lost their jobs when the mill closed Monday because the NRA would rot restore its Blue Eagle. Star Agen on Way William A. Rorer, one of the federal agents who raptured George • Machine Gun) Kelly, was ordered here from Nashville. IH Chattanooga, Mr. Held told a harrowing story of his experiences. During a wild automobile ride a gun was pressed in his side. •If Hugh Johnson comes dowm here," one of the men told him. “we’ll do the same to him that we're going to do to you.’’ A United Press correspondent toured Harriman today and found the town of 6,000 divided into two bitter groups, one pro NRA. the other anti-NRA. O(Trials Are Determined Officials of the Harriman Hosiery Company seemed determined to keep the mill closed rather than rehire fifty striking workers as the NRA demands. Their Blue Eagle was withdrawn on the allegation that they violated the collective bargaining provision of the recovery act. Without a Blue Eagle, their customers evaporated. The mill is Harriman's biggest industry and elimination of its pay roll was a frightful blow to local business. Because of financial, family and social connection of the mill's officials, the town’s leading citizens are on its side. This in- , eludes mast of the merchants. In the Blue Eagle camp are union labor, low wage workers, and ardent j Democrats. John Roland. 26. a nouunion man and the father of a baby, felt j badly. "Don’t Know How I’ll Live” “I don't know how I'm going to live.” he said. “I’m in debt for groceries and I owe house rent. I don't believe the government has been fair.” The correspondent found a man and woman standing inside the screen door of their department store. “The mill closing has already ruined us.” said the woman. "We have worked seventeen years at this store and look—there isn't a person in it.” $14,500,000 IS GIVEN SCHOOLS DURING YEAR McMurray Reveals Contributions of State Since July, 1933. Approximately $14,500,000 has j been sent to local school units by the state government since July 1. i 1933. when the new system of school financing went into effect. The funds were from the intangibles tax. excise tax. grass income tax. school fund interest and state education property tax. Announcing compilation of the total. Floyd I. McMurray, state superintendent of public instruction, denied charges that recent changes in Indiana textbooks will work a hardship on parents.

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Daily Dozen for Baby Broken-Bones Infant Given Exercises in Attempt to Relax Legs From Bent Position.

DAILY exercises are being given Caroline Ruby Mercer, month-and-a-half-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hansel Mercer, 1245 West New York street, bom with mere than fifty bones broken.

Each day the mother straightens the baby's legs in careful exercises, in an attempt to relax them from the bent position which they have maintained since removal from a wooden framework a week ago. % The broken legs were the most serious of more than fifty fractures which were revealed by Xrays taken three days after Caroline’s birth at Methodist hosnital. They have healed, but remain in a drawn-up position. ana IF the exercises Mrs. Mercer is giving the baby each day do not correct this, physicians in

SECRETARY WEEPS AS NOLAN URGES PRISON FOR BLACKMAILERS

Miss Mildred Gallagher, pretty secretary to Val Nolan, United States district attorney here, has emotions like anybody else. It was too much for her yesterday when Mr. Nolan was demanding, in an impassioned speech, the maximum penalty of twenty years for Carlos McNeill and James Woods, Paragon, youthful and nattily dressed extortionists, who left college only last year. She broke into tears and sobbed audibly, covering her face with her handkerchief, as Mr. Nolan waxed eloquent. She continued to sob while the boys were sentenced to five years each. “Now, Miss Gallagher,” Mr. Nolan chided facetiously w’hen court was adjourned, “remember, you are an employe of the prosecutor's office and we can't have you siding in with the defense that way.” OHIO CHIEF JUSTICE STATE BAR SPEAKER lowa Professor Also to Talk at Lake Wawasee Session. An address by Carl Victor Weygandt, chief justice of the Ohio Supreme court, will feature the annual meeting of the Indiana State Bar Association at Lake Wawasee, July 12 and 13. Professor Rollin M. Perkins of the University of lowa also will speak at the session. He is an adviser for criminal procedure for the American Law’ Institute. The fortune of the ex-kaiser of Germany is estimated to be more than $62,500,000.

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charge of the case probably will place Caroline in another apparatus, using traction . draw the legs into a normal position. Caroline’s ribs, broken in several places at birth, giving her a sunken appearance on the left side, have healed, and her body now is much like that of a normal baby's. Physicians believe that she has every chance to recover completely. The fractures were the result of an improper bone formation before birth. Ordinarily this is caused by a lack of calcium, but in this case, both mother and child showed a normal amount of calcium. Indianapolis physicians admit that the case is an unique one.

Children P^AtC***™* M M/m Children’s Sizes Sizes Mr Misses’ B '6 lls fftk ■/ * HHc Ladies’ ' 25 O | Sizes 5419 2<3 to 8s ■ A' \ $439 A / w A SHOES / W jAm IN SALE NOT EXACTLY SALE SHOES HAVE TWO ST TAPS §tou£s §hoe Jtores Jg 318-332 Mass. Ave. 352-354 W. Wash. SI. (Second Block) STOUT’S STORES OPEN 8 A. M., CLOSE WEEK DAYS, 6 P. M. SATURDAY’S, 9 P. M. SHOE STORES

BANK OFFICIALS FAIL TO ENJOIN $2,000,000 SUIT Federal Court Action by Trust Indenture Group Will Continue. An attempt by stockholders of the old Fletcher American National bank to enjoin in Marion county superior court the pressing of an action instituted in federal court, by trustees of a trust indenture, to collect $2,000,000 from the bank’s directors, failed today. The injunction was denied by Chalmer Schiosser, judge pro tern., despite pleas of the stockholders’ attorneys that the federal action was a “friendly” one. designed to harass a $5,000,000 action against the same directors in the superior court. The actions grew out of the relationship between the defunct bank and its affiliated corporations.

STOUT’S FACTORY

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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JUNE 28, 1934