Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 133, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1934 — Page 3
OCT. 13,1934.
LABOR ADOPTS LEWIS PLAN FOR LARGER COUNCIL Decision Second Triumph for Miner’s Head: Parley Adjourns. B# United Press SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 13—The American Federation of Labor today entrusted its campaign to organize industrial unions in mass production industries to an ex°cutive council of eighteen memoers. adding seven new vice presidents to the body which guides organized labor in the United States. Approved in the closing session of the fifty-fourth annual convention, the enlargement of the council was the second victory of the meeting for John L. Lewis, head of the United Mine Workers cf America. Mr. Lewis emerged as the cutstanding figure on the American labor front through the convention action which switched the A. F. of L. into the industrial union field and enlarged its executive cabinet. Mr. Lewis himself won a place on . the larger council, getting one of the vice-presidencies created after j the 433 delegates had voted, 22,423 j to 2,056, to approve the corr.pro- | mise brought forward by the com- ! mittee on laws.
Officers Are Re-elected After re-electing all present officers and selecting the new vicepresidents unanimously, the convention adjourned without selecting a place for the 1935 meeting. That matter was left to the executive council, which also has been ordered to issue charters to union organizations on the vertical plan in the automotive, aluminum, cement and other mass production industries. President Green set the organizing goal at 1.000,000 new members for the coming year. During the two weeks the A. F. of L. delegates also: 1. Denounced Communism and Fascism and voted down all left wing proposals. 2. Pledged themselevs to fight for the thirty-hour week as the only solution of the present unemployment situation. 3. Placed a bitter schism in the trades department in the hands of President Green for solution. NRA Is Criticised 4. “Cracked down” on the operation of the NR A, charging that failure to enforce its collective bargaining provisions was contributing to continuance of the industrial depression. 5. Invited President Roosevelt to “co-operate” with labor and industry in leading the way to business recovery. 6. Passed proposals for old age pensions and unemployment insurance. censure of the labor attitude of S. Clay Williams, head of the new NRA setup, petitions for the release of Tom Mooney and Warren Billings, and condemnation of discrimination against workers because cf race. Daniel Tobin. Indianapolis, teamsters union, was elected one of the new vice-presidents.
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Toto Tembo, a five-months-old elephant, left Indianapolis by air yesterday, after an overnight visit here, to continue his flight half way across the continent, from New York City to St. Louis, where he is to make his home permanently. Toto Tembo, who has shown no decided aversion to air travel despite the fact that his plane was forced down once between here and New York, is hoisted into the plane (upper) just as he was hoisted onto a ship in Africa and hoisted off again in New’ York. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Johnson, highly-publicized African travelers and hunters (lower), who brought him to this country and sold him to the St. Louis zoo, travel with him as does Twaganski, a Swahili boy, who comes from the same part of Africa as does Toto Tembo. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, who say that Toto Tembo is traveling in a plane because trains would upset him. but who are suspected of having an eye cocked toward publicity for a coming book, acquired Toto Tembo when he was three weeks old. Toto Tembo, whose name, appropriately enough, means Little Elephant, was orphaned when an Englishman shot his mother in - f-defense.
MASONIC GROUPS TO HOLD SESSIONS HERE Former Senator Watson to Be Speaker. The seventy-ninth annual assembly of the Indiana Grand Council. Royal and Select Masters, and the eighty-ninth annual convocation of the Indiana Grand Chapter, Royal Arch Masons, will meet here Tues-
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day, Wednesday and Thursday at the Masonic temple. Both groups will be guests of the Marion County Royal Arch Chapter Association, Indianapolis council No. 2, Prather council No. 100, Royal and Select Masters, and Raper Commandery, Knights Templar. The Rev. Henri R. Pearcy, Tipton, grand chaplin, will speak at the assembly banquet Tuesday night, and James E. Watson, former United States senator, will speak at the convocation dinner Wednesday night. Music will be furnished at the meetings and dinners by the Indianapolis chapter choir under the direction of Arnold F. Spencer.
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SHOOTING IS ACCIDENTAL Real Silk Employe Shot in Groin by Own Gun. Ralph Riddle, 919 Broadway, a knitter at the Real Silk mills, was admitted to Methodist hospital early yesterday suffering from a pistol wound, accidentally inflicted Thursday night when he removed an automatic from the pocket of his automobile after driving to his home from the mills. The wound is in the groin and, while painful, is not serious, hospital attaches said. The earl of Derby inaugurated derby races in England, in 1780.
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LABOR LEADER FLAYS RECORD OF LTLARTHUR Senator Is an Opportunist, Anderson Unions Told by MacPherson. (Continued From Page One) United States senate has he ever stood up and done battle in the cause of labor? “Think now; some of you say his record on labor legislation is clear, but can you say that he ever has been a positive force in advancement of labor's rights? Never Authored Labor Bill “Let us look through Senator Robinson’s record in the last session of congress. Up to then and until now, he never has been the author of any labor bill. Up to then and until now, he never has been the author of any noteworthy amendment. Is that the kind of labor representation we want in the chamber of the United States senate? I say ‘No.’ “It is not enough for a senator to sit quietly on the sidelines and see how the wind is blowing before casting his vote in the affirmative, or else running to the cloakroom. “If labor had to depend on that kind of representation in congress, our voice never would reach the President; our programs never would become laws.” Mr. McPherson admitted that Senator Robinson voted against the confirmation of the anti-labor Judge Parker as a federal judge when he was nominated by President Hoover, but did not take the floor against it. Jumped on Bandwagon “A silent voice on that vital labor issue easily can be construed as a compromise with political expediency,” the speaker asserted. Accusingly he continued: “Senator Robinson waited to see how the wind blew. Labor was about to win, so he got on the winning side. Yes, Senator Robinson voted for the railroad workers’ legislative program; but his enthusiasm there was like that of a bridegroom at a shotgun wedding and again he got on the winning side. He spoke not a word for labor. “He half-heartedly supported amendments to the labor adjustment acts, but then who knows what he will do tomorrow if some political influence stronger than that of labor should arise? “He voted for the national recovery act, but now shouts that he Is agaihst it and admits he voted for an ‘unconstitutional law,’ although no court has said it is unconstitutional. These are the ways of a political opportunist; not the ways of a true friend of the laboring man.” ‘Ducked’ Wagner Bill The speaker accused Senator Robinson of “ducking” the vote on the Wagner-Hatfield amendment to the communications bill which would have insured “equality of opportunity and consideration for educational, religious, agricultural,
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Doris Duke, who matrimonial prsspects keep society talking, i shown here at the opening of a New York night club at a table wit: Count Rene de Chambrun (rights.
labor, co-operative and similar nonprofitmaking associations.” “Can a senator be called a sincere friend of the working man,” asked the speaker, “when he votes against taking a cut in his own salary, paid by the taxpayers, and then turns around and barks and snaps at reasonable governmental expenditures for the social and economic recovery of our people?” Mr. McPherson paid high praise to Mr. Minton, the senator's opponent, and virtually indorsed his candidacy on behalf of labor. “If I were permitted to nominate the candidate to whom organized labor in Indiana should give its indorsement, it would be Sherman Minton, the Democratic candidate for the United States senate,” he asserted. Stand by President “Organized and all labor must stand by Roosevelt or else perish from its own folly. We indorse Roosevelt and his faithful supportors, or we commit suicide. We cast our votes for those who give us a place in the sun and who take up arms in our defense. “We can not be misled by political opportunists, do-nothing legislators, men who play along with us until the time is ripe to swing to some more influential group of voters. “Senator Arthur R. Robinson will not deserve the indorsement of organized labor in Indiana until he has taken up our sword and assailed our foe. Let’s be selective
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A DUKE AND A COUNT
and extremely jealous of our rights and support those candidates who will keep the faith and uphold the policies of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.” State Representative William J. Black, Anderson, acted as temporary chairman. Other speakers were Thomas Hutson, of the Tile Workers and Brick Makers International; Arthur Viat, president of the Ft. Wayne Federation of Labor, and Robert E. Mythen, of the Pressmen's union, Indianapolis. Alleged Forger Is Held Robert Rucker, 21, of 1239 Sheppard street, was held to the grand jury under SI,OOO bond on forgery charges yesterday by Municipal Judge Dewey Myers. The youth is accused by police of having forged the name of a former employer on a check cashed in a downtown department store.
Real Mortgages WE SOLICIT APPLICATIONS FOR FIRST MORTGAGE LOANS ON PREFERRED INDIANAPOLIS PROPERTY. INTEREST RATE 6%. NO COMMISSION. THE INDIANA TRUST *ZZ SURPLUS $2,000,000.00 THE OLDEST TRUST COMPANY IN INDIANA
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TIMES COOKING SCHOOL TO OPEN IN CITYOCT, 23 New Type Instructions to Be Offered at Murat by Expert. “Foods on Parade.” anew kind of cooking school, as colorful as a motion picture production and as helpful as a college course, will be brought to Indianapolis Oct. 23, 24 and 25, bj The Indianapolis Times, at the Murat, under the direction of Miss Ruth Chambers. Miss Chambers is familiar to Indianapolis women, for whom she conducted a similar school last year, under sponsorship of The Times. Though she will bring a school that is elaborated produced, it also will be practical, for she realizes that every housewife is interested in new dishes to serve her family and new ideas for entertaining, which will fit in with a limited budget. Information in the school will be the most up-to-date and authentic available. Miss Chambers is a member of the national live stock and meat board, an educational and research organization in close touch with universities and colleges, experimental and research laboratories. Every Indianapolis woman is eligible to the school. No charge is made, and Indianapolis merchants are co-operating in the school, in order to provide local women with the newest ideas in cookery and marketing.
SANKEY'S BETRAYER IS SHOT DEAD BY ACCIDENT Roy Gibbs Loses His Life in Mishap in Colorado. By United Press FT. COLLINS, Colo., Oct. 13.—Roy Gibbs, the man who was credited by authorities with betraying Verne Sankey, once the nation's No. 1 kidnaper, to the law, was accidentally shot to death near Estes Park, Colo., yesterday. German police have equipped trained pigeons with strap cameras which, when the bird is in flight, snaps pictures of the ground.
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