Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 162, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 November 1934 — Page 8

PAGE 8

LABOR BILL TO PASS CONGRESS. WAGNER CLAIMS

Senator Redrafts Disputes Act, Puts Teeth i in It. y A mt* paper 4rtMf' •WABHINGTO. Nov. 15—Confidence that a labor dispute* bill Uh teeth in tt will he passed bv f the nem- rongreM w%* expressed today by Senator Rober* F Warner tDem N. Y.. the vmvii principal authorltv on labor relation*. The senator is preparing to redraft without vital change hi* bill of last mm, Whirh v*j dropped in a iast-minu’e compromise. He paid he thought th* new congress would he leas disposed to obstruct such legislation than the last. "After all." he said, “we are amply proposing to induztn that, if Ita employes want to organize industry must not interfere and that industry must thereafter deal with the organized emplove* “In England they would laugh if uich a proposal were made—since England has had such legislation for manv years. “Perhaps it sounds demagogic, but the fact, that property rights are regarded as sacred by too manv people In this country, while the same people would leave human *tght* to shift for themselves.” Senator Wagner would not confirm reports ’hat his new labor disputes bill might incorporate in detail the principal terms of the national labor relation boards decision in the Houde rase, jn which the right of a labor majonty to bargain for all labor in a given unit was affirmed. But at the same time he emphasiard that the Houde ruling followed the precedent set in the Denver tramway decision of the old national labor board, which he himself headed. The Hondo decision has been

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Richard Washburn Child Richard Washburn Child formerly ambassador to Italy and recently special envoy to Europe for the present national administration. will speak before a Town Hal] audience in the Columbia Club at 11 tomorrow on “Changing Structure of Governments." LIBRARY CONTRACT LET 1.200 Transfer Cases. .100 Follower Block Purchased Herbert P Kennev, sta'e library commission president, announced today the awarding of bids on 1.200 transfer cases and 300 follower blorks to the Business Furniture Company. 112 East Maryland street, at $3,303. The equipment will be used to house the archives of the new state library. challenged by Industry, and a rourt test, is still in the making. Meanwhile, due to the labor board s tack of punitive powers of its own. the decision is unenforced.

NEW TREASURY AID FAMED AS INDUSTRIALIST Josephine Roche Active Head of Vast Mining Interests in Rockies. By T *<>■* Prrit DENVER Cole., Nov. 16.—Miss Jonephine Roche, appointed yesterday by President Roosevelt as assistant secretary of treasury, was a candidate for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination at the September primary, opposing Governor Edwin C. Johnson. She is one of the nation's most I famous women-industrialists, being a tive head of the vast mining in--1 terests of the Rocky Mountain Fuel Company. A Vassar college graduate, she has interested herself in public welfare work ever since her graduation. She studied social science at Columbia university in New York after leaving Vassar, and was engaged in welfare work in the slums of that city two years. During the reconstruction period after the World war, she was active m veterans’ rehabilitation work, and she also served on a committee appointed bv President Woodrow Wilson to delve into coal mining | labor troubles. She has been appointed to public i service groups of three Presidents, Wilson. Hoover and Roosevelt. Miss Roche for the last five years i has been active head of the Rocky Mountain Fuel Company, inheriting from her father a large block of the stock of that company. Miss Roche's chief duties will include supervision of the public health service arH welfare work among the treac department's 56.000 workers. position to whitfii she was ap, .gp h has been unfilled for some tin.e.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES '.

HORIZONTAL Amrw to Previous Plt 1925. 1 Mexican prealdent who op- omar Is £jsflnnA xKIS k§3 12 IWMAM i MffijjTiJH 2 ® Ey * tumor. 13 Eskimo hotLM. gQ R °^ ent religions beliet To bemoan. 20 whr* rlC *' -22 fortune out of 23 Suitable Ico’s debt. 2 Falsehood. chick 25 Wing. 48 Upon. 2 Movers track. crops. 28 To de-vlafe. 47 Definite article 4 Wealthy. 3* Labels. 30 Genna of moles 43 To hardelL 5 Monster. ** Grit. 6Tru-out* :::r 34 Insertion. „ * r °° L ’ Atrlctn 44 Males. 3 Herein. n To reeound termer. 45 Grille*. 37 Epoch. 57 He wag an * Drove. 46 Gem. 38 Social insect. armv J 9 Lump. 48 Night before. 39 Like. Artist'* frame 10 Kimono sash. 51 To observe. 41 He made an 58 ArtlSt Bf ’ 11 A fate. 53 Half an cm. for re- VERTICAL 12 This president 55 Deity. funding Mex- 1 Region. was —— d in 56 Postscript. r"" 5" 2“ s" - 5""" TANARUS“" 5" 5""" 15" Fir“ir>r K-^-=-nS-==r nH 1 ri 11 rrn LU

Indiana in Brief

By Ttmrt Sprrinl NOBLESVILLE, Nov. 16.—Hamilton county authorities announce that Nov. 24 is the deadline for removal of all slot machines from the county. Judge Fred Hines of Hamilton Circuit court announced that mere removal of the machines from use will not be tolerated and that they must be taken outside the county. He declared that he will accompany Sheriff Frank Hattery on raids to seize anv machines inside the county after Nov. 24. In connection with the clean up. Judge Hines announced there would be a campaign to end employment of minors in beer selling places and to stop sale of liquor to minors.

LAMSON IS ARRAIGNED ON MURDER CHARGES Stanford Instructor Will Be Released, Is Rumor. By TJnited Pret* SAN JOSE. Cal., Nov. 3.6.—David Lamson was summoned into court today for anew arraignment on the charge that he killed his wife. Allene, in their Stanford campus home last year. Mystery and uncertainty surrounded the proceedings which brought the former Stanford press executive before the court. While District Attorney Fred Thomas said positively that Judge R. R. Syer will set a date for anew trial, rumors were current that the charges against Lamson may be dropped. OLDEST LINE CLOSES 94 YEARS OF SERVICE Eastern Firm Never Lost Passenger in Shipwreck. By Cnited Pre** NEW LONDON, Conn.. Nov. 16. The New London Line, oldest operator on the eastern seaboard, closed shop today. It was going out of business after ninety-four years of carrying passengers and cargo between New London and New York. The line never lost a passenger through shipwreck, fire or any other accident. Motor trucks proved too much competition.

CHEAP SOAP-CHIPS A RISK

Hard Rubbing and Strong Alkalies Cause Worn Spots y Faded Colors “THAT’S A BARGAIN,” you think, when you see a great big box of soap-chips for a few cents. But wait... what happens when those cheap soapchips get in your tub? ■ ■ "Where are the suds?” you wonder. For the and frocks... the linens... sheets and towels? thin, sluggish suds are more like scum. You A costly bundle they make! Too many dollars must rub... scrunch ... scrunch ... scrunch ... to risk for saving a few cents on soap, across your washboard. And every “scrunch" Chipso’s Suds Get Dirt takes the life from your clothes. s 0 chipso makes such a pile of suds! “Strong Alkalies” Fade Colors Lively, bustling suds that go right after dirt. And look ... the "tubf.br color U begin- Send it scamp,™* ... y ! Joct 15 mmut . _ soaking with Chipso ... a few swishes ... a nmg to run. That tells you in plain words nnse _ and the dm ia GONE. Clothes •This soap is strong.’* It attacks colors. It rots threads. Soon your clothes look worn, slUi new * dingy. The color is gone . . . "thin spot*’’ Chipso Keeps Clothes New split out. Yes . . . Chipso cared-for clothes do stay Weekly Wash A Costly Bundle! like new. For Chipso saves nibbing. Chipso Have you ever counted up the cost of clothes has no harsh alkalies to harm even your finer and linens in the week's wash? The blouses clothes. “Neighbors Praise Our White Clothes,’’ Say Chipso Users, “Colored Things Stay New” THERE'S PRIDE... real pride ... in the voices of these Chipso users as they tell about their snowy-white clothes—their bright colored clothes! “Our ■ clothes keep their fresh-from-the-store look!” they say. Three small children make two or three icoshin as a week for Mrs. Harvey Fell. "It wouldn’t take long for the clothes to wear out if we used harsh soap as often as that,” she knows. “Eut with Chipso, the colors hold up bright and the materials don’t get thin and sleazy.’* Thank Chips* for bright colors Yes ... Mrs. Fell can thank Chipso for its gentle washing. For she never—with all the cart ia the world—could keep her children's

Admits Thirty Burglaries By Time* Special COLUMBUS. Nov. 16.—Edward McKain, 44, father of three children, was sentenced to the Indiana state prison for a term of three to ten years after admitting that on thirty occasions in the past year he had broken into the Otte store at Waymansville. He estimated loot had a value of $l5O and included money, clothing, groceries and tobacco. * tt K Robbed at Start By Time* Special LOGANSPORT, Nov. 16.—First person to enter a case here following its purchase by Albert Kistler, was a man who robbed him of $24. A pocketbook from which the money was removed was found in front of the restaurant. The bandit escaped in an automobile. men Set Orphanage Afire By Time* Special COLUMBUS, Nov, 16—A 16-,vear-old girl, inmate of the Francis Comfort Thomas orphans home, has been sentenced in juvenile court to remain at the state girls’ school until she is 20 because she twice set fires in the institution and on another occasion tried to cause the heating plant boiler to explode. • There are ninety-five kinds of Brussels sprouts. 120 of lettuce and 194 of carrots.

MATTICE TO CONTINUE LAW PRACTICE HERE Retiring Chief Deputy Prosecutor Has Enviable Record. Retiring Jan. 1 as chief deputy prosecutor. Floyd J. Mattice, who has made an enviable record oT chief aid for Prosecutor Herbert E. Wilson in the prosecution of murder and bank cases in criminal court, will continue to private practice in his offices, 1405 Fletcher Trust building. Throughout his tenure of office, Mr. Mattice kept his law offices in

Mid-Season Sale of $1.98 i Boys’ SUITS new browns and grays, blue cheviots and oxfords. Wffl jrMBHT jBS nch ’ hacl< ' bi-swing anri P lain back coats. Single $^8 S^PH Boys'Knicker Suits , M.. • our Group consists of novelty fabrics and blue cheviots. Bi-swing and pinch-back coats. 2 Small ri( “” and pair of knickers. Sizes 6 to 14, B j", ‘ m !!! u US!St BOYS’ HOCKMEYER Boys’ Blue Corduroy Slacks Belton Genuine Hockmeyer’s in J wCKUE® royal, navy, green, wine and . Heavy Blur Melton leather shades. Made in * m • Genuine Talon Zipper slack models with 22-in. bot- A / • Cossack Styles toms and side buckle straps. • 2 Large Well tailored, in sizes Bto Mtßßn Muff 20. PAIR— Pockets $ Q/l • Well Bg U “ BOYS’ 2-PIECE CORDUROY zipper suits : H-;: & Regular Price Is $4.95! Saturday Only! Buy and Save! BOVS’ School They re dandies ... all the. fel- & XQ lows like them. The jacket has *r m|||rp|>t| genuine Talon zipper closing and knickers are full-cut plus 4 style. and Tan, brown and gray speckled tweed patterns. Sizes 6 to 16. 140W JJICS 59c DANIEL BOONE MA 22T win £uSZ in sizes 8 to 18. Knickers in plus Broadcloth Shirts is%rLSs.ra&rs sST* Fast color ifbvelty print broadcloths in fall’s JBk JHh J&jjjfyjk newest patterns and Bafcr _ colors. Full cut, with Atirmfe breast pocket and full center pleat. Sizes 8 to ' *

the Fletcher Trust building. He took the job of chief deputy, it is said, only under the proviso that he might continue his private law practice between criminal court trials. LEADERS ARE LISTED IN WOMEN'S BRIDGE PLAY Contract Club Conducting Tourney in Indianapolis A. C. Best scores in the Indianapolis Woman's Contract Club for play yesterday in the Indianapolis Athletic Club were: Section 1. north

Cheap Soap-Chips Ruin Good Impression | igrTl £. 9 M LOOKS CAREUSS. IS Ht fl ™ e *** ?or ™ ,s Did he ret the job? That’a a question. “How I regret ever trying cheap soap-chips.” writes one young wife. “I soon found I wasn’t saving ...l was spending dollars to replace our faded, worn clothes. Rut since I’vw gone back to Chipso, our clothes look nice all the time.” clothes looking so well if she used a soap with CHIPSO MAKES CLOTHES strong, harsh, bleaching alkalies in it. nVT CD “Besides,” she adds, “you don’t have to WfcAK LUNutK break your back rubbing. Dirt soaks right out in those good suds.” Why do Chipso suds whisk out the dirt... V 1 more quickly? It’s because Chipso suds are #\JP thick, solidly packed bubbles that surround k every fleck of dirt. And it’s soap bubbles ... fjm a I plenty of them ... that lift dirt out. . a A soap*saver Get a box of Chipso today ... use Chipso 'J^w every washday. You'll delight in your clean | flj fresh wash ... in its sweet fragrance. And your budget will delight in your savings on clotnea \ ~ ••. your savings on soap. -AC-. SSBBm

_NOV. 16, 193?

and south. Mrs. Btanlev Brooks and Mrs. D. L. Adams; east and west, Mrs. Arthur F’ratt and Mra. R. Stevens. Section 2. north and south, Mrs. Robert Stempfel and Mrs. Harlan Hadley; east, and west. Mrs. Joseph Marott and Mrs. W. K, Naylor. Colds That Hang On it thm r*? ntarted: Fight them qnirklv. C*remulion fombtee* 7 help* in ene. Powerful hut htrmtees. Pleimant to take. No narrofiea. Tour druggist ia authorised to refund votir moner on the spot ts your rough op rold i not relieved by Creotßulaioß. Advert isement.