Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 179, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 December 1934 — Page 19
DEC. fi, 1935.
RICHBERG GALLS ON INDUSTRY TO END BICKERING NRA Chief Urges Adoption of Fighting Spirit to Help New Deal. R* l uttrd Prrtt NEW YORK. Dec. 6—A challenge and a warning from New Deal recovery headquarters was placed before business today. Industry was urged to respond to the fighting spirit typified in Admiral Farragut's order. “Damn the torpedoes, go ahead,” and “timid men” were told that their attitude was Justification for further governmental controlling powers. Donald R. Richberg, executive director of the National Emergency Council, made these pronouncements in addressing the National Associ- ! ation of Manufacturers. Fault-finding and lack of confi- j dence among industrial leaders! evoked pointed words from the recovery chief. He referred to the meeting of the American Bankers Association as the “beginning of; constructive co-operation between j business and government,” but added: “Yet many of those who had most! loudly clamored for something to inspire confidence were, like the critical professor, eager only to sneer at and to belittle any evidence j of a better understanding between the bankers and their Government. , Urges Ends of Complaints “One conclusion seems inevitable: Those who try to attribute all our ills to lack of confidence in the Government are proving themselves to be those in whom the Government itself can have but little confidence. “If there is to be co-operation in economic recovery, it must come from those who have faith enough in their Government and in themselves to stop complaining and put their shoulders to the wheel. The man who spends his days and nights in finding fault with every j public official, in sneering at every effort to serve the general welfare, and then howls for something to give confidence, ought to spend a few minutes every day looking at himself in a mirror and asking himself what he is doing to inspire any one with any confidence in him.” Mr. Richberg admitted NRA had failed to achieve all its aims, but insisted that Its fundamental principles must be preserved in permanent legislation for codes of fair I competition. Trade Association Criticised “NRA demonstrated all too clearJy.” he said, “that private business Ts not yet adequately organized for collective action and self-discipline, and that political controls are a poor substitute for voluntary co-op-eration. The record of trade associations, upon which the Recovery Administration relied so hopefully in its infancy, has been, to put it mildly, disappointing.” He said few trade associations j were found truly representative of | an entire industry; that business | men theoretically were opposed to 1 Government interference, but practically anxious to wield political ; power in disciplining recalcitrant i competitors.
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DIXIE’S HAIL AND FAREWELL TO PRESIDENT
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Tha aplause of his Warm Springs (Ga.) neighbors probablly still will ring in President Roosevelt’s ears as he tussles with governmental affairs in Washington. This picture, taken shortly before the Chief Executive was to leave for the national capital, shows a typical scene outside the gates of the Little White House as a patient, long-w'aiting crowd hailed the President at the wheel of his own car.
DRUG STORE BANDIT GETS 10-YEAR TERM Ruby Minton Is Sentenced in .Anderson Holdup. ti\j Lnitt and I’m* ANDERSON, Ind , Dec. 6.—Pleading guilty to aiding four other Indianapolis men in a daring robbery of a downtown drug store here Aug. 26, Ruby Minton, 32, Indianapolis, was under sentence today to 10 years in prison. Minton implicated John Debrota, Nick Cucu, Walter Steagall and James Riggs, with whom he was arrested by State Police shortly after the holdup when a tire on their automobile blew out near Pendleton. Trial of the other four was set for Dec. 18. POSTAL CLERK GUILTY S9O Shortage in Stamp Account Brings Conviction. Kenneth p Katterheinrich, Sullivan (Ind.) postal clerk, was found guilty of embezzlement yesterday before Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell in connection with a S9O shortage in his stamp account which was discovered last January. He will be sentenced Saturday.
SUNDAY, DEC. 9 50.50 CINCINNATI L HAMILTON $2.30 OXFORD 52.00 I.IBERTY 5.5 CONNERSVILLE $1.20 RCSHVILLE and return I.V. 4:35 A. M. C. T. Returning lv. Cincinnati 10:50 P. M. E. T. tireatiy reduced round trip railroad and sleeping ear fares between all stations every week-end. .LOW ROUND TRIP Fares Between All Points. CHRISTMAS, NEW YEARS HOLIDAY' PERIODS Reduced Sleeping Car Rates Phones LI ncoln 6404 RI ley 3355 n>4iid'M:i*g-i:i{*l
AUTOMOTIVE GROUP TO ENJOY ANNUAL DINNER 500 Expected at Banquet Tonight, Society Head Says Approximately 500 persons are expected to attend the annual dinner of the Indiana Automotive Maintenance Association at 7 tonight at the Riviera Club, Y. D. McCoy, as-
FilißK 1 "IT’S WONDERFULI" ... Peggy Pool, Chicago, says: “I had ind I.Jj gestion. Headaches.” XR Yeast helped her in just a few days! "RELIEVED MY CONSTIPATION IN f g South Bend, 1nd.... Mrs. Opal Haymaker works /■ / X XXj X/ for a leading dress shop, writes:‘‘l haven't much IS j m/ gg f / W? J \ I wiHP* time for exercise, so from constipation H / XT Wr w \ ,11111 5 ' for years... I received a folder telling all about X A. W ffi _VX X X 5 fpii Ii yeast. I tried it... This new Fleischmann’s XR 0 Jr *l/ X■ X •• *rrrn im to umiDCi" Yeast relieved me in 3 days! All women who live X X X X X ACTED IN 72 MtJUKb an indoor life should know about it!” _ X £ SW XXX X X Norwood, Pa.... David Evanswrites* A W X X y mj XV X *** developed indigestion. As yeast ’■ 1 X mX'w/ M Jm. JW/ £ / had helped me before, I tried it again ; X mM X X us ** * his new Yeast acted in 72 . * X X X X X / X/ hours ... I see why doctors are enX r W "I Nm, UIMVIO IN HIM UXATIVtI" Waltham, Mass. . . . Mrs. W. R. Hickler, Silver Hill Rd., HIS INDIGESTION STOPPED FAST writes: 4 *l felt so tired. Nervous ... I didn t believe in laxa* Elizabeth, N. J. . . . Brewster S. Beach, of the plexion and digestion improved. Headaches left!” wrong—l had headaches that lasted for days. '^-' Didn't care if I worked or not ... I’d read of yeast. , '' "' v '^ , ' i S& Cable, Wis. . . . Margueritte Bro, a writer, says: “HudM. 4; dling over a typewriter isn’t exactly conducive to health. ' X; "'wX Il°st my appetite . . . felt miserable ... I tried laxatives—- '' 4 ''* <* iXXXmMi&mi.. 4 had to discard them . . . Finally I tried XR Yeast. / have 'Wjl only praise for My sluggishness few days!” 6on Blvd., writes: “Blotches all over my face! I|j| i* r Jib' ito Coast. . . people are eating this new td I’d lose my job ... Almost everyone in a ]B§ : ' Wgjm yeast that corrects common health ills twice friend's office was eating yeast, so I began . .. as CJllickly as any yeast before^ pies weren’t noticeable!” Feels much better, JjQIP ''K You see it’s a stronger kindoi fresh yeast JB* \ It immensely speeds up your digestive juices 4,''"V 1 if musc^es •• • moves food through you r' Thus this wonderful new yeast banishes -.■l constipation and related troubles:—indigesHk \ cease; you have more appetite, energy. 'fSl y *\ addition, Fleischmann sXR cast supplies ' 1 | I r *l, anew vitamin—A— that combats colds! And it’s , |P' WiLI r j c h j n Vitamins B, D and G. ..four vitamins —as re and abroad, well as hormone-like substances that aid health!^
THE INDIANAPOLIS TOTES
# been made by Mr. and Mrs. Justice McCoy. Officers of the organization besides Mr. McCoy are Edward Siebert, vice-president; August Linne, second vice-president; H. H. Philips, secretary-treasurer; E. E. Jones, executive secretary, and D. M. Armstrong. counsel. Arrangements for the dinner have been made by Mr. and Mrs. Justine McCoy.
TEXTILE MON TO GET HEARING IN WASHINGTON Company Ordered to Show Cause for Refusal to Rehire Strikers. The National Textile Labor Relations Board announced today that officials of the Indianapoiis Bleaching Cos., 900 W. Wabash-st, had been ordered to appear before the board in Washington, Dec. 17, to show cause why the order of the Indianapolis Regional Labor Board restoring 119 strikers to their jobs should not be carried out. The local board last month ordered the Bleaching Company to return to their original jobs all those strikers who yet been reemployed, and that all those hired as replacements during the textile strike be discharged in order to make room for the strikers. The company refused and the national board in Washington declared that the local board had exceeeded its authority. Charles P. Drake, business agent of the striking Local No. 2069. United Textile Workers of America, last week hitchiked to Washington in an attempt to get a quick decision on the case from the National Textile Board. The order today is thought to be a result of his trip. Charles A. Young, bleaching company general manager, told The Indianapolis Times today that he
had received no notification of the board's order. Mr. Young declared that statements previously circulated that he would be required to go to Washington were “a lot of damned lies put out by labor racketeers.’’ He declared that it had been definitely established tiiat the textile board had no authority to compel him to discharge the replacement employes hired during the strike. He said that he would discharge no one from his plant and that all those who had taken part in the September stake would be restored to their jobs as soon as the company's business warranted it. “There is no reason why we should be singled out for action by I the board,” Mr. Young said. “We have not sinned and we have not violated the code in ans way.” Textile Dance Postponed The dance of the United Textile Workers of America, which was to be held at 8 tonight at the Eagles’ Hall, 43 W. Vermont-st, has been postponed until Dec. 20 at the same time and place, it was announced today. Breakfast Feature Chilled Tomato Juice or Stewed Fruit Fried Fresh Egg Grilled Bacon Strips Toast—Dry or Buttered Long Expected Coffee with Pure Cream 15c G. G. MURPHY GO. Basement Cafeteria 41 N. Illinois St.
WOMAN’S TORSO FOUND IN CALIFORNL TRUNK Body Identified as Wife of Missing Crippled Engineer. LOS ANGELES. Dec. 6—John Happel, partially crippled unemployed stationary engineer, was sought today after the dismembered body of his wife. Rose Marie
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Happel, was found crammed into a trunk last night. Mrs. Happel. 40. had been dead from four to seven days, police surgeons estimated. When Mrs. Happel had not been seen for a week, nor Happel for three days, | neighbors searched the premises. Thev found the trunk, heavy and i bloodstained, in a storage shack in I tlie rear.
