Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 195, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 December 1934 — Page 10
PAGE 10
OVERHAULING OF NRA IS TASK OF NEW CONGRESS Roosevelt. Richberg and Williams Outline Changes. Thi* i th* *fTfnth of *r\eral '•tone* on th# ronirf'Mnnal program B\ LYLE ( WILSON l nttrd Prr** SUff < orrr%i>ondrnt WASHINGTON Doc. 25—President Roosevelt is determined to continue protective provisions for laoor in the reorganization of NRA which will begin shortly after Congress convenes Jan. 3. The National Industrial Recovery Act. which hatched the Blue Eagle, was enacted for two years. It will expire on June 16, 1935, unless continued. Mr. Roosevelt, Chairman S. Clay Williams of the Industrial Recovery Board, and Donald R Richberg, chief Nt w Deal co-ordinator, are the best A .ministration authorities on NRA. Th ir statements over a period of months indicate that the new NRA act. which almost s ready for submission to Congress, xfrill continue : * 1. Prohibition of child labftr. 2. Guarantee of collective bargaining. 3. Minimum wages and maximum hours. 4 Safeguards against a limited category of unfair trade practices. Price fixing probably will be eliminted from the new NRA. Production control will be eliminated or materially reduced in scope. It is the intention of the Administration to shift code enforcement so far as trade practices are concerned to the industries themselves. Relaxation of anti-trust laws to permit trade association organization and action in effecting code provisions doubtless will be continued. Ask Experimental Period The foregoing appears now' to be the foundation upon which Mr. Roosevelt will attempt to build a new structure of industrial selfgovernment. Organized labor and organized industry also have NRA programs. They differ fundamentally from each other and there are points of conflict in both with the New Deal plan. At the White Sulphur Springs conference, industry recommended that NRA be kept In the experimental stage by continuing it from June 16 for one year only. Only inter-state industry would be coded under the White Sulphur plan. In- 1 dusfry wants code acceptance to be voluntary on the part of business. The conferees approved maximum hours, minimum wages and prohibition of child labor. But industry objects to NRA’s guarantee to labor of the right to bargain and requests that individual bargaining be recognized. The industrialists asked that Blue Engles and NRA labels generally be abandoned. Six-Point Program Urged Labors six-point NRA program Is as follows: 1. Create a board to impose labor codes on any industry which fails | to present an acceptable code on its j own initiative. 2. Extend the wage principle to j establish basic nunimums for skilled, semi-skilled and common labor instead of • confining minimum I rates as now is the practice, principally to common labor." 3. Give labor equal representation
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PROSPECT MASONS TO INSTALL NEW HEADS Musical Program to Precede Ceremonies Tomorrow. Following a musical program, installation of officers of Prospect Lodge, 714, Free and Accepted Masons, will be held at 8 tomorrownight. Taking office will be Raymond F. Forces, worshipful master; Paul W. Armstrong, senior warden; Albert Mayo, junior warden; Raymond F. Lane, secretary; Frank B. Meyer, treasurer; William R. Belford, senior deacon; Harry E. Emmons, junior deacon; Everett E. Beason, j senior steward; Raymond Dailey, I junior steward; Dr. R. H. Benting, chaplain; Clarence E. Gunckel, ! trustee, and John C. Hoover, reelected tyler. ROAST CHICKEN TOPS STATE PRISON MENU 3600 Pounds to Be Served Michigan City Inmates. By Vailed Press MICHIGAN CITY. Ind., Dec. 25. ' —Approximately 3600 pounds of roast chicken was to be served in- i mates of the Indiana State Prison today for their Christmas dinner. I The menu also included mashed potatoes. giblet gravy, celery, can- | died parsnips, hot tea, onion sage dressing. Boston cream pie, apples and candy. on all code and NRA administrative authorities. 4 Impose a program of mass enforcement involving regular inspec- 1 tions to discover code violations. 5. Require reconsid erat i o nos code provisions on motion of the Labor Advisory 7 Board. 6. Empower Government agencies to collect data on wages, production, j profit, costs and related records of ! business operation.
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BUSINESS' PLEA FOR RETURN OF GOLD ATTACKED Sen. Thomas Is Aroused by Monetary Views of Industrialists. B 7 Beripp*-Hoirnrd \rir*paper Alliance WASHINGTON. Dec. 25 —Declaring that oig business dinosaurs'’ attended the White Sulphur Springs business conference, Sen. Elmer Thomas 'D, Okla., leading Senate inflationist, scoffed today at the business men’s stand for return to the gold standard. "Those so-called big business
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
who met at Hot Springs didn't even seem to know that we are on the gold standard now and that Is one of the things that is the matter with our monetary system,” Sen. Thomas asserted. “So far as I have read of their discussions, they seemed to have talked about everything but the real problem—money and credit. Judging from their recommendations regarding the gold standard they couldn't discuss these things because they are unfamiliar with them. "We had that gold standard when the crash came in 1929. “It was still in force on March 4. 1933. when every bank in America was closed, when business was at a standstill, and when 14 million wage earners were walking the highways and byways looking for jobs, food, clothing and shelter. "Under that gold standard the capital, surplus and undivided profits of 15,C00 banks was lost by the bankers and the depositors lost
billions of dollars in many cases, the savings of a lifetime of toil and privation. "Surely these business leaders are not serious about wanting da return to those times just to be able to say we are back on the gold standard. They just haven't thought the problem through,’’ 32 MARRIAGE LICENSES ISSUEDJN HALF DAY New Record Marked Up by Dan Cupid Here. Little Daniel Cupid went on a Christmas spree yesterday, and consequently anew half-day record was hung up when 32 couples presented themselves to Clerk Judson West and applied for marriage licenses before noon. A total of 42 certificates were issued Saturday, only two short of the record for a single day. They brought the year's mark to approximately 4000, the highest figure since 1929.
REFUGEES FROM YUGOSLAVIA ARE SHOWNIN REEL Women, Children Forced Into Hungary; Graphic Scenes Revealed. Graphic views, the first to reach America, of the refugees who were expelled from Yugoslavia as a result of the ill-feeling arising against Hungary as a result of the assassination of King Alexander at Marseille, are to be seen exclusively in the current issue of The Indianapolis Times-Universal Newsreel,
which has Graham McNamee, noted radio announcer, as its "Talking Reporter.” The refugees are seen huddled in the market squares at Szeged, Hun-
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DEC. 25, 1931
gary, as soldiers feed them from rolling soup kitchens. Their small bundles of belongings and babes in arms strike a tragic note to the scene.
