Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 1936 — Page 11

i

AUTO FUMES. FATAL

| By United Press | BEVERLEY HILLS, Cal, Sept. 8. | —Louis F. Brewster, T4, a retired { Duluth. (Minn) engineer, died last night by aspnyxlation in his garage,

PUNISHMENT OF

TO U.S. SCENE, Suan SaYS of GR EE WINS || od md me CF AF Sn

Finds -Socialists’ Analysis 4 ‘A. F. of L. Chieftain Plans to Ping her to stay away from the of National Picture |% Organize in Field of | Worth Studying. Lewis’ C. I. 0. Ladies’ Silk

in Stud) ; (HAA AW Oh | n it OIN ra-rasnionea lL A]. 0 BY HERBERT LITTLE \ McDonald Mitch Golden | HOSIERY

Murphy Brophy Bittner Times Snecial Writer Sl as i : : Kinney Shoe Store WASHINGTON, Sept. 8. — Two Six aggresisve executives who , Golden. Mitch is Southern direc- | Indiana coal pits to high union 138 East Washington Street

heavy-handed means of pypishing; fought their way up through the | tor for the drive, rising from the ! authority. the insurgent John L. Lewis unions! ranks of labor head the. Steel -

| es a Sos BE Ee TCE Td

’ : : : William Green and other American; S. W O. C. for short—in charge A wend’, aay Federation of Labor chieftains. TERI LTS od x

TUESDAY, SEPT. 8 1936

© THOMAS CLOSE

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES re ‘BIG SIX" WHO DIRECT STEEL ORGANIZATION DRIVE «

U. SCHOLARSHIPS |

'GREEN DRAFTS

FOUR WIN BUTLER

|

(Mr. Sullivan Writes Thrice Weekly.) BY MARK SULLIVAN

WASHINGTON, Sept. 8.—Among the persons now emanating light or | : hgat, or both, on the American?’ political stage, one who is worth Jollowing, is Mr. Norman Thomas. i i candidate of the Socialist Party. 1 counsel “following” Mr. Thomas, not in the sense of adhering to Mr. , Thomas’ political philosophy, but : of -'listening to him for the sake | of information. | Any person!

Helen Jean Willcutts Van A. Bittner, David J. McDon-

are Philip Murray, John Brophy, /-one, was to organize | | feels 2 Hono on : | ald, William Mitch, Clinton 8.

[In the fields now occupied by the 10 | suspended unions, placing the new | | recruits into so-called “federal! comes tomorrow when representaunions” under the federation’s direct | tives of company unions of the Carungry for g guidance. : | negie-Illinois Co., U. S. Steel Corp. | unkry So Ea : The other was to forbid the 750 | subsidiary, meet in Pittsburgh with | ing weiter of | ZENE : ; : central labor bodies and the more | the company president, Benjamin | strange dogmas | AEE 4 F than 50 -state federations to send | now clamoring! any member of the suspended unions | at : 2 as a delegate to the A. F. of L. con- |

oS Beef posse PRE

an

——————— ta

OS

> e , whic Lewls’ Com- i

industry. From left to right they | mittee for Industrial Organization! : le are]! Ask C. L. 0. Recognition ve 2 Guest Star Sas

"Let us

: huindred

: formation of one or both of the two {old parties.

- visers' continue

Union party, and his backers, Father

at American ears will Mr. Thomas| possesing eX =~ | ceptional exact- | ness of mind. | partisan, while he |

Mr. Sullivan While he is

pleads for Socialism as his fermula

for America, and while he opposes | other philosophies of society, both the new ones and the old ones, |

tne

find |

he js clear-sighted in his vision of | Li

America’s situation and of the forces now loose in the world. I say this preliminary to taking for a text a sentence from a recent speech of Mr. Thomas at Wilming- | ton, Del. Mr. Thomas is described | as saying that America in the next few years “will be well started on the road” to either Socialism or | Fascism. To that statement one

might assent provided it be put in|

I would say that at this moment the forces and per--sons pushing America toward Soci1al®m, and those pushing America foward Fascism, are more alive and energetic than the forces which tend to hold America to its traditional pattern of society and government. |

Do Not Expect Victory

the situation in parties ‘ in

a different way.

look at terms of the political this campaign. formal Socialist Party and the formal Communist Party. Neither of | these will get more than. a few| thousand votes. .I doubt if Mr. Thomas expects more and 1 doubt if Candidate Browder of | the Communist Party expects nore. | 1f a new form of society comes to America—either Soeialism or its opposite, ' Fascism—within a. few vears, it will come through trans-|

The only possible outcomes of the |

‘election next November are Demo-

cratic victory or Republican victory. | It is common for opponents of Mr. Roosevelt to say that Democratic victory would mean some variety of - Socialism. This is far from | necessarily true. Mr. Roosevelt is not, consciously, a Socialist. He is not, consciously, a Communist. Certainly he is not a Fascist. He has | not, consciously,.aimed toward dictatorship. True, some of the steps taken during his Administration have led toward a changed social order.” - And it might well be that] another Roosevelt Administration would take America farther toward 8 new order. But this is not necessarily true. } Within Mr. Roosevelt's circle, the

principal influences making toward | | starts with a premise, which I think |

8 new social order are his radical advisers. . Mr. Roosevelt by temperament prefers these advisers to the conservative heads of the Democratic Party. If Mr. Roosevelt is re-elected to have as much power as they have had, then certainly America would be carried toward a new order. - Hope for Party Purge But Democratic victory in the coming election carries another pos-

We can dismiss the |

{ any

Margaret Van Meter

we

Nettie: Marie Dulberger

‘The four Indianapolis girls pictured ahove are to enter Butler

University Thursday as

They are Helen Jean Willcutts.

scholarship honored by the Fairview institution : Haverstick Park; Gretehen Huetter,

students. They were recently

4973 Boulevard-pr;, Margaret Van Meter, 6558 College-av, all graduates of Broad Ripple, and Nettie Marie DulRerger, 2921 Park-av, a graduate

of Shortridge.

FACULTY CHANGES MADE AT FRANKLIN

Dr. Leo Hertel to Head - German Department.

Timez Special FRANKLIN, Ind., Sept. 8.—Faculty changes at Franklin College have been anneunced by Dr. W. G. Spen- | cer, president.

Dr. Leo Hertel, Mitchel, 8. D. |

Coughlin and the Rev. Gerald |

| Smith, who, in Mr.- Thomas’ view, |

“more nearly approach the Fascist | patterns.” | Mr. Thomas declares the real wish | of Gov. Landon is “to go back some- | where in American history—to Cool- | idge, McKinley, or maybe all the way to Jefferson.” : | Mr. Thomas™ thinks that to g0 | back is impossible. And, in a literal | sense, if is impossible. I doubt i | Gov. Landon wants to go back, n | literal sense. I. suspect Gov. | Landon in his campaign speeches | will show that he proposes to pre- | serve the American system, but that | he contemplates modifications which | will preserve the system but at the |

| same time make it more satisfactory

|

1

| to a larger number of people. | Derides Premise

In all his arguments Mr. Thomas |

debatable. Practically all radicals! of. every variety, Socialists, Commu-

| nists, Fascists and many milder re- |

and If his radical ad- |

formers, start with the same pre- |

mise. The premise is that for a particular reason the existing

| American form of society can not |

sibility. If Mr. Roosevelt is elected, | s0 «will a strongly Democratic Con- |

gress be elected. And_the Democratic Party as a whole longs to become Democratic again, longs to get

{ an influence. (all this commotion about society

rid of the influence of the radical | advisers around Mr. Roosevelt. It!

is with that expectation that many Democratic leaders are “going along” With the program of re-electing Mr. Roosevelt. If the Republicans win the coming election, what will follow? The extreme Communists charge Gov. Landon would take the country to

Fascism. Candidate Browder of the]

Communist Party urges Communists

to defeat Landon as their imperative |

task.

But charging Gov. Landon with!

Fascism is just nonsense, Candidate Thomas of the Socialist Party, who does not approve.of Gov. Landon, nevertheless absolves him of Faseism. "It is.” incidental jeer, “absurdly and dangerously misleading ‘to call this modest, conservative, rather wildered Kansan a Fascist.” More Nearly Fascists

It Is Candidate Lemke of the

says Mr. Thomas, with |

be- |

survive, They say that collectivism

{ of one variety or another, is ines- |

capable. “The machine age,” says | Mr. Thomas, “makes collectivisp | inevitable.” True, the machine age must have | But the place acer |

started was Russia. And Russia, | in 1917, at the time communism was imposed upon it, machine age hardly at all.

|

| +. . withedogs as well as with

That's just our modest

| Some! Judge us any way or economy.

Backgrounds DO Count!

‘most anything. | are awarded for the country’s most modern city railway system, {| You'll see them fiying in Indianapolis. ‘

=i _T way of saying thats Indianapolis i Railways is on a par with the finest in America . you please . . . service, safety, comfort

When ribbons

+ +» and then

Indianapolis Railways |

had felt the |

has been named head of the German department to replace Dr. L. B. Murdock, who is studying in Germany. J Dr. ‘Hertel has studied in Breslau, Berlin, and Cologne: Universities, ang holds doctorate in philoso-

| phy from the University of Munich. {-Mrs. Hertel has a Ph. D. from the same school.

Dr. Charles Alexander Deppe,

| professor of biology, who has been

ill several months, will not teach during the first semester. ‘ His position will be filled{'by son; Fritz Deppe, who was called her® from an assistant professorship at the University of Cincinnati.

vention at Tampa in November. Green said he was confident: that such delegates would not be seated by the credentials committee, which he appoints. Although barring C. I. O. union {members as delegates, Green said his own eligibility to serve as président was not impaired by the suspension. | On the one hand he contended the | unions were deprived of A. F. of L. | rights. But on the other he argued | that his membership in the United | Mine Workers, biggest of the rebel | eroups, qualified him for his present | office. -

Suspended Have Votes

| | | Another quirk of the situation is | that Green ‘has stated officially | that the central labor bodies are { not to expel from their groups the | members, of the suspended unions. ( They will continue to have votes— in many vicinities controlling the | policy of the labor bodies. _C. 1. O. unionists minimize the importance of Green's threat to or- | ganize “ih all fields and all indus- | tries,” including their own. Not a |single A. P. of L. organizer has ‘been active in their jurisdictions, | they said: . i | Meanwhile both Lewis and Green are following the strategy of charg- | ing that the other side forced the | split between the 1,125,000 industrial | unionists andthe 2,000,000 others in | the A. P. of L. Sigh { For the two months between now | and the Tampa convention, however, | Lewis expects to aim his men more

| | | i {

| concentratedly upon the fight to or- | his | ganize steel and seek higher wages |

{ and contracts. | The biggest test of his educational

| and organizing campaign in steel |

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Acording to Philip Murray, mine union vice president and chairman of the C.I.O.'s steel workers organizing committee, these company union men, representing 89,000 of the 111,000 workers of that company, will demand recognition of the C. I. O.

steel union, the Amalgamated As--

sociation of Iron. ‘Steel and Tin

- Workers. This is unusual procedure,

since the company unions, set up by the management on a plant-by-plant basis, are not yet officially in the Amalgamated. But the men have united their plant groups to cover. a majority of the company’s activities and now seek recognition of a wholly independent outside union. The fact that Fairless meets his men to hear such a demand constitutes -a big step for organized labor. Old Judge Elbert Gary never got that near a union proposition. .

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