Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 December 1936 — Page 34
HORTER HOURS OPLAY PART IN ‘DRIVE FOR JOBS
Roosevelt Likely to - Call Industrialists to Parley, Is Belief.
(Copyright. 1936, by United Press WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.— The 1937 drive on unemployment was forecast today by informed sources . 8s likely to include early conferences between President Roosevelt and industrial leaders and possibly an allinclusive registration of jobless men and women. Its immediate objec- " tives are re-employment, shorter , and, if possible, higher wages.
Preliminary preparations for both 3
the conferences and the registration are under way. The program is in
its formative stage only and is .
tentative pending final presidential gxamination and approval. Although the precise method of ppproach may vary from the fore-
. going, consensus is that Mr. Roose- | %d
velt contemplates speedy action in association with industry relating to unemplo nt. It is not believed likely that he will depend on volun-
tary industrial control to achieve his |& ends
. . The exact form of legislation required evidently has not been determined.
Seek Industry's Co-operation
Mr. Roosevelt's own pronouncements, however, suggest the scope of his plans for further labor legislation. The conference program is designed to place the problem before responsible industrialists and to obtain from them, if possible, cooperative request for legislation to Sites objectives of the second New
It would not be a coercive process, ~ In the opinion of persons acquainted with the plan. But always as alternatives to any industrial-labor legislation favored by Mr. Roosevelt would be the more radical remedies ~~ Which are being prepared by various groups in Congress. Notable among these is the 30hour work week bill passed once by the Senate, April 9, 1935, and last year reported favorably by committees of the House and Senate, despite White House opposition. The measure was blocked in 1933 in the House only by the White House proposal for NRA as a substitute,
Speeches Are Recalled
In his Baltimore speech last April,
Mr. Roosevelt said: “Industry can contribute in great measure to the increase of employment if industry as a whole will uncertake reasonable reductions of hours per week, while at the same time they keep the average individual’s pay envelope at least as large gas it is today.” In New York, Mr. Roosevelt advocated “nation-wide thinking, planuing and action” as essential to preRenting new economic crises. In Madison Square Garden just before the election, the President pledged himself to seek to: (1) Reduce over-
~ Jong hours; (2) increasé wages that|
“spell starvation: (3) end child labor; \ \ (4) wipe out sweat shops; (5) end monopoly, support collective bargaining, stop unfair competition and ¥mbolish dishonorable trade prac- ! tices. ‘The foregoing, in general, are . ‘ Judged to be the objectives of the , 1937 drive.
Step right up, folks, and meet “Donald Turkey.”
He’s Muscovy,
star of the Indianapolis National Poultry and Pet Stock Show. He's part duck and part turkey, according to the owner, Ervin Rush, 437 8. Arlington-av. He's shown here held by Mrs. Mary Owens. Old Muscovy weighs about 10 pounds and is a pretty tough cus-
tomer. promptu battle yesterday.
He ripped his owner's hand with his sharp claws in an im-.
Judging opened yesterday. There are more than 3000 entries on exhibition. The show is to continue through Sunday.
DAFFRON’S ALLEGED PAL GETS TWO YEARS
Times Special WASHINGTON, Ind.,, Dec. 11.— James Carter, 24, alleged companion of George Emmett Daffron, pleaded
guilty to burglary charges yesterday |’
and was sentenced to two to five years in the Indiana Reformatory.
He was fined $50 and costs and dis-
franchised for two years: Carter earlier had denied complicity in the crime, contending that he was forced to participate by Daffron.
2 DIE IN ELECTRIC CHAIR By United Press COLUMBIA, 8. C., Dec. 11.—-Two cousins died in. the electric chair today for slaying a taxi driver. The two, Sam Powell, 26, and Sam Anderson, 25, were convicted of fatally®*shooting W. A. Daniel. They were the first white men electrocuted in the state in over two
’ HIGH BLOOD PRESSURES
DIZZINESS - NERVOUSNESS LISTLESSNESS SLEEPLESSNESS
“50 to 75 Points
NO AFTER TASTE drop in BLOOD OR LL] PRESSURE ee f 0 MADE PALATABLE AND B8OCIA As the rose has thorns so Bak. lic ay ‘its odor. But thanks to the inimitable D. Gosewisch’s Genuine Garlic Tablets you get, without after taste or odor, all the Datensy and vital minerals of pure cultivated garlic. Obnoxious odors are only found in adulterated substitutes made from wild grown garlic. Play safe and get the best. D. Gosewisch’s Garlic Tablets cost $1 a month's supply. Look for in each box. At Hook's ut
ter druggists. vertisement.
ONE KILLED IN RIOTING By United Press , CHESTER, Pa., Dec. 11.—One man was killed and 36 injured today when loyal workers of the Sun Ship Buildisg Co. yards crashed through heavy: strike picket lines today. ;
STATE MISHAPS
: Crawfordsville Civic. Leader
And F: + Amo
_ of Seven g Victims.
Eight persons were injured fatally in trafic accidents in Indiana outside Marion County .in the last 36] hours. Mrs. Anna H. Walter, 9, Craw= fordsville civic ‘leader, was killed last night when struck by a fruck as she crossed a downtown street. She was the widow of the late James P. Walter. David Harter, truck driver, was not held. Seven children were orphaned in
truck crash took’'the life of Ernest Sayler, 45, North Judson. Mrs. Elizabeth McCauley was in-
day when struck by a street Joseph 63, was killed a ‘stantly in Fairmount when a Big Four train struck his auto. Paul Scheer, Huntington building contractor, died of ‘injuries
‘| received in an auto collision near
Anderson. Two men were killed last night when - their automobile collided with a transport truck on U. S. Road 20, west of Michigan City. One man, believed to be C. W. Miller, St. Joseph, Mich., was killed instantly. The other lived until police arrived and said he was George Hendricks, Berrien Springs, Mich. Mrs. Lockie Harrison, 27, Murray, Ky., died today in Putnam County Hospital, Greencastle, from piri ies received Wednesday in an auto-mobile-train crash in which two others were killed. o
No More Itchin After Using bus
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Acts quick, Ends misery, Comforting. \
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La Porte yesterday when a train-|
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James E. Perry (above) is president of the first McNutt for President in 1940 Club, organized here recently.
YOUNG DANGERDIES, . CLAWED BY LION
By United Press * BALTIMORE, Md, Dec. 1l1— Gladys Cote, youthful dancer, died in University Hospital today from ‘injuries received when she was
clawed by a 300-pound lion. during
an act at the Hippodrome Theater here Tuesday. r The girl, who had been believed to be recovering, suffered a relapse shortly after midnight. Gas gan-
grene set in, and physicians hur riedly performed: a sion. "She died ts ‘before dawn.
) was shot to death on Easter Sunday,
jand that he ‘had shot her in a | jealous rage. Teal was arrested in
blood transfu-
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