Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1937 — Page 2

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REPUBLIC FIRM |

STILL REFUSES |

ACTTOC. 0.

S. W. 0. C. Challenges Company to Allow President to Settle Strike.

(Continued from Page One)

cumbed to bullet wounds received in Sunday's pitched battle.

3 Hoosiers Are Victims

Other victims have been identified as Alfred Causey. Hammond. Ind.

| . Kenneth Reed and Earl Handley.

both of Indiana Harbor, Ind.. Joseph Rethmund. Chicago. and Sam Popovitch. address unknown. At Saginaw, Mich.. the Chevrolet Service ‘Parts plant. a General Motors unit employing 500 men, Was | closed today when the management shut’ off the electric power supph after union workers had ejected five nonunion employees. Immediately after operations were halted. the workers barricaded themselves inside -the plant gates and announced they would remain until they were granted a closed shop.

Never Saw Lewis

In Cleveland Tom Girdler, Republie chairman, said he had never met John L. Lewis, C. I. O. head, “and I hope to God I never see him.” | : Meanwhile the strike of thousands of steel workers had reduced Republic production by half. and had com- | pletely shut down plants of two] other large independent producers— | Inland Steel Corp. and Youngstown | Sheet & Tube. fd A Republic plane. crashed today during alleged sniping at food cde- |

Plane Delivers Food

i

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

to Workers

The target of several rifles. according to company officials. a plane is shown above as it roared through the gathering darkness and dropped hundreds of pounds of food to nonstriking workmen within the Republic Steel Corp.- plant at Warren; O. The plane is at the left; hovering low over the

FILES SUIT TO BAN. ; PHONE BOOK ADS

A suit asking a court order to pre- | vent the Indiana Bell Telephone

LINTON MAN NAMED STATE ELKS CHEF

grounds of the plant, ready to land supplies for the workmen, blocked off from all other means of getting food. The pilots were paid $20 a minute for’ the flights ‘after mail trucks had been turned back after strikers and the workers had battled across the fence with a threat of more serious trouble.

Frank Recobs, Tipton, tiler; R. A. Scott. Linton, superintendent of Elks national home.

FLEEING PROWLER

BELIEVED "WOUNDED

liveries to nonstriking workers a

ernment moved for peace quietly | Court 2 today. behind the restive gteel strike scene. P . oo . i aul . Keller, The plane had flown low over the | B elie, "of plant shortly before and had been

a target for rocks and bolts thrown | suit. He charged that the Telephone | | company discriminated against the In Detroit a subpena was issued | Keller company as to position of its]

by pickets.

the Keller] | Brothers Transfer Co., brought the 7imes Special LOGANSPORT, Ind. June 2.— he heard someone trying to force | Milo Mitchell, Linton, today was ad- pen a side window in his home. He |

t | Co. from selling advertising in its Four Made Vice Presidents

Warren. O.. while the Federal Gov- | diréctory. was on file in Superior |

During Convention.

a

vanced to president of the Indiana

| Police today hunted a~ middle- | aged Negro prowler, believed to have | been wounded as he fled from a house at 1001 Church St. last night.

Harry Rainbolt, 40, told officers

said he took his .22-caliber revolver. fran out the rear door and fired

or

6 HIGH SCHOOLS HERE GRADUATE RECORD NUMBER

2600 Eligible to Receive Diplomas; Exercises _ Are Opened. Two city high schools held grad-

luation exercises last| night, * two more are to hold them) tonight, and

two tomorrow night. Approximately

2600 graduates, the largest number

lin Indianapolis school history, will

receive diplomas, A class of 66 is to be graduated from Broad Ripple High School tonight in the Women's Gymnasium, Butler University. Baccalaureate | services are to be held Sunday in the Bethlehem Lutheran Church, 52d St. and Central Ave.’ Crispus Attucks High School also lis to hold its graduating exercises {for a class of 224 in Cadle Taberi nacle tonight with Dr. Leslie Hill, { Cheyney Teachers’ College presi- | dent, Cheyney, Pa.. delivering the address. Baccalfureate services are | to be held in the schcol auditorium at 4 p. m. Sunday.

700 in Shortridge Class

Shortridge High School with a class of 700 and George Washington High School with a class of 265 will hold exercises tomorrow. Student speakers and musicians are on the Shortridge program in | Cadle Tabernacle, where diplomas (will be presented by Alan W. Boyd. School | Board president. Sunday afternoon vesper services will be conducted in Caleb Mills Hall. Dr. William Lowe Bryan, Indian] University president emeritus, is to { address: the graduating class of George Washington High School in Butler University Fieldhouse. Mrs. Mary D. Ridge, school commissioner, is to present the diplomas. Baccalaureate services were held (last Sunday.

Manual Exercises

| John F. White, School Commissioner, presented the diplomas to a

State Normal School, Mont., giving the principal address. Butler University was the scene of the Technical High School commencement exercises last night when 1024 received their diplomas from Carl Wilde, School Board vice president. Vesper services. for the Technical class are to be held Sunday afternoon in the school gymnasium.

H. A. WILLIAMS, CITY FIREMAN, IS DEAD

Humphrey A. Williams, Negro, .died yesterday in his home, 217 W. North St. He was 42.” Funeral services are to be held at 2 p. m. Friday in the New Baptist Church. Burial is to be in Crown Hill.

Mr. Williams had been a fireman at Pumper Company 1, Indiana Ave. and Michigan St. for 16 years. He was born in Danville, Ill. Mr. Williams was a member of the International Association of Fire Fighters Local 416, and the Second Baptist Church at Toledo. Survivors are the widow, Mrs.

| Helen Johnson Williams: two sisters, Miss Roger Williams and Mrs. |

Mildred Marshall, and one brother, Frank Williams,-all of Toledo.

-— New...a Sr

Billings, |

Fieldhouse |

Cream Deodorant

SHORTRIDGE PUPIL WINS SCHO

Miss Anne Holmes High School senior] | awarded one of the $200 scholarships t6 DePauw Dcan G. Herbert Smith, scholarship director, has announced.’

tr np SRA EG

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 1937

Walfer C. Holmes, 2041 Broadwar, and has maintainéd a straight A plus record throughout her four years of high school. ! Miss Holmes is vice president o? the Shortridge chapter, National Honor Society; recently received a silver loving cup: for scholastie achievemerit. Her ' sister, Harriet Jane, received the same honor in 1934.

| Only 400 of | These Great Values Go On

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THY

(Rouge plant last week between com-

| the Second Circuit Court of Appeals

today for Edsel Ford as a one-man | advertisement and as to terms of

grand jury investigated | circum- | stances of a fight at the Ford River |

pany employees and organizers for

[the United Automobile Workers of |

America. Wayne County Prosecutor Duh- | can C. McCrea. who ordered the grand jury, investigation of the near-riot last Wednesdayv, disclosed : that Ford would be souzht as a wit- |

iness before Common Pleas Judge

Ralph M. Liddy. Rand Writ Asked The National Labor Relations Board in Washington today asked | to issue a temporary injunction re- ' Remington-Rand. Inc.. from alleged finfair labor~practices. There were two bright spots on the labor horizon: __ In Hollywood. a month-old strike of motion picture technicians -was beliaved nearing an end. In i vl Ill. it was announced | that 550 miners, who staged 'an eight-day sit-down strike at the bottom. of the Superior Coal Co,

mine at Wilsonville, will return to A work pending negotiation of their Teacher Association, has charge of

demands. . 7

i EEE al iin ! |

PICKPOCKETS GET | $348 AT GRADUATION

Pickpockets who obtained $348 at the Technical High School commencement in Butler Fieldhouse last night were sought by police today. | G. W. Gille, 810 N. Bolton Ave.,| reported the loss of his billfold containing $333 and valuable papers. |

‘Other victims were Thomas Reid,

3601 E. North St. who. told police his billfold containing $8 was stolen | as he left (he building, and Fred Elder, 1649 Union St., who said pickpockets took his purse opninining $7.

‘SENDOFF’ PARTY FOR

MISSIONARY IS SET

Miss Rose Fecker is to be honored at a farewell party Friday by the First Evangelical Church Women's Federation at the home of Mrs. | C. L. Hartman, 5040 Pleasant Run | Parkway. ; Miss Feckér, who has been a missionayy in China for 15 years, is to sail on the Empress of Canada from | Seattle in a short time. Mrs. W. A. | Shullenberger, Mrs. Charles Breece |

and Mrs. C. P. Maas will lead the |}

devotions . i

HOLDUP SUSPECTS HELD

Four Negroes were held on va-| grancy charges today as suspects | in the attempted holdup of Norman | Johnson, 22; and Robert E. Merrill, | 23, both of Ft. Harrison, at 38th St. and Keystone Ave. last night.

AD THIS PB

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payment. tion#tharged that “advertising is not | tion here. set out in the defendant's articles of | Raymond Thomas. Terre Haute, incorporation as part of the opera-| C. E. Thompson, Frankfort, "and tion of the telephone system,” and | Glenn Miller. Logansport, were adthat advertising rates “are exorbi- vanced to ‘first, second and third taht.” vice presicents, while Joseph Kyle, Telephone company officials de- Bors: was named fourth vice presi-

lined to comments. - | dent. ; £ bat |W. ©. Groeble, Shelbyville, the

SCHOOL |S TO HONOR Re WB, Hoffenbacher, East On VETERAN EDUCATOR Gerd

L. E. Yoder, Goshen, were re-elected chaplain, sergeant - at - arms and treasurer respectively. All . . ART ..._ | other officers were re-elected excentTribute for her 44. yoars of serve ing Trustee Frank Himler, Vine ice as a teacher in the Gregg School, | cennes, who was succeeded by J. E. East Michigan St. and Beville Ave.,| Montgomery, Washington. will be paid to Miss Ella Frietzsche | Re-elections included A. A. Spears, . 1+ Brazil; Reinhart Stetter, Ft: Wayne: | at a reception in the school audi- | Harley Rudolph. Michigan City. and | torium Friday 7:30 p. m. to, 9. | Will Smith, Alexandria, trustees; | Miss Frietzsche taught in the City | : school system {our . years before | joining the Gregg faculty. She has | taught every course in the curricu- I lum gnd now teaches mathematics | and English. Mrs. Lee Waddell, | president of the school's Parent- |

Memory Is the Treasury and Guardian of All Things.

Charley Calon

: Flks Association. succeeding A. GOr- | {hree times. Mr. Keller, in asking the injunc- don Taylor, La Porte, at the conven- | The man appeared to have been Cadle Tabernacle last night, with

| hit, it was reported.

i Manual High School class of 321 in

‘Dr. Lynn McMullen, president of '

ARRID |:

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the reception program. All friends | WEST IO™ST.

and former pupils are invited.

~) FUNERALS !LiNots ar

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Tuesday, June 15 | Saturday, Wednesday, June 16 | Sept. 11

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