Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1937 — Page 32

PAGE 32

TRUCE REACHED Amana Women Work a

IN EAST CHICAGO

UNIONS’ DISPUTE

A. F. of L. Workers Return

To Jobs After Row Over Concrete Duties.

A truce was reached today in #2 Jurisdictional dispute between

A. F.of L.

missioner, announced. The dispute was between the International Operating Engineers’ Union and the Teamsters, Chauf- | feurs and Helpers Union. They | argued over which union had the |

right to handle concrete after it was | delivered to building sites. As a result 450 workers of both | unions went on a three-day strike | this week. Meanwhile, contractors | had to stop their operations and an | East Chicago concrete company had | to close, throwing 1100 men out of work. Mr. Hutson said under the ee the men went back to work pending settlement of the dispute at a con- | ference of international officers of | the unions in Washington,

MEXICO TAKES OVER BIG OIL CONCESSION

MEXICO CITY, Nov. 5 (U. P).— | President Lazaro Cardenas has or- | dered vast areas of Government lands in Tabasco, Campeche and Chiapas States turned over to the | National Petroleum Administration, the Official Gazette disclosed today. Included is a tract on which a | concession was granted in August, 1936, to Fortunato Zuazua. In taking over. this land President Cardenas ruled that the concession | provided that the work should be | started within six months and that the concession itself must not be | turned over to anv foreign interest. It was asserted. however, that ! not only did Zuazua fail to start exploitation but that he transferred his rights to the Richmond Petroleum Co. of Mexico, held to be a subsidiary of the Standard Oil Co. {

AGENTS TO RETURN INDICTED PAIR HERE

two unions in East Chicago, | Thomas Hutson, State Labor Com- |

| trator,

Looking alike as they bend absorbedly over their task, four elderly women of the historic Amana colonies in Iowa County, Iowa, bundled in heavy sweaters, coats and head shawls, are pictured above | doing their part in the modern industry of hybrid

Amana colonies

U. S. AID ASKS Season Opens

CHECK ON DRUGS Ory

For Pheasant

Urged on Basis of ‘Elixir’ Deaths.

Bu Science Service

WASHINGTON, Nov. 5—W. G.

today

empowering the Federal Govern-

ment to prevent the marketing of | have been such ' as | said.

dangerous drug mixtures, the sulfanilamide “elixir” which has

| taken 61 lives. He said in an interview that the a daily bag limit of two birds and a |

{$200 fine for first offenses against |

“no different at all” to a manufacJourer. Eiusking specifically of the “elix- ’ he said the manufacturer should [ove made it his business to learn

{ that diethylene glycol—with which

Power to Prevent Marketing |

| Wednesday,

"ednesday

The hunting season on cock pheasants, quail and rabbits opens Virgil M. Simmons,

| Conservation Department commis-

| sioner,

| Campbell, Food and Drug Adminis- | plentiful this year demanded legislation | every section of

announced today. “Reports indicate game is more in practically the state, while advance sales of hunting licenses unusually heavy,” he

| The pheasant open season is for

fcur days, and the department sets

| possession limit of four. The quail

the Pure Food and Drug Act was | season extends to Dec. 20, with a

bag limit of 10 birds a day and a possession limit of 30. Rabbits can ve hunted until Jan. 10, 1938. There also is a daily bag limit of 10 for rabbits with a possession limit of 20 al one time. Mr. Simmons said this is the sec-

corn seed production. ears of corn and cutting out defective kernels.

The women are inspecting The were for many years one of the

largest communistic settlements in the United States but in recent years have become more capitalistic.

NORTHWOOD'S DEATH

\ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

at M odern Task

PROBE DATA SECRET

Michigan Farmer is Held in|

Fatal Shooting.

SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont., Nov. |

5

(U. P.).—Examining psysicians |

today withheld findings of a postmortem examination of the body | of Helen Grier, 28-year-old Pont- |

iac, Mich. stenographer, found

slain in a Northwoods

north of here a week ago.

cabin |

Co-operating in the examination |

performed yesterday were Dr. J. R. McRae, of the Sault, and Dr. E. R. Frankish, provincial medico-

legal expert. Dr. Frankish conferred |

conclusions were not disclosed.

outcome of the post-mortem examination, probably will be held early next week, Dr. J. P. Keith, district coroner, said today. Vernon Spencer, Wixom, Mich.

The inquest, postponed pending |

| with investigating authorities, but |

FREE HOSPITAL HELP STUDIED BY GROUP HERE

Bureau Surveys Methods of Charity Service in Other Cities.

A survey of hospital charity Serv- | ice methods in other cities is being | conducted by the new City Central! Registration and Certification Bureau, it was announced today. Bureau members, named recently’

by Mayor Boetcher, have elected Dr. $72 IN LIQUOR LOST

Norman Beatty, 3307 Washington | Blvd.,, chairman, and L. B. Mec-

Cracken, 6032 Central Ave. secretary.

FRIDAY, NOV. 1937

|and took $25 in change from a cash | register, it was reported to police

»- Jy

TO TAVERN BURGLAR today.

A burglar who | broke | into a tavern

at 742 Massachusetts

Ave. during

The tavern is owned by Deborah Rosen, 218 E. Morris St. Loss was | discovered by Alice Rosen, daugh-

Results of the survey are to be|the night, Stole liquor valued at 372 {ter of the owner.

discussed at a meeting next week. The Bureau is attempting to learn methods used in other cities in handling free hospital cases. Aims of | the program were discussed at the | organization meeting. Dr. Charies Myers, City Hospital | superintendent and Bureau mem-| ber, said the purpose of the Bureau is to cut the City's annual loss re-! sulting from free hospital service to | persons able to pay. Bureau members are to investi- | gate the financial and credit standings of all applicants for free med- |}

=

ical service and then eliminate the | be s

unaeserving, Dr. Myers added.

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dairy farmer who reported finding | { Miss Grier dead of a bullet wound | in the cabin where the two had

Youngs Held in Florida ON [the sulfanilamide was mixed—was Bouquet

|ond year an open season has been

| ernment should have power to see | eld on cock pheasurts. The divi-

| dangerous. He added that the Gov- | Larceny Charges.

| make

Agents will be dispatched from the | Prosecutor's office tonight to bring | back Donald E. Young and Elsie | Mae Young, held in Tallahassee, | Fla., on a grand larceny indictment | here. : Prosecutor Herbert M. Spencer said he hoped this trip would once | and for all settle the extradition | “fiasco” which began nearly two weeks ago. Ray Seidle, prosecutor’s investigator, and two others returned to Indianapolis last night from Florida where they had sought te custody of the couple in vain. Balked by legal what he termed a “politico-legal run around,” Mr. Spencer got action! after sending a terse telegram to! Governor Cone of Florida. He was | notified yesterday the couple was being held for Marion County authorities again. The Youngs are charged with participating in an alleged $6100 swin- | dle here,

proceedings in

INDIANA STATE COEDS IGNORED FOR QUEEN

TERRE HAUTE, Nov. 5 (U. P.) — | The Indiana State Teachers College | home-coming arrangements commit- | tee decided to have some sort of a queen to reign over the festival, but the members became deadlocked | over the method of selection. So they effected a compromise. i They will draw a name from =a hat—but it will not be that of an| undergraduate beauty. The selection | I be confined to coeds who grad- | uated last June, return for home- | coming and sign a register. |

IGNORANCE NO ALIBI, BANKERS ARE TOLD

Bankers who plead ignorance of | the law or fail to keep adequate rec- | ords are no longer excused in the | cyes of the law, Hugh E. Reynolds; | member of the law firm of Slay-| maker, Merrill & Locke, told the Marion County Bankers’ Association | last night in the Hotel Washington. | He pointed out that since 1933 a | riumber of unrelated laws have been | brought together under one act en- | abling the banker to chart Ris] course more Clearly.

that drug manufacturers do not | mistakes” like that again.

Manufacturer Disclaims

‘Responsibility

(Copyright, 1937, by Science Service) CHICAGO, Nov. 4.—Responsibility | for 61 deaths caused by “elixir of sulfanilamide-Massengill” is disclaimed by the head of the S. E. Massengill Co., of Bristol, Tenn, which manufactured the drug. “I have violated no law,” he said in a letter to the American Medical

| Association here.

More deaths are expected to be reported within the next two days, but there is no more of the drug to cause new cases. The U. S. Food and Drug Administration has traced every shipment and, following it into drug stores, doctor's offices and family medicine chests, seized every bit of the drug.

OFFERS TWO SCHOLARSHIPS Two $300 service scholarships for

| students entering the school in the

midyear session beginning Jan. 31,

| are to be awarded by the Indianap- | olis | School Alumni,

Club of

today by Jr.,

president.

Guernsey VanRiper

| sion has liberated several thousand

one | { pheasants in suitable areas as a part

of the general restocking program.

AIR FILTER CALLED HAY FEVER RELIEF

Electrical League Hears of New Discovery.

Hay fever sufferers today hailed an air filter discovery, still in experimental stages, which promises complete relief within 48 hours. It was described last night by Dr.

Phillips Thomas, Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co. research engineer, at a meeting spousored by the Electrical League of Indian- | apolis and presided over by Wallace

| O. Lee, Indianapolis Power & Light |

| Co. vice president. | In other demonstrations of elec- | trical magic, Dr. Thomas showed it | was possible to “blow out” an elec- | tric light, “light” one with a match,

Harvard Business | and described other developments it was announced | in research.

His first two “tricks” were accomplished through sensi- | tivity of a “breath relay” tube.

stayed together, is held as a material witness. No charge has been placed against him.

U. A.W. TO MAP NEW CHRYSLER DEMANDS

Thomas, vice president of the United Automobile Workers of America,

nounced today that locals of all

placed before the corporation,

[upon cancellation of a strike vote in the Plymouth division, scheduled for yesterday and today. No reason

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Directly Opposite Indiana Theater

29 ON THE CIRCLE—2 Doors from Power & Light Co. LISTEN TO MOSKIN'S VALUE FLASHES-—-WIRE

Citizens Gasand Coke Utility,in cooperation with Indianapolis Gas Range Dealers and women’sorganizations, presents

BARBARA JENKINS

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at the

GAS COOKING EXHIBITION

Cadle Tabernacle 2:00 P. M. November 10th

ADMISSION TEN CENTS—Entire Proceeds to Charity

Cooking is fun for tiny Barbara Jenkins . . . And you'll have fun watching her prepare and cook a complete meal Wednesday, at the Gas Cooking Exhibition in the Cadle Tabernacle. Entirely unassisted, she will cook many of the 200 dishes she has mastered and will explain what she is doing over a lapel

microphone.

Barbara Jenkins is the world’s youngest cooking demonstra tor. Don’t miss seeing her.

It’s aa “Double Feature* E.C. SORBY, nationally known

cooking authority, shares honors with Barbara Jenkins at the Cooking Exhibi. tion. He'll show you how you can make cooking easier and less expensive. You'll find his humorous demonstration especial. ly entertaining.