Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 April 1938 — Page 4
"PAGE. i
INDIANA LABOR DIVISION ENDS 513 DISPUTES
Settlemerits for 124,863 Workers Reached; Troops Never. Called Out.
Records of the Indiana. -Labor Division, established by statute a year ago today, show it has settled
© 513 labor disputes involving 124,863 |:
employees.
Commissioner Thomas R. Hutson ;
; reported that, during the last year, the National Guard has not been . used in a labor. dispute. He .estimated that if troops: had . been called out on major strikes settled - by the Division, the cost to the taxpayers would have been approxi- - mately $400,000. Mr. Hutson said the Division has . performed a two-fold function of . conciliation @hd education. “Educatioh of both employers and employees in methods of collective bargaining is an important factor in the ‘development of Indiana's record for industrial peace,” : Mr, Hutson said.
New Formula Found
“We have found that if workers . and their employers understand collective bargaining, they are able to reach an agreement. covering wages and conditions of work.” He pointed out that the Division was established by the 1937 Legislature upon the recommendation of Governor Townsend. Division officials also claim to have discovered a new formula for settlement of disputes—a plan which was used successfully in the <little steel” strike. This formula calls for the signing of agreements or memorandums
of" understanding by both parties
with the Division, instead of directly with each other.
‘Mr. Hutson said conciliators are
sent upon request by both parties to investigate any type of labor dispute, including sfrikes, lockouts and riots. After they have made an investi-
a aa a Anesaascsanssnsocencneny
B-MAN JOINS U, FACULTY
Reinecke, Indiana F. B. I. Head to Lecture on Police: Training Methods. BLOOMINGTON, Ind., April 1.— Herold H. Reinecke, special agent
in charge of the Indiana division of the Federal Bureau of Investiga-
§ | tion, has been added to the faculty
E [of the Indiana University Institute
Prof. Paul H. Douglas of the University of Chicaga will talk on “Controlling | Business Depressions” at the last of a series of open forums Sunday night at Kirshbaum Center, N. Meridian and 23d Sts.| Prof. Douglas. was a member Of (the Consumer's Advisory Committee under the NRA.
STATE GETS FUNDS
FOR SOCIAL SECURITY |
Times Special | WASHINGTON, March 31.—Allotment of $1,566,791 for public assistance in Indiana from April 1 to June 30 was approved today by the Social Security Board. The amoun{ is to supplement State Funds in Indiana’s program for aged and blind persons and dependent children. Federal appropriation for about 2300 blind was $58,878, and 42,000 aged persons are to receive a | Federal portion of $1,107,453. An estimated 28,000 dependent children are to receive $400,550. Eleven other states, Alaska and the District of Columbia shared in the $12,343, 318 public assistance allotment.
gation, the Division invites both parties to a conference to discuss terms for a settlement, the conciliator acting as a neutral observer.
of Criminal Law and Criminology and will be a special lecturer in po-
Et 1lice training.
Prof. James J. Robinson is director of tiie Institute. Mr. Reinecke's headquarters are in Indianapolis. Before taking charge of the Indiana office, Mr. Reinecke was in
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dliaige of the Bureau's. offices ‘oy Charlotte, N. C., and Detroit, Mich. He was graduated from the Uni- | versity of Iowa law school and has been a special agent with the FBI since 1925.
During the Dillinger hunt, Mr. Reinecke was assigned to the Chicago office of the FBI and at the time of the Bremer and Hahn kidnap cases, was in St. Paul.
SHE MARRIED BEAU DESPITE HIS TRICK
CLEVELAND, April 1 (U. P).— Mrs. Catherine Seferian came all the way from Europe 15 years ago to marry a correspondence-court-ship fiance. : “But when I got here,” she told Judge Samuel H: Silbert at her divorce case hearing today, “I :dis-
covered Reuben had sent me a picture of someone else as a decoy. As long as I was here, 1 decided to go through with it,” she said. Judge Silbert severed the tie.
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PASSPORT ISSUANCE OFF 21 PER GENT HERE
44 Seek Permit to Travel Abroad in March.
Passport issued here last month’ decreased 21 per cent compared to March, 1937. Miss Mary L. Hostetler, Federal Court deputy clerk, said she received 35 passport petitions in March and 44 in the same month last year. “However,” she said, April is the banner month for passports and will indicate more = accurately
whether people prefer to remain a ab(F
home.” | Twenty-three passports were - sued in February, a gain of six over that month in 1937.
CONVICT GIVEN CHANCE ST. PAUL, April 1:(U. P.)—Governor Benson today denied the re-
.{ quest. for extradition of Harry
Streinz,| now a Newport, Minn, farmer, to Oklahoma where he escaped the state reformatory 14
years ago. Governor Benson found
that Streinz has established himself as a law-abiding citizen here.
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