Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 June 1938 — Page 7

THURSDAY, JUNE 23,

KING'S TRIP TO PARIS DELAYED

FOR MOURNING

Queen's 19 or 22 Now Likely Dates.

(1 P) nnounced

Qu

cen hat

to France ause of

of Strath mother

“" oul i ing the King

of the

A here urt mourn that yembers

observe

ned

to inspection

the

of Port Countess Britain's lies, the Bentinck imporFrance he French

the LI

REMINGTON-RAND CO. T0 REINSTATE MEN

Firm to Comply With NLRB After 2-Year Fight.

0 comply against it,

: Orde

ILLINOIS POLICE KILL NEGRO FROM INDIANA

AGO

SUES FORMER TEACHER

Mother Dies: July

1938

Billion Appropriated for Crop Curb and Farm Aid;

0. P. Hrdnds Monopals Quiz as Move to Divert Blame.

PH) will

e

WA Congressional

THINGTON, Jun committees

conduct a series of intense and per-

spectacular investigations of

and Government congress

haps activities convenes

business

before the 76th

next J 1ary. One of the most President Roosevelt's own investigation monopoli It has been branded by Republicans as a move to divert the blame for the business collapse from Government policies to business itself. Armed with a hich President Roosevelt will con£400,000, a 12-man commitiee senting both the Executive and departments will study asserted inability of the and Clayton Antitrust cope with concentration of and wealth, and draft a comprehensive legislative program for presentation next January. Senator O'Mahoney (D. Wyo.) will »4 the inquiry. Two Democratic we ) . - bers and one Republican from House will represent Congress and Representatives of the Treasury, Justice, Commerce and Labor Departments, the Securities and EXchange Commission, and Federal I'rade Commission will complete the nembershin Attack Is Mapped Assistant AtW. Ardivision, lobert S have attack on Both coninadequate,

{ busi

0

ant extensive will be

of

es

$500,000 fund of Ww trol repre Legislative 1Isiness, Sherman Acts to business

he mt

each

Under guidance of

Tih antitrust

torney General rman

Pe

head of th Solicit

nold, and General Deal .

frontal

ol

Jackson, New agencies

for a

prepared

monopolistic

1e58

en 3ruce Barton hareed the nu ynopoly m a “drumhead economic collapse

wy vestigacion to on

ld be court’ blame business

I'he

the

vou the

exnected to since 1912 was 1nves-

investiga be most extensiy when the “money tr tigated The Tennessee Valley Auth av be revised after a 10-man joint congressional committee completes an investigation of it. Fortes TVA Chairman Arthur E. Morgan, ousted by the President and Dicesrs David Lilienthal and Harourt A. Morgan hurled charges of mismanagement, hypocrisy and concealment at each other in the committee's initial hearings. The commitiee hired as Francis Biddle of Philadelphia head of National Labo: tions Board. It announced it will oo to the bottom the TVA confroversy

tion is

no

ust”

uthoritv

counsel forRe-

mer he

ol

Utility Probe Planned

ilities also will be in-

connection with

sought to hamper

hn cours

£150,000

and hamstring it I'he commiiiee has inance its maquiry Liberties ComLa Folan in-

Jersey

The Senate Civil

ittee. headed bv Senator Wis.),

the

fe (Prog quiry into City where Mayor Frank Hague has been accused of suppressing the bill of rights. The department of justice is now investigating these charges Senator Minton (D. Ind) New Dealer, will continue vestigation of lobbies Activities of Nazi and ther groups propagandizing unAmerican ideologies, will be investid bv a seven-man House committee headed Conservative Rep Martin Dies I'ex Hearings probably will held major

plans

situation in

ardent his in-

Fascists

2ate by (nD be in

cities,

HUNTINGTON SHOE FIRM TO EMPLOY 100

HUNTINGTON. June 231 (U1 Pp)

Officer nf

e

2 nrgan

hoe mannfactirine: ‘oncern here

todav hoped tn =tart product

The:

workmen

inn in planned to The of incor Huntington Shoe the Secretarv

ahoiit twn neeks

emplon about 100

new firm has filed articles

porat he Co

State

INDIANA LAW SCHOOL GETS NEW QUARTERS

inn for

Inc with

The Indiana Law School today new quarters, the former William B. Wheelock residence at 1346 N I'he deal Pal

moved into Delaware St made real

thro estate § Neuer r.

was igh the

Co.

Rov met

PUTS STOP TO ITCHING

a effect Y y z itech : in BLUE ST AR OINT y 10 y srture of mples, Poauk if All drug 3 Desk 4, of price

NRO. Money 3 L 3

Co

Genvuine]Revere

SOLID copper

@ Yours for anly

VALUE woth 4» Thi SOLD COPPER

ESS THAN cafe SEMI

appers from soft ERY PAN «hem hants rk avenh enn: enc!

! Many sthar 8

. “at. ian. ore ; PREM

TW FOLDER

ar maney beck

fn Write Tar o ©

} reel

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SKILLET

HALF REGULAR RETAIL

NOLE NSSUE in diameter

o ered a! bar

today!

SEMINOLE TISSUE

SEMINOLE PAPER Sel 1s NEW

1483"

ized

of |

| Mr,

W allace Lauds Congress For Constructive Legislation.

WASHINGTON, 23 (U. PD. —The 75th Congress broadened the Deal agricultural program and appropriated more than a billion dollars to finance control of production and to aid farmers. Congress began consideration of the New Farm program at a special session last November and finally passed it in February over opposition which charged farmers were being “regimented” and “coerced” into compliance. Secretary of Agriculture Wallace defended the act as ‘the most constructive farm legislation ever enacted” and asserted it gave farmers a “new charter of economic freedom.”

June

New

Subsidy Payments Set Up

Princ features farm program are: 1. Subsidy payments to farmers planting within acreage limits established by the Secretary of Agriculture 2. Imposition of marketing quotas limiting farm sales, subject to twothirds approval of growers 3. Federal loans on surpluses to growers who co-operate on acreage limitations, 4 Wheat 1939 5. “Parity” payments wheat and corn The new act differs from the old soil conservation law principally in that it gives the Secretary of Agricultm added power to regulate plantings and marketings by rewarding co-operators and penalizIng nonco-operators. Secretary Wallace described the program, signed Feb. 18 by the President, as intended to protect farmers against low prices and consumers against high prices resulting from scarcity. This, he said, would be accomplished through controlled production and storage of reserve supplies

500 Million

bill authorized dollars for payment to farmers growing corn, cotton, wheat, rice anc tobacco for planting within -allotted acreage and conserving the soil on their farms. Congress appropriated 175 million dollars for rural relief on Mr. Wallace’'s plea for additional aid to farmers. The money will be spent during the next fiscal year on direct relief grants and rehabilitation loans to impoverished farmers. The Recovery-Relief Bill provided an additional 212 million dollars to be disbursed as “parity” payments to increase cash returns on corn, cotton, wheat, tobacco and rice. The Agriculture Appropriation Bill carrier more than 100 million dollars to be expended as indirect aid to farmers through purchases of submarginal lands, wind and water erosion control, experimental work and removal of surplus commodities.

ipal of the new

insurance beginning in

in cotton,

Authorized

I'he 500 million

Payments Up to £10 an Acre Farmers who plant within allotted acreag will receive benefit payments ranging from 82 to $10 an acre. Deductions at 5 to 10 times the benefit rate will made for

36S

he each acre planted in excess of the allotment on each farm. The act requires the Secretary of Agriculture to announce marketing quotas the amount which each farmer may market free of penalty —whenever the supply of cotton, corn, wheat, rice or tobacco exceeds demands and threatens prices. The quotas become operative on all growers of the affected commodity, whether or not they have co-operated in other phases of the program, if approved by two-thirds of the growers voling in a referendum.

COURT TO QUASH

Series of Probes Planned TRUST CHARGES

Demurrer Gontends Acts Alleged Were Not | Criminal.

SOUTH BEND U. P).Counsel for General Motors Corp, today sought to quash an anti-trust indictment against the corporation, three affiliated finance companies and 19 executives In a demurrer filed Federal District Court, corporation counsel, contended the acts with which the defendants were charged did not constitute criminal viola- | tions of the Sherman Antitrust Law. The indictment charged the corporation, its finance company affiliates and executives had coerced automobile dealers and discriminated against independent finance companies. | “The demurrer mentioned nu-! ! merous legal technicalities but the | principal charge advanced was that the acts charged against the General Motors defendants did not constitute criminal violations,” U. 8S. District Attorney James R. Fleming said

Tune 23 ¢«

vesterday in

Bond Posted General Motors counsel also posted $2500 bond for of the de-! fendants Mr. Fleming =zaid Federal Judge Thomas W. Slick “probably” would not rule on the demurrer until the October term of court. The Court adjourns for the summer June 28. The demurrer sought to quash | the indictment only against the General Motors defendants. It did not mention the Ford Motor Co. or Chrysler Corp.. their affiliated finance companies and executives In the Genera! Motors indictment were named such prominent executives as William Knudsen, president, and Alfred P. Sloan Jr., president of the administrative board.

AWAIT RULING ON COUNTY'S DEBTS

Plaintiffs Claim Institutions Owe Total of $11,303 In Due Bills.

each

The question of whether spending extra money to care for inmates of institutions is an emerwill be decided next week Court Judge Joseph Mar-

county gency by Superior Key. Pending in S brought recently anapolis firms, asking immediate pavment of $11303 claims. The plaintiffs contend the money is due them for supplies furnished County institutions They stated that County Commissioners had failed to pay the claims because of lack of money in the budgets If the Court rules the claims were for emergency supplies. a special fund must be appropriated in the budget for payment with interest from the time the judgment was made. The State Tax Board ruled several months ago that spending money beyond budget limits cannot be approved unless it was for an emergency. Merchants were warned they could not collect such claims.

Court One is by 21 Indi-

uperior a suit

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WAS LOSING TIME EVERY PAY-DAY TILL HE GOT RETONGA

Painful Joints and Muscles!

And Acid Indigestion “Disappeared Like Magic” States Indianapolis Resident. Works Every Day Now Without Trouble.

I'he remarkable and

strengthening powers of

up-building Retonga are in who do

day

and over the

cases of and women hard and work. Everv scores of them call at Hook's Drug Store, 8 E. corner Illinois and Washington Sts, where the Retonga representative is explaining the new herbal medicine, and tell how it has brought lasting relief from the tortures of gassy, acid indigestion, ach- | ing muscles and joints due to the toxic poisons of constipation, and restored them to happy strength. Take, for instance, Emmitt Ogborn, 1026 South Illinois

proved over again

men steady

| St., who says of Retonga:

“I was in such bad shane from

acid indigestion, pains through my | | back, and loss of sleep, that I was | losing

several days’ every pay-day, and Retonga proved a regular god-send to me,” declared Ogborn. treatments, but 1 got no relief to speak of and when I started on Retonga it was like grasping at the last straw, 1 was on a strict diet, but even that would sour and the gas would press my chest until I could breathe. At night I would have to get up half | kept me so nervous 1 could get no

up

the case of Mr. |

work out of |

“1 took lots of special |

and ferment | into i

hardly |

a dozen times which |

EMMITT OGBORN ing feeling limp and draggv and I stayed so tired all day 1 did not | seem to have any strength or vitality left in me. My bowels would not ! {move unless I took strong purgatives, and my back and legs were 185 sore and painful that many days | I could not get through a day’s| work. “It took a wonderful medicine to | drive out all these troubles and put me back on my feet feeling fine and never missing a day from work, but Retonga did it. No wonder everybody is praising it. I eat three | big meals like a hard working man needs every day, and I relish every | | bite and never have a sign of acid | | indigestion. My !pwels are regular, which seems to have relieved my | other trouble ard instead of get- | ting up nights now I sleep the | whole night through and feel fine when I wake up in the morning. Mv troubles just seemed to disappear like magic when 1 took Retonga. It | is a world-beater.” | You ran obtain this new herh compound at Dependable Drug Stores:

|

remarkahle all Hook's | Just ask |

| restful sleep. I'woke up every morn- | for Retonga. $1.25 size,*08o.

PAGE 7

WY RESULT IN PAY REDUCTIONS

Absence of Enforeement Clause Endangers Incomes.

By HERBERT LITTLE

limes Special Writer WASHINGTON, June 23.—Weekly ‘ay envelopes of many workers who now put in more than 44 hours a week may be thinner in October,

when the Wage-Hour Act's 44-hour |

yrovision becomes effective. Although the act contains a ceclaration forbidding employers to ut wages because of the new stanprds, it carries no provision for enforcement of this clause. Consequently such workers apparently will escape lower weekly wages «(nly where the employer voluntarily, or under union pressure raises the hourly rate, Skilled workers in particular are concerned lest their because of the 44-hour limitation. A typical instance is that of a man who now works 48 hours a week at 81 an hour. Under the 44-hour week he will get only $44 unless his employer raises the hourly rate. Or the employer could legally let him work overtime at time-and-a-haf pay. In the latter case, if the worker put in 48 hours he would get $6 for the four overtime hours, and thus a total weekly pay of $50.

Section 18 of the Wage-Hour Act states:

States Warning

“No provision of this act shall justify any employer in reducing a wage paid by him which is in excess of the applicable minimum wage under this act, or justify any employer in increasing hours of ememployment maintained by him which are shorter than the maximum hours applicable under this act.” But

Sure, the loveliest Irish

who

they picked all

party

of the the of Justice Charles Mass

to

rose out people at the

S. Mur-

went to

ranch bheMiss annual and

de-

phy near Paxton, and, dad, it Iurphy! reunion of the clan Murphy the contest Miss Dorothy Murphy war 10.000

pro-

just had be a

For it was the

in beauty

ROSE Oli

the various _eniorcement With olive oil shampoo & sel

Gunarant’d. Only 1

n y Central Beauty MIL OOF Bld, Li-o3?

judges that of East Providence, R. I., prettiest girl Murphys

cided the

among the

ent

pres

The That

Known as Having the

Best VALUES

Store Is

TT

a

3 VERY

OUTFIT INCLUDES: ONE HOLLYWOOD BED

income shrink |

| visions, | which section of the act it is de- | signed to enforce, do not mention Section 18. Hence, according to lawyers, the declaration amounts to little more than a pious wish. It was not con-

tained in the original House or Senate version of the bill, but was in- | serted by the House-Senate conferees who made the final draft. It is

said to have been proposed by Sen-

ator Walsh (D, Mass). In this as in other

Phases of the

| each of which specifies

law, all action is being deferred pending signature of the act by the President, expected within five days, and appointment of an administrator,

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