Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1938 — Page 3

SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1938

Loyalists Warn Of Raid Reprisals;

THOROUGH QUIZ PROMISED INTO

Shot Lawyers

Britain Criticized WPA | ACTIVITY

THE FOREIGN SITUATION

PARIS—Lovalists warn Rebels of reprisal bombings. ROME—Italians say reprisals will mean warfare. LONDON-—Viscount Cecil denounces British policy. BERLIN—Nazis exempt U. 8. Jews from edict. SHANGHAI—Chinese claim capture of Hsiangkow.

Cecil Renounces Support Of British Policy

LONDON, June 25 (P. count Cecil of Chelwood, Great Britain's most distinguished |

Rebels Report Loyalists Will Bomb Ships

PARIS

Spanish

The P.).—VisFrance today had |

new

(U Mission

P)

to

June 25 Rebel from Salamanca the Loyalist Government squadrons of Cartagena and

leaving Rebel

announced

{hat

statesmen, of the Government today of his dissatisfaction with its policy |

regarding the bombing ships by planes operating for Spanespecially | ish Rebels. singled out, it was said. The step! This action followed the refusal is in retaliation for Rebel attacks of Winston Churchill, a Conservaon British and French shipping on | tive leader in the House of Comthe Bast Coast. mons, to vote with the Government The Lovalist Government Thursday after a debate on Spanish | he French Foreign Office policy. y it would attack Rebel ports Viscount Cecil said: bases in retaliation ; Ny “I feel 1 can not honestly of undefended vou to treat me any longer nominally a supporter of the Government.” Criticizes Government

Mr. Churchill, on Thursday, was one of a dozen Conservatives who remained ostentatiously in seats during a vote on a Labor Party | motion of censure against the Gov- | ernment. In announcing withdrawal of his suport from the Government, Cecil was unsparing in his criticism of its policy. “The (British) ships bombed were acting lawfully in pursuit of their ” he wrote. *Yet the German | Prime Minister declines to take any | action. economic or military, to protect. British lives and property. . . . The Prime Minister's speech (admitting the Government nothing but request the Rebels stop hombing) is inconsistent with British honor and international morality.”

transferred

planes to Valencia,

Rosas to attack ships ports. Italian ships

will be

notified today | and | plane for ny! allow bombings Lovalist cities Dr. Marcelino Pascua, the LoyvalAmbassador, handed the notificato Foreign Minister Georges | RBRannet ! France fears international plications from such a policy The Spanish notification was that Rebel ports and plane bases on the Spanish mainland and in the Balearics Islands, and possibly in Spanish Morocco. would be affected anv reprisal raids. Newspapers published reports that Italian and German cities might be bombed. Loyalists cha tha; the for Rebels are German manned | trade

further

tion

com-

by

The

planes operating the Italian lareels bh Italian

and and ere The (invern

homb 1

alist to

Embassy dented the oy catenead

ferman cities

ment had {ha

talian and (

Lovalists Give Warning Of Reprisal Raids

LONDON. June 25 (UP)

San Gis Lo arehil dase tf Nazis Exempt U. S.

rebels stop JEWS From Edict

and has hinted | WASHINGTON, June 25 (U. P) The State Department announced today that Germany has agreed to exempt American Jews living abroad from the necessity of registering with

I oval jst prisals nunless the syombing open cities mping open the reprisals mayv extend to points continental in usually

Spain, it was reliable quar-

outside said today {ers The Pablo de ist Ambassador, Foreigh Secretary, Informants

warning was conveved by Azcarate, Spanish Loyalto Viscount Halifax, | last night Azcarate hinted guardediy the Loyalists in executing reprisals might not confine themselves to such Rebel cities as Bhireos and Salamanca but extend the reprisal zone to include points from which the raiding planes were believed to come Lovaliste have made no secret of their belief Italian planes have | taken a leading part in the bombing | Mediterranean cities and the | planes come from the Balearic 1s- | lands

SHANGHAT, June 25 (U. said in 35

smashing victory today

capture of Hsiangkow, miles

any the Yangtze River. I'he engagement occurred in a | sanguiinary Chinese counter-attack against the Japanese drive on Hankow, temporary Chinese capital, in which , they claimed Japanese casualties were between 3000 and of

The surviving Japanese troops,

as even | ©! | migsal | ployee taking part in political man- | agement or political campaigns.”

| WPA political activity were made in

the German Govern- | ment properties owned in Germany.

U.S. Steel Noncomittal

By] : I | Chinese military officials claimed a | On Wage Question the re- | | The United States Steel Corp. today above Anking on the south bank of |

| nounced yesterday.

ward along the Yangtze bank after |

the Chinese had cut, off their treat to the rear. Their tion was threatened

re-

Hitler Reported in

Vienna After Row

BERLIN, June 25 (U Perstent and unconfirmed reports EAST PEORIA, Ill, June 25 (U circulated here and in Vienna | P) —The Illinois River. swollen by between the Ger- a eloudburst, swept over its banks Nazis, One re- pearly today, inundated lowlands and wer Adolf Hitler went | forced approximately 50 families to airplane to Vienna 10 flee from their homes

P) ILLINOIS RIVER IN FLOOD \ ere

oday of conflict

netrian

threat of the Lovalists to take reprisais against foreign nations for the Rebel bombing of open cities.

of the informal

Rome Savs Cannon Will Answer Raiders

rn

he the Spani hh 1

editor often an for Premier Mussolini, Italian-German reaction would be “immediate and implacable, not exercised bv a diplomatic note of protest but with cannon.”

Gavda., is

Virginio paper. who spokesman aid the

ine 23 1p

ROME. Nn

femint 5

Any al waliste tn Italian and German will be met wit fare Giornale d'Ital

commenting on

bomb targets the infiuia said today the implied

Hh wat ential on

IN INDI. ANAPOLIS

Herve Is the Traffic Record EF

23

zabe h Ha oscle 1081s

at Centra!

=a

in White River skull

I Arrests Speeding ..., 98

— mn a ket 5 : 1 g min ef

County Deaths fy - {To Date) frac Reckless Priving .... §

A itv, hranmonia Downin 26822 N. Gale

nio

tunning Preferential Streets 4

City Deaths (To Date) 193% 193%

jomas Cham at 1153 Laurel iit is

W. Rich 1015 Lambert,

39 i cardio vascular

Running Red Light

Drimken Driving

Kay Pen erebrospinal Henry Jewell, 72. at al thrombosis Tord Hiner, 40, at Citv, ©» 0sls a Powell oeeltsinn

Wilfone at mening

Methodist

2705 Rader.

Tune 214 Accidents Injured Dead

imonary

4R, at

Others

MARRIAGE LICENSES

(These lists in the Ceunty Court House

OFFICIAL WEATHER

United States Weather

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST

showers tonight and tamorrow: morrow

official records The Times, is not responsible for errors in

ars from

therefore. Burea tee.)

names or addresses.)

a dng 1 shastian 14! ed Lowe AY Ho wel Alice Cat » ,

nt RY English ) of B43 CC} h 8 af 358 N

A qurel t Hig hlan d of E

Sunrise | {

Sunset « 1:18

A 1

TEMPERATURE ~June 23. 193% -— 13 1pm

BAROMETER 20 84

recipit

ion at hes e) di n otal mm Ta cre

ect ation since ince Jan 1

MIDWEST WEATHER Indiana Thundershowers tonight and omorrow, except cloudy in extreme northvest tomorrow. eooier tomorrow and in northwest and extreme north tonight Mostly cloudy in central and south tomortomorrow and in eentral and fons tonight Lawes Michigan —Mostly ders howers tonight and in exireme east-central morning cooler tonight Ohio BIRTHS ably Lo morrow and In nort Rave . Kentueky- re ees probable toMildred Ma yiet night and tomorrow: cooler in west and m Helen ¢ a north portions tomorrow. ladys Barke: : Ellio

Miinois ight and ron cooley north port

cloudy, southeast and portions tomorrow and tomorrow,

morning ‘ oe fomorrow

h portion ton

CITIES AT 3 eather Bar, .. Cloudy 29 86 PiCldy ‘loudy loudy loudy loudy joudy ioudy loudy loudy foudy

Ww E ATER IN OTHER

GC COaConacs

Rambe. Fla IW ashigton DGC

2028 Rirton, |

A.M Temp. | 65

Thunder- | cooler to- |

| Prison by Federal

thimdershavers | | Toledo, where he was captured.

thun. |

hundershiowers toni oer and prob-

| —Officials of

|

one of | |

of British |

| which should tend to restrict

their |

|

Lora |

| such a

could do! to |

| pressed gratification that the price | eut statement was not accompanied | according to the Chinese, fled west- |

‘General Cut in Steel |

annihila- |

Prices Is Likey

| A general cutting of steel prices was

New Civil Servi Service Order Contains Ban on Political Work.

(Continued from Page One)

investigate the Two Per Cent Club.” “In fact,” he added, "I never heard of the Indiana Two Per Cent Club.” “We have no jurisdiction over collections from state employees. Nor | have I ever mentioned Indiana for | any investigation.” The opinion is growing, as the | committee plots its job, that this | | will not be the whitewashing ex- |

renounced his support | edition which it appeared at first. | because | Developments

during the summer may involve some important per- | sonages.

Order Contains New Ban

There has occurred another event 1 po- | activity by Government | This is the issuance of al series of civil service orders by | | President Roosevelt. These orders, bianketing into the | civil service more than 100.000 government employees, call for disor discipline of “any em-

litical agencies.

Angered because he thought he was being “laughed at.” Emil Hansen, above, shot and killed two lawyers in a Los Angeles courtroom. Hansen claimed the men were “mocking” him and had swindled him out of the $35,000 he took to California when he left his South Dakota farm 11 years

What part, if any, of the WPA personnel will be covered was being |

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

| dom of the press’—would

studied todav by legal experts. The Senator and his committee intend to give a broad interpretation to “political activity.” For instance, WPA Administrator Harry Hopkins’ personal indorsement of Rep. Otha Wearin in the recent Iowa primary, which caused | wave of protest, may He come a committee issue, While Senator Sheppard declined to discuss the Hopkins statement, he said the committee should investigate the “atmosphere surrounding the situation” where political indorsements come from WPA or | other Government officials

ago. The lawyers were J. Irving Hahe ock and R. D. Mclaughlin.

6, 0. P. REJECTED BY VANNUYS ONGE MORE

Republicans Are Active on Eve of State Convention.

(Continued from Page One) Plans Primary Probe Grounds Colizeytm, The Marion County delegation will hold its caucus Tuesday night preceding the district meeting. District sessions will he at the Claypool Hotel and the State House The Republican State Committee is scheduled to meet Tuesday afternoon to complete last-minute ar- | rangements,

The committee will not confine: itself to future primaries, the Senator said, but will go into primaries held

earlier in the vear. Charges of

connection with the Florida, Penn- | svivania and Iowa primaries, Next week the committee will mail to every candidate for the Senate | a comprehensive questionnaire | The committee appointed by State about all sorts of political activity. | Chairman Arch N. Bobbitt vesterday | to investigate the Madison County chairmaniship dispute, also is scheduled to meet Tuesday. However, | party leaders said the committee may not be able to submit a report until after the convention. They said the committee may not be able to! notify all parties involved in the dis- | pute in time to conduct a hearing and reach a decision by Tuesday, The committee was named to hear protest of Blanchard J. Horne, Anderson, over the Madison County | cominittee’'s action in ousting him | as chairman and naming Ray V Gibbens to succeed him

Recess May Be Proposed

NEW YORK, June 25 (U.P).

announced it had given "no assurance” that wage reductions will not follow steel price reductions an- |

The announcement made no reference ton President Roosevelt's speech last night in which he ex-

by a wage cut.

—n | One of the first matters expected |

come before the convention | proposal of delegates from several | | counties that the G. O. P. session be recessed until some date follow- | ing the Democratic convention next month, I'he State Committee cently that it had no postpone the convention any action on the have to be voted by I'he state meeting opened by Mr. Bohbitt with Rep Charles A. Halleck, Rensselaer, Indiana’s Republican Congressman, az temporary chairman, He will introduce the keynote speaker Bruce Barton, New York Congressman William 1 president of the United Brotherhood a of Carpenters and Joiners of Ameri- | |

to

PITTSBURGH, June 25 (U. P)

probable following the lead of U. 8

Steel Corp. and the quick reaction of President Roosevelt who hailed the move as a stimulus to business recovery The unheralded price cutzs—ranging upward to 17 per eent—were announced by “Big Steel’ yesterday Carnegie-Illinois. one of its subsidiaries, made the first announce ment, calling for reductions in 12 major classifications of steel products ranging from $2 to $4 a ton, or from 8 to 12 per. cent

ruled power and that proposal would the delegates will be

reto

onl

Hutcheson, n atiotai |

Tribesma n Ready for ‘Home Run’

which has headquarters here, serve as permanent chairman. HT T. James, Portland attorney, will be sergeant-at-arms, and | Robert Hyatt, Washington, chief uisher, Mr. Sheaffer, who announced for the Secretary State nomination today. served as deputy prosecutor | in Porter County, at Valparaiso, in 1923, before coming to Indianapolis | to enter the practice of law He served Marion County deputy prosecutor in charge of the Grand Jury from 1925 to 1929 and as Municipal Court Judge from 1931 to | 1935.

of

There probably will be a bridegroom in the lineup of the Indianapolis Indians when thev meet Toledo tonight at Perry Stadium Centerfielder Myron Winthrope McCormick, 21, today obtained a license to marry Beverly Vivian Jones, also 21, Both said they town hotel.

AUTOMOBILE THIEF GETS 5-YEAR TERM

ax

Five Candidates Busy

Greatest activity among the candidates has been among the five | | announced aspirants for the Sen- | atorial nomination Four of the five have preconvention headquarters at the Claypool Hotel. They are Raymond E. Willis, Angola publisher: Clarence H, Wills attorney; former Senator 31, Cincinnati, Was | wateon, Rushville, and to five vears in Federal | Bossert. Liberty attorney Judge Robert C.| ufacturer Baltzell today on a charge of inter- | ne fifth candidate, Oliver Starr,

‘ Gary attorney and {ormer Lake | state trangportation of a stolen County prosecutor, i= expected to | auto

open headquarters at the Clavpool | Walsh was turned over to Federal | tomorrow agents after completing a two-year | Possibility of a “dark horse” sentence in the Kentucky State | candidate for the nomination still Prison on an auto theft charge. He | was being discussed by party leadwas accused of stealing a car in| ers. Some predicted that Mr. Willis | Kentucky, driving it to near An- | would lead on the first ballot, but derson, where he abandoned the car, | without a majority. Other obserstole a taxicab after binding the | vers said that “horse trading” hy taxi driver, and driving the taxi to various county delegations for State office nominations might switeh the edited tsuneo tvastvessueers Senate race strength. They said most county delegations were

CIRCUS MAY GO T0 uninstructed, and that “it is anyWINTER QUARTERS | Says tute

SCRANTON, Pa. June 3 . py. | PITTSBURGH PAPERS TO PUBLISH SUNDAY

the Ringling Bros, | Barnum & Bailey Circus, stranded | PITTSBURGH, June 25

lived at a down-

Kokomo | James B Walter F and man-

Joseph Walsh,

sentenced |

here by a strike of roustabouts ahd |

performers, indicated today that the | od

| general

liberal

| perheads”

| copperheads

facturers, | the Wages and Hours Act

is | ity

| stockholders’

| oh

| 289

| ment

| ordinance adopted Dec | The State Tax Board,

| from each of the city employes’

| 1037 city budeet | was adverse

also

| |

| show would be returned to its winter | Every department of the Piutsbiteh |

| quarters in Florida.

| along because created by the strike were

Written agreements between (he inion and management were to he drawn up providing for the move Mayor Fred J. Huester vesterday ordered the circus to leave Scranton “forthwith” and take its employees sanitary conditions terrible.” |

worked today to produce Sunday editions after settlement of a busi- | ness office strike, and complications with other unions, which prevented publication for nine davs Publishers of the Press and SunTelegraph last night agreed with presidents of 10 eraft unions in their plants to arbitrate the union's demands for pay during the period of MONTEVIDEO, Uriiguay, June 25 | a strike called June 17 by the newsU0. Py —Pour Army flifrs were | paper and News Distributors Office | killed today when two airplanes coi- | EFmplovees Union, an A. F, of L. lided in the gin | affiliate,

FLIERR DIE IN CRASH

Press and Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph |

|

ing"

%::

PAGE 38

FDR. ISREADY Benjamin Harrison Era

T0 FIGHT FOES

AT PRIMARIES

President in Fireside Chat States Policy of New Deal Reforms.

(C ahtinved from Page One)

| bility of carrying out the definitely liberal declarations of set forth in the 1936 Democratic platform,” he added, “I feel that I have every right to speak in those few instances where there may be a clear issue between candidates for

principles |

a Democratic nomination involving | these principles, or involving a clear |

misuse of my own name. “I am concerned about the attitude of a candidate or his sponsors with respect to the rights of American citizens to assemble peaceably and to express publicity their views and opinions on important social and economic issues. “There can be democracy in any community which denies to the individual his freedom to speak gand worship as he wishes The American people will not be deceived by anvone who attempts to suppress individual liberty under the pretense of patriotism.”

He added, immediately, that

no constitutional |

free- |

dom of expression—‘"especially free- |

lead to “a lot of mean blows struck between now and election day.” Mr Roosevelt said he meant there would be “misrepresentation, personal at-

| tacks and appeals to prejudice.”

Addressing himself to voters of all parties, he said there would be a clash this year “two schools of thought, classified as liberal and tive.” He counselled voters of all parties to ask this question “To which of these general schools of thought does the candidate belong?"

generally conserva-

Calls Self “Liberal” classed himself with “those in America who hold to” the | school of thought. Mr. Roosevelt reiterated his allegiance to the private profit system. He equally denounced communism and fascism Brigkly challenging “defeatism.” Mr. Roosevelt repeatedly asserted that New Deal “reform would continue despite the counsel of {o ease up “Never before have we many copperheads.” he said. “And vou will remember that it was the | who, in the days of | between the States, tried their best to make Lincoln and his | Congress give up the fight, let nation remain split in two and return to psace—peace at any price.”

He of us

‘cop- |

had so

the war

Praises Congress

He said Congress had left many things undone — notably Government reorganization and railroad legislation—but that Congress had accomplished much and “ended on the side of the people.” In a tartly worded reference, regarded as directed against one of the outstanding automobile mantu- | Mr. Roosevelt defended |

“Do not,” he said, howling executive with an income of $1000 a day,

relief rolls in order to preserve his company's undistributed reserves, tell you—using his money to pay the his personal opinions— that a wage of $11 a week is going to have a disastrous effect on all | American industry. Fortunately for business as a whole, and therefore the nation, that type of executive is a rarity with whom most business executives heartily disagree Mr. Roosevelt said he hoped there would be more intelligent operation between labor and and with Government

CITY EMPLOYEES IN FT. WAYNE UPHELD

Court Rules $36,000 Salary Claims Must Be Met.

postage for

COcap-

F'I'' WAYNE, Allen Circuit

today

P) H. Hilgefor

| policemen |

June 25 ((U Judge Harry mann entered a verdict Ft.

and sighal department employees in |

Wavne firemen,

their suit seeking an aggregate judgof 836.000 unpaid balances due for

based on

salary allegedly 1937. The firemen, policemen and signal | department workers were granted increases of $10 monthly under an 22, 1938 however, refused to authorize an emergency appropriation of $60,000, of which $40. 000 was to cover the salary increases

As a £120

deducted | pay | for December, 1937, to make up the | difference between the established and those allowed by the The court's ruling to the State Tax Board's decision. City officials indicated an appropriation to cover the judgment would be included in he budget for next vear,

VIOLENCE IS CHARGED BY HARLAN DEFENSE

result, was

LONDON, June 25 (U. P.) .—

The defense in ie Harlan coal con- |

spiracy case ended its first week of | testimony today with a hint it would offer evidence that union men, too, committed violence in the struggle over organization of the soft coal fields. In the month that it took to present its case the Government offered two score withesses—most of them union members—who testified they had been beaten, threatened, kidnaped and shot The defense will counter own testimony of bloodshed violence and is expected that union men resorted when they took the offensive against nonunion men “Belling” consists of taking a man out in the country and chaining a aroud his neck. He then is left to find his way home as best he can,

with its and to prove to “bell-

between |

the |

who has been |. turning his employees over to the | | government

salaries

| iness expansion in that direction, |

project. | publican,

| to the field.

blocks | concrete buildings,

| Real Estate Board executives. Thay

| we feel that comprehensive low cost

| rental “let any a |

| Chamber's | tification | national Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union as exclusive bargaining agency for men

| General Motors Sales

sufficient |

cowbell |

courts, [a national union succeeds in bring-

companies been represented by other unions to bargain exclusively with a national labor organization with which their | own affiliated. |

cedented,

Revived Here as Home Is Opened to Visitors

Statue Cast From 10,000 Dimes Given Indiana President for Venezuela Action Is Feature Exhibit; Many Historical Pieces on Display.

(Photos, Page 1)

By JOE COLLIER Only the other day, rummaging in the attic at the old Benjamin | Harrison home, which for years was rented as a rooming house, they | found a blackened statue of a sailor which someone said was a curbstone ornament used at one time for hitching horses.

They put it to one side. Shortly thereafter, someone found a hoxed | book, ornate and printed on silk. There was a picture of the same

COUNCIL SPLIT cise ON SLUM ISSUE

the statue had an Af ti Real Estate Board Sars

| of about $1000, because it was cast | | from about 10,000 dimes donated | City Still Can Qualify For Grants,

by persons grateful to President

Harrison for prompt action in an | Sinergency in Venezuela which may have averted a war.

Preservation Planned

In addition to throwing a light on an almost forgotten incident in | the Harrison administration—one that nevertheless was so tense at the time that the dimes were volunteered at York newspaper—the statue is to [be cleaned and be a highlight of = | the preserved home which opens most good, would block further bus-| to the public at 10 a. m. today. | Owned and operated by the Are thur Jordan Foundation, the home at 1230 N. Delaware St., contains many of the things that Benjamin | Harrison lived with, and others that in themselves are deeply rooted in | Indiana history and taken from | |the home of Mrs, Ovid Butler interdenomina- | Jamieson. tional committee chairman of the | Bernard F, Batty, curator, found | Indianapolis Church Federation, | the Janeson pleces in an oud Jal. : e had rescue rom the attic o urged establishment of the Hulls | the Harrison home the inside wood is SUE 38 8 Savudice and HO | window blinds or shutters. He

cleaned them and put them up. which would attract private capital | Then he found Fy the pole

of hanging drapes so they would allow freedom for the operation of | the shutters was too much for He called in a department expert, and she was stumped.

Old Pieces

One dav he was Jamieson home and noticed that hoth shutters and drapes were] hanging so he popped in to find out the technique. In addition to finding out, he discovered some pieces steeped in Indiana history which were needed to fill voids in the Harrison house. For instance, Mrs. Jamieson acquired two governor chairs the Oliver P. Morton estate. | ernor Morton was a the | Mr. Harrison's at Miami University, | Oxford, O. He was the Civil War Governor and he commissioned Mr. Harrison to organize and command the 70th Indiana, which Harrison led against the South. Moreover, the chairs mateh the bookcases which are authentic Harrison. At 10 a. m. today, the son home will be open {to the public and thereafter, at the public may visit it and inspect the objects of Indiana history gathered there. Incidentally. anniversary of Benjamih Harrison the Presidency.

(Cc ontinued from Page ne)

Theodore Cable and Mrs, Nannette Dowd, Democrats, favored the | Edward R. Kealing, Re-| said he wanted more time to study it. Dwight Ritter,

A petition asking for the authority has been filed with the Council by the Church Federation, he said “No extensive survey is required to find that Indianapolis slums need correction,” he said. “It would pay the Clity in health and social service alone.”

store

Found

passing the

Lockefield in Dispute

Tockefield Gardens, covering 16 city with 24 modern brick and was built at a cost of $3,020,000 to provide low cost housing facilities for Negroes. Described by some tenants as| “heaven,” (he Lockefield project was characterized as a “failure” by

had from Gov-

declared it had merely shifted slum districts instead of rehabilitating them. They assailed the present ization of the Federal Authority as ‘a bunch theorists.” | “No one denies we have a housing problem,” Mr. Whelden declared. “But we have to work out a practical approach to it. “We are vitally interested as much as any group in town.

organHousing of paid

in it— But |

housing would affect low rentals | seriously, and it might affect higher brackets. Private capital can’t compete with subsidized hous- | ing.’ "to

today is the 50th the day on which was nominated

NLRB Maritime Dec sion Rapped by U. S. Chamber

WASHINGTON, June (ty, 2) Commerce warned businessmen today the National Labor Relations Bo ruling in the Pacific Coast longshoremen’s ca “may have serious sequences to industries operating on a national scale’ In its weekly Washington Review ® the Chamber said: Should the Board's ruling be sustained by the this would mean that where

of ard

25 The United States Chamber

ee

services to the stockholders of

Motors’

Holds NLRB Charge Is

Free Speech Menace

WASHINGTON, C. H. Murray, American Mill Co. official, said today one of the “unfair labor with which his company is charged by the National Labor Relations drew the Board is sustained, “then we no the ©ers longer have free speech in this fhters country and we may as well it." A public hearing on the NLRB charges against the company will begin at Catlettsburg, Ky., Monday. The company is headed by Presi- | dent Charles R. Hook of the Na- | tional Association of Manufacturers who is a member of President Roosevelt's commisczion to study English and Swedish labor legislation, Murray is assistant to Hook.

C. I. 0. Asks Probe

Of Record Seizure NEW ORLEANS, June 25 (U, P) “The Committee for Industrial Or-

his Gieneral

ing into its membership the ma joritv of the employees of an entire industry, it could force individual |

tt. PP.) whose employees have | :

Rolling that if

June 25

employees refused to become which was Bridges’

The decision criticism of Harry

12.860 longshore= | Pacific Coast ports,

Decision Unprecedented

in 31

board's decision was unpregranting the union sole bargaining powers for all longshoremen employed by hundreds of members of five waterfront emplovers associations. The Chamber's attack came as the labor hoard ordered the first collective bargaining election in a | General Motors Corp. plant It directed a poll within 20 davs of ganization asked the Department of | 1200 hourly-paid employees of | Justice today to investigate alleged three General Motors’ subsidiaries | violations of eivil rights by police, | at Oakland, Cal. Workers at the | especially with reference to the Fisher Body division, Chevrolet | seizure of C. 1. O. records Division, and parts division of the| A police raid on C. 1. O. headCorp. Will | quarters yesterday, during which choose between the United Auto: |the documents were removed, grew mobile Workers of America and the | qt of a ©. I. O strike at nine National Auto Workers local of the | traneportation conesrns. The Union International Association of Ma- | qaimed 100 per cent chinists | : a ” . among the companies Meanwhile, the American Feder- it had called

ation of Labor's weekly news serv- Bt Saif f had a witl ice today editorially criticized Alfred | PCC" 1¢ rms had signe A

P. Sloan Jr, Genetal Motors board | (he American Federation of T.abor chairman, for his opposition to the | ‘to avoid bona fide contracts.’ Wage-Hour Bill. Calling atten- HE LEANED TOO “FAR tion to Sloan's message to stock- 4 SAN FRANCISCO, June 25 (U

holders in mailing out June diviP.) —Harold Butler, 30, was recover-

dend checks, the editorial said |* Sloan “doesn’t have to worry,” add- | ing today. He threw a cigaret out window and then leaned out to

ing “last year he is reporied to a have been paid a remuneration in| watch the trail of sparks. He leaned the heighborhood of $650,000 for too far and fell 35 feet.

The

Fletcher Trust Company

CoMMEpCIAL BANKING SAVINGS # TRUSTS CITY-WIDE BRANCHES

* Mambhar Fodaral Reserva Syetam Mambher Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Fe ——— ——————————————| —

the suggestion of a New |

him. |

classmate of |

General |

Harri-

stated hours, |

con- |

practices” |

know |

FRANK C. DAILEY NAMED TO HEAD ELECTION DRIVE

Accents Chaimanshis 0: Citizens’ Committee Campaign.

Frank C. Dailey, attorney, h: been elected Indianapolis Citizen School Committee general chairma | to direct its campaign for the ele | tion of a nonpartisan School Boar: | fhe executive committee announce today. He succeeded Edgar H. Evans, wh had served since 1934 when th | present Board was elected. | The active campaign for draftip | and electing an entire new Schor Board will open early next mont | with the appointment of an execu | tive secretary and the opening « headquarters.

Niblack Vice Chairman

John L. Niblack was voted gener: vice chairman and Fred Bate Johnson, treasurer. Both long hat been identified with the movemen: Mr. Niblack served as executive sec retary during the 1020 and 103 campaigns. Accepting the position, Mr said, “I feel that the welfare « the school system is so importan and the work of the Citizens’ Scho: Committee so paramount, as show in the high-grade performance « the present and preceding Schoo! Boards, drafted and sponsored b the committee as candidates, that am willing to do all I can to assi the movement.’

FOES CRITICAL OFF. D.R. TALK

Senators King and Burk Censures His Speech; McKellar Likes It.

Dalle

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tration of power in the hands of on man. I don't. | Mr. Burke said the President hai full legal right to enter prima: campaigns, “but T question the wis [dom of the President of the Unite | States doing that.’ “I believe the Congressional districts and the states ought to determine for themselves whom they want to represent them. “I believe the people in the dis- { tricts and states will resent the President's interference. If we were | to follow the course he has suggest - ed, we would be goose-stepping behind a leader, and no matter hov beneficent that leader may be, ! do not approve of that course, Mr. McKellar hailed the Presi dent's address as “highly entertaining and instructive, as his speeches always are.” { “It shows,” Mr | “he is just as greatly interested in nis forward !ooking policies in 1933 | as he was when he came into of[fice in 1933—and just as willing to fight for them.” Senator Sheppard (D. Tex), chairman of the Senate Campaign Expenditures Investigating Committee, said that the President's speech “clarifies all the issues and shows the President to be a mili= tant liberal.” “He is entirely In discussing fice. Mr. Sheppard added Senator Hatch (D. N. M) “The President made many fine | statements I was especially im(pressed by his emphasis on co-op= eration by capital, labor and Gove | ernment for the benefit of all.”

AWAIT PWA ANSWER ON AIRPORT PROJECT

City officials today awaited ane swer on their application for a PWA | grant to help finance the constrice tion of a building at Municipal Aire port to house the new Federal aire craft radio experimental laboratory. PWA regional officials at Chicago asstired M. GG. Johnson, airport engineer, that the application would be expedited, Federal Bureau of Air Commerce officials are waiting for construction of the building to install their new laboratory, called the most important development at the airport in recent years Application was made for $43,650 in Federal funds, 45 per cent of the building's estimated $07.000 cost. Thus the project will cost the City $53350. The City has borrowed $63,000 for the building. The $9650 balance probably will be used to construct runways at the port, i Works _Board officials said.

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Tere Room

McKellar said,

within candidates

his rights for of=

said:

membership | employees, | strike |

offers a delightful new

SUNDAY EVENING DINING SERVICE

THE EPICUREAN BUFFET DINNER

Hors d'Oeuvres Soup Sea Foods Entrees Vegetables Desserts

Salads Beverages

$1.00

* Also a la Carte and Table d'Hote Service The Tuscany Room is Air Conditioned

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