Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 July 1938 — Page 2

SATURDAY, JULY 9, 1938

under a ruling issued by Judge John Collet of Federal District Court. Judge Collet held that the Court had no jurisdiction in the case. Judge Collet ruled that the Nor-ris-LaGuardia Act, denying Federal Courts the right to intervene in a labor dispute except in specified instances, was applicable. The company, the court said, had not formed [its own union “in the manner provided by the Wagner Act.” The company said it would appeal,

NLRB Dismisses

Indiana Plea

WASHINGTON, July 9 (U, P).— The National Labor Relations Board | today dismissed the petition of the day was expelled from the union | United Packing House Workers’ he helped found. The expulsion was | Union for certification as sole bar President Homer Martin's first step | gaining agency for Swift & Co. em= toward completing his “purge” of | ployees at Evansville, Ind. enemies within the union, | The C. I. O, affiliate was defeated, - | 220 to 99, in an NLRB supervised election held June 4.

‘CASH SLAYER TO DIE

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

‘Happy Takes No Back Scat’ C.1.0. TOFLOUT PTT | NEW ORLEANS iis POLICE THREAT iv: nities nsionat” curser

T homas to Receive F. D. R. Aid Today; Chandler [s Happy

months old Maytag Washing Machine Co. strike appeared likely today after striking C. I. O. unionists had withdrawn pickets from the company plant in compliance

| tration law setting up a three-man { board to begin settlement negotia-

THE LABOR SITUATION | tions,

NEW ORLEANS C. I. O. striker shot; A. F. of L. man held. MAYTAG strike arbitration ordered. HARLAN case may go to jury by July 23. GARMENT WORKERS Union wins court ruling. V. A, W, expels secretary-ireasurer,

Suspect in Strike Shooting Captured

NEW ORLEANS, July 9 (U., P) —Police Superintendent George

Finish Next Week Reyer said today the C. I, O. could |

expect additional raids and arrests| LONDON, Ky. July 9 1 U. P)— at its headquarters here if it per-| As the Harlan coal conspiracy trial

sisted in distributing 10,000 circulars ended its eighth week today, Chief EE T——. described as denouncing City offi- | petense Counsel Charles I. Dawson| TALLAHASSEE, Fla, July 9 (U, C1 O. leaders said they would | Said the defense may complete its ce selion ST Fran . I. O. S 8 ¥ fh Bin ys CS McCs * the kidnap-killing dety the police Siperintendenty| tase Nou) Jeek Danny a verdict | of )ittle Jimmy Cash of Princeton . Si ’ . . ., | May 28 has been s pr > week More policemen were shifted Government attorneys have said of July 3 § beer seb for the week : ; ey 3 back to routine assignments, despite | not more than three days will be oo : That is as id hy SR hd . the shooting of two men and an | needed for rebuttal testimony. At- Governor Fred P. Cone signed the 3 attempted gun and hammer assault | torneys for both sides have asked [order late yesterday for execution of yesterday in Jefferson parish, out- | for four days for arguments, and if | the 21-year-old minister's son 24 side the city limits. that time is granted the jury could | hours after the State Pardon Board The wounding of a C. I. O. striker | receive the case by July 23. refused to commute McCall's sen=

allegedly by a man who was later | —— tence to life imprisonment,

shot and captured in a streetcar, | |J, S. Judge Rules

and renewed police raids on C. I. O

union halls, intensified the trans- FOr Garment Union

portation strike. Tr " | KANSAS CITY, Mo. July 9 (U The suspect, Charles Bolding, 24, P.) —The International Ladies’ Garfired at a group of men who accost- ment Workers Union was free today

ed him in front of a transfer com- ; i ‘ : to resume picketing of the Donnelly any. struck le : Services to Be pany The bullet struck William Garment Co. and to attempt to or-

| Martin Expels First of Foes

DETROIT, July 9 (U. P)— George Addes, United Automobile Workers secretary and treasurer, to-

Kentucky Governor Won't | Opposing Candidates for Welcome Chief Executive.

Take Snub or Lose | Senate to

His Cheerfulness.

(Continued from Page One)

(Continued from Page One)

they being applied to Government emRoose- plovees for political purposes. news- Let me assure you,” he said, “that it is contrary to direct and forceful orders from Washington for Federal Government emplovees | those under them how to | vote and I trust that the same rule applies to those who work for or under the State of Kentucky. “Personally, I am not greatly disfurbed by these stories because 1 have an old-fashioned idea that the voters of Kentucky, no matter

suspicious that wouldn't give out President velt's Covington speech to papermen until just before delivery They were afraid Happy would get a copy of it Just what he would any » could-—- done with it no- | to tell body could quite explain) Senator Barkley boarded the train at Chillicothe, O. He seemed a bit nervous and grim He did not come aboard on the car where attaches were waiting for him, but | Nobody was there to Sreeh im. The frst per-| whom they employ or by whom son the Sen®Mor ran into was the | they are employed, are going to who didn’t recognize him yote their own personal convictions demanded fare. | on Primary Day manager, Shackle- | chould be led out At At Cincinnati arvin Melnsecretary, met and led

Were 20

Harlan Defense May

conductor, and brusqueix Che campaign ford Miller, Happy got a his beautiful wife ] tyre, the President's them outside, shook hands t rivate dining room of

Louisville and Bowling Green, the President talked to thousands Those speeches | ———— stressed that he believed it important to Kentucky and the Nation that Mr. Barkley return to the Senate. At Bowling Green. the last

Japs Demand U.S. Warships Kentucky, he also paid

op in Kentucks, he aio paid Quit Yangtze Danger Zone

New Dea! adherent _—

Elizabethtown

CMTC ENROLLEES GET HALF-HOLIDAY

“Happy” Chandler sits between the President and Senator Barkley , , , and grins.

Memory Is the Treasury and Guardian of All Things

(honley Brien 3 FUNERAL

gq ILLINOIS AT WESTIO™ST

special car, where

looking stop in

Praises Senator Logan

Religious

(Continued from Page One)

he rode Cal Roosevelt {from the tonia race track sat with them arly so cheerful as the

1s {OOK nO

Happy ito the front row at{orm in front of An He waved to nd—packed for the lavish with Barkley ind leaned over to shake \ with well-wishers Once, before the ceremonies got got up and waved his hat to the grandstand Boos mingled with cheers. 8 he grinned

Iti! g much like a college boy 1

under way, he

©»

3arklev got up to introi and again Happ) just as Mn to the microowd seemed to like the meeting was supbe a Barkley rally » President got to work 3 +i Tal y

nor for bhal-

Happy ap-

" 10¢ ted how state i been able to balance ecause Federal Washi

money

noten ng

vel hile Mr ator Barklev's Washington 1S Wav up, and Ss with the author-

ity leadership of the

sald he had

1d knowledge that acquired

ine un at th LR Hh e

to talk to.

Thev seemed

od back of the turned shouted tsleeves as the mto

auekeq

He

Hopkins Denies WPA Funds Aid Barkley

WASHINGTON, July 8 « WPA Admi rator Harm Kin 1 today he had investi

ts that WPA

WPA | Mich)

Patent Monopoly

Probe Requested

WASHINGTON, July 2 «U.P Senator King (D. Utah). a member of the executive-legislative monopo-

ly committee, demanded todav that included in

mvestigation of

n patent monopolies be committee's problems r to Assistant Attorne) rman W. Arnold, he

Discussing Mr

dent said

Logan the Presi-

Some dav when history comes to be written there will be recorded an episode in the life of Senator Logan—an episode that took place in the spring of the year 1938 Unhesitating, clear-cut action on the part of Senator Logan whereby at possible personal sacrifices, he stood square like a rock—firm like a rock—against dragging the Federal judiciary into a political campaigh. That action on his part will he recognized as a splendid and spontaneous act of moral and ethical righteousness 3v that act. Senator Logan stands for all time as an example of probity in public life, an example of which all Americans should be proud : Others vho were to hoard the {rain today are Governor Stark of Missouri; Senator Lee. Oklahoma: Senator Thomas: Elliott Roosevelt: Governor Marland of Oklahoma; Senator Miller, Arkansas. and Reps Lyle B. Boren. Wilburn Cartwright and Will Rogers of Oklahoma Mr. Roosevelt studied reactions to his Kentucky and Ohio speeches and reports submitted to him on the Indiana political situation by Senator Minton (D. Ind.), who boarded the train last night in Louisville for the two-hour ride to Bowling Green, While Mr. Minton claimed his isit was of no particular signifianee it was understood he had indicated to the President that SenVanNuvs, his colleague, would be renominated by the party organization at its state convention Tuesdav. Mr. Roosevelt will leave Oklahoma City at 6 p. m. (Indianapolis Time) and arrive in Ft. Worth, Tex, five hours later. He will stay over Sunday at the home of his son, Elliott Roosevelt, there, and Monday will go on to Pueblo, Colo, and thence to San Francisco

\

ator

Court Deal Mention WASHINGTON, July 9 (U. P) Governor Chandler. it was revealed today, proposed to President Roosevelt last spring a plan whereby SenKv.) should accept judicial appointment to create a Senate vacancy which Mr, Chandler would take instead of opposing Senator Barkley In a letter Logan last today by Mr. Logan's Roosevelt wrote that he informed Governor Chandler that he would “not traffic in judicial appointments in order to satisfy the ambitions of one office seeker.” In New York, Mr. Logan said Mr,

ator Logan (D

written to Senator

office, Mr.

Chandler sought to persuade him to |

accept a Circuit Court position. The idea was that Chandler id step into my post and that Barkley without opsition,” Senator Logan said. The letter was made public after Roosevelt in a speech at Covington, Ky,, threw the full weight of his influence behind the campaign of Senator Barkley to win renomination over Mr Chandler in the Kentucky primar1€5 Senator

uld leave

Logan refused to sider accepting any Federal judicial appointments

con-

DEATH DRIVER KILLS SELF CONCORD, Mass, Juy 9 (U. P) —Remorse was blamed today for the suicide of a one-handed death car driver in a state police cell late last Chester I. Dunlap, 37, hanged himself with a belt soon after his automobile, speeding 70

miles an hour along the wrong side |

| of sheltering

February, made public |

(D. Kv.) |

Sheframr, near Haifa, under siege by armed bands of extremists, No details of the attack on the garrison were available, but it was believed the attacking bands were composed of Arabs. The general tension was less be-

cause of the arrival of the British |

battle cruiser Repuise at Haifa and

the prospect that two battalions of |

British troops would arrive from Egypt soon Terror gripped the people after a week of rioting. In Jerusalem, the streets were nearly empty and today one British constable and one Palestinian constable rode on top of each bus. It was reported without confirmation that British authorities were considering the deportation of a number of the leaders of the Zien Revisionist Organization to the Sevchelles Islands, in the Indian Ocean, in the belief that they were instigators of the rioting.

Armored Car Unit

Sent to Palestine

LONDON, July 9 (U. P.).—The Government has ordered the llth Hussars armored car regiment to Palestine from Egypt. in addition to the first battalion Irish Guards and first battalion Essex Rifles which previously had been ordered to go there to aid in suppressing disorders, it was announced today. Casualties in a week of rioting in Palestine were put at 52 Arabs and 12 Jews killed, 145 Arabs and 18 Jews wounded, a total of 64 Killed and 163 wounded

Latin-America Agrees To Refugee Plan

EVIAN, France, July 9 (U, P.). Latin-American republics, responding to President Roosevelt's appeal, announced their readiness today to co-operaie in the problem refugees from Germany and Austria, At the International Refugee Conference, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Ecuador, Peru,

Urugnay and

dispute over boundaries of the wild, rich Gran Chaco jungle, to prevent a renewal of the long and sanguinary war between Bolivia and Paraguay The main clauses provided: | 1. A definition of the machinery of abritration for a settlement of outstanding ditferénces, includ{ing fixation of a definitive boundary. 2. Bolivia and Paraguay hind themselves not to resort to force in seeking a final settlement, 3. Each country will be permitted 20 days in which to ratify the treaty after its formal signing.

18 Reported Slain in Rioting in India LONDON, July 9 (U. P.).—The Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, leader of the Indian National Congress, who | is visiting England, announced to-

of the treaty

|

| camp

day receipt of a cable from India |

saving 18 were killed and many in- | jured in a demonstration at Sikar, ! Jaipur, vesterday. Police fired on a crowd observing a hartal (passinve resistance fast). after which all business was suspended.

ENDEAVOR BANQUET

SCHEDULED TONIGHT

The four-day convention of the Indiana Christian Endeavor Union, being held in the Central { Christian Church, is to close to- | morrow after a banquet tonight. At an election of officers vester- | day, John Meyers, of Vincennes, was named president, succeeding Leonard Smith of Michigan City. The Rev. John K. Gosney of Boonville is the «new vocations superintendent; the Rev. J M Johnson, Gary, was elected pastor counsellor, and Mrs. Edward Stauffer. Ft. Wayne, was named Dynamo Club secretarv,

MRS. HORLICK DIES AT 88.

Venezuela declared they are willing |

in any steps which the conference may take. They pointed out that they are already receiving agriculturisis and in some cases, industrial technicians. At the same time, the United

to collaborate

States, Britain and France brought | the conference within sight of suc- | cess by agreeing to establish a per- | refugee No agree- |

manent intergovernmental committee in London, ment had yet been reached on whether the committee would help only German and Austrian refugees, or those from other nations, as desired by President Roosevelt. Poland's unofficial observers left Evian today because the conference refused to hear them, Poland not being officially represented.

Paraguay and Bolivia Sign Peace Pact

BUENOS AIRES, July 9 (U. P.. ~—Delegates of Paraguay and Bolivia today signed an agreement for arbitration of their dispute over the Gran Chaco territorv and removed the gravest threat to peace in the 14 800.000 square miles of the American continents, For three vears statesmen of the American republics, including the United States, had been working for a peaceable settlement of the

HEALTH INSURANCE

Good teeth mean a healthy bodv Have vour teeth examined now.

| died at her home here today.

RACINE, Wis, July 9 (U. P.).— Mrs. William Horlick Sr., mother of Mrs. Mavbelle Horlick Sidley, 61, Horlick malted milk heiress. who died in Toronto. Ontario, this week, She was 88.

We read in the papers the other day about a hig celebration held in Wabash. They blew the factory whistles, rang the church bells, and everyone attended a town mass-meeting.

All of this announced that Wabash citizens had joined the “National

- - I ———— Villemuer in the muer’'s companions, 4 ers, pursued Bolding.

Held Tomorrow. . . . | streetcar, inspection this Fred S. Englert, morning to see how they are caring for the Government equipment issued them, trainees of the Citizens’ Military Training Camp at Ft. BenJamin Harrison are to enjov a respite from duties this afternoon in a | gun. 1 half-day off. in the hip. Under the direction of regular | Army supervisors, battalion and company officers are to make a thorough check of all companies, Tomorrow religious services will be conducted for all members of the Chaplain John Hall is to be assisted by Chaplains Henry G. Vorsheim, reserve, Portsmouth, O., and John J. Price of Bedford. O. A combined informal service is to be held at 7 o'clock in the recreation tent

Following an leaped conductor he was

Bolding. Englert ver. Passengers fl

transfer company

C. I. O. declared a

Governor Inter

first time last night in the regi-

employee who saw the into the c

ago. Taxicab drivers affiliated with the C. I. O. also are on strike.

In Maytag Strike

™ f ca a NEWTON, Iowa. The cadets used their riges for the | Peaceful adjudication of the two- |

arm. Mr. Ville- | said to be strikHe boarded a

| 29, filling station shooting, | ar and told the | going to capture | carried a revol- | ed. Englert said |

he fired when Bolding reached for a | The bullet struck the suspect |

Bolding was employed at the |

where he was |

accosted. He belongs to an A. F. of | L. union with which transfer companies signed a contract when the |

strike two weeks

venes

July 9 (U. P.).—

ment's second parade, First award in the parade went | to Company A, commanded by Capt. E. F, Klink of Cincinnati. The Signal Company, commanded by Second Lieutenant Eugene E Kent, Columbus, O., was second. and Company H was third.

Strong

Dav and evening ses

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s NOW a Good

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uy a Home?

To some people this is a perpetual question and they never buy—to others this question never arises with the result they buy just as soon as they have the money and can find the house that appeals to them.

® »

Salesmen’s Crusade” to speed the return of prosperous times. The enthusiasm wasn’t unusual nor misplaced—the same reaction is being expressed wherever the “Sales Crusade” is in progress. Fact of the matter is, that those of us who depend on business for a livelihood— and that’s most of us— also depend on sales because business certainly does. So we all have a selfish stake in the campaign to improve sales— they're what hold jobs, after all.

of Concord turnpike, collided headon with another car, killing a woman and critically injuring four others. |

the Department of Peoples Dentists

36's W. Washington St.

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l iminary investi- DR OWENS the full committee, in use of patents, means the use of them. and

Farley Talks in West

For New Dealers

FOND DU LAC. Wis., Julv 9 (U P) —Chairman James A Farlev of *he Democratic National Committee headed West today to speak in two stales where New Dealers face strong Republican opposition in oming Senatorial elections.

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