Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 November 1938 — Page 14

PAGE 14

DAVEY ATTACKS LEWIS AGAIN AS STRIKE IS ENDED

Lorillard Employees Return To Work, Troops to Be Withdrawn.

MIDDLETOWN, O., Nov. 3 (U. P.). —Peaceful reopening of the P. Lorillard Tobacco Co. plant here after a one-month strike was accompanied today by a new attack upon the Committee for Industrial Organization by Governor Davey. Governor Davey had sent 500 National Guardsmen to Middletown to preserve order. His action caused the C. 1. O. Pioneer Tobacco Workers’ Union to abandon its strike. In a statement issued today in Columbus, Governor Davey renewed his verbal feud with John L. Lewis, national C. I. O. chairman, which began when the Governor ended the little steel strike of 1937 with militia. The Governor said that the decision of the union to call off the strike demonstrated that there were “only a small per cent of the employees in the C. I. O. union,” and that “the surrender of John L. Lewis . . . proves that he cannot operate when the state government stands for law and order.”

Puts Cost at $150,000

“It Is pleasing to know that John L. Lewis has called off his strike in Middletown and that trouble has been everted temporarily,” Governor Davey said. “I wonder, though, * whether this is merely postponement of the evil day until after the first of the year when Mr. Lewis plans a wholesale and violent invasion of Ohio if he can get away with it.” The Governor asserted that the strike had cost Lorillard’s 1100 employees “nearly $150,000.” A few guardsmen, policemen and deputies in uniform and plain clothes were on hand this morning when Lorillard employees, both union and nonunion, returned to their jobs. The presence of the

Five hundred Notional

SEAMAN IS CHARGED IN POET’S BEATING

NEW YORK, Nov. 3 (U. P.)— Ralph: Mosher, a Duluth seaman, was under arrest today and charged with the severe beating of Orrick Jonns, poet and former city director of the Federal writers’ project two years ago. Mr. Johns spent weeks in a hospital with fractured ribs and a fractured jaw and burns received when he was doused, with whisky and set afire. He accused Mosher of the assault on the ground he had

Guardsmen ant their things in order and pulled out of Columbus for Middletown and the P. Lorillard Tobacco Co. there.

order.

UNION BOWS TO MENUHIN'S ART

Los Angeles Philharmonic Unit Decides to Accompany Young Violinist. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 3 (U. P.).—

Union laborism bowed today to art in the first conflict with expensive

Jascha Heifetz, violinist, - took exception to Mr. Menuhin’s stand and asked the orchestra not to accompany him.

When they arrived they found the strike called off and employees returning to work without dis-

another famous

The young violinist said “a closed

shop in art is preposterous; the idea should be to help young artists— not hinder them.”

SAN DIEGO SOLVED

SPEEDING THIS WAY

SAN DIEGO, Cal, Nov. 3 (U. P.).

—Chronic speeders of San Diego County will speed no more.

Along with stiff fines, Municipal

£ GANG'S CHEF SHOT ON ‘RIDE INTO INDIANA

Prohibition Era Bootleg Salesman Discovered in Auto at Hammond.

HAMMOND, Nov. 3 (U. P.).—Walter Leonard, 35, Chicago, one-time Capone gang lieutenant, was found dying in his automobile in a residen-

tial district early today. Police said|

he apparently had been taken on a gangland “ride.” He had been shot in the jaw and the back of the head. A physician at St. Margaret's Hospital said he had little chance to live. A resident of the neighborhood found him propped behind the steer-

ing wheel. One bullet, fired from in-

side the automobile, had pierced the windshield. Police Capt. Sandor Singer said Leonard undoubtedly had: been shot at some isolated spot and driven to the place where he was found. “The killers must have thought he was dead when they left him,” Capt. Singer said. “We haven't found any witnesses who saw them drive up to the spot.” He said he had found two suitcases in the automobile, bearing stickers from hotels in Tucson, Ariz. and St. Joseph, Mich. Leonard had a lengthy police record. He was a salesman for the gang headed by Al Capone during prohibition.

New Barrow-Hamilton Group Believed Foiled

SAN ANGELO, Tex. Nov. 3 (U.

P.).—Two men and a woman, cap-

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‘|tiured by a West Texas posse and charged with armed robbery, were identified today as relatives or followers of the old Hamilton and Barrow brothers’ gang—the worst of the Southwest's modern outlaws. Authorities believed that the captures had ended a new alliance of the old gang’s survivors at its outset. The prisoners v were Joe Cabson, 24, brother-in-law of the late Raymond Hamilton; Ollie Miner Smith, a police character and once a follower of the Hamilton-Barrow gang, and a 21-year-old woman believed to be Marie Barrow Francis, sister of the late Clyde and Buck Barrow. The posse was hunting bandits

who took a car from a ranch woman after abandoning one stolen at Dai-

las. “They caught the three s ) cha near Eden in Concho County.

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Judge Clarence F. Terry ordered mechanical governors installed on the cars of habitual offenders. The governors are installed for periods ranging up to two years.

authorities seemed unneces< "y, however, because there was no . sorder. Troops will be withdrawn gradually. The strikers planned to file new charges with the National Labor Relations Board in an attempt to force resumption of collective bargaining with the company.

One Dissenting Vote The strike was called off at midnight after about 500 workers, 459 of whom were said to be members of the union, voted at an emergency meeting to return to work. The vote was taken in response to an order from Paul W. Fuller, Cincinnati, C. I. O. regional director.

There was only one dissenting vote. “We don't intend to have our people murdered by a lame duck Governor . . . who has proven himself to be America’s No. 1 strikebreaker,” Mr. Fuller wired. -

“No One to Shoot,

Lewis Comments

WASHINGTON, Nov. 3 (U. P.).— Chairman John L. Lewis of the C. I. O. said today that Governor Davey ‘probably considers it most unfortunate that the settlement of the Middletown strike leaves his soldiery on the ground with no one to shoot.”

HERE IS ONE WIFE WHO’S BIT DIFFERENT

SYDNEY, Nov. 3 (U. P).—Ron Whyte, manager of a cattle ranch in scuthern Australia, is in the city with a document that makes it certain he can go the limit during his first vacation in 20 years. His document reads as follows: “This is to certify that I. Jack, the legally wedded wife of Ron Whyte, do hereby permit by husband to go wherever he pleases, drink when he pleases and what he pleases, and I furthermore permit him to keep and enjoy the company of any lady he sees fit, as I know he is a good judge. I want him to back horses and enjoy life in this world for he will be-a long time dead. “(Signed) Jack Whyte.”

NEW PLANE DEVICE WARNS OF DISTRESS

PASADENA, Cal, Nov. 3 (U. PJ). Anthony Easton, physicist of the California Institute of Technology, and Maj. Daniew Ellis of the Air + Corps Reserve, have invented a distress signal apparatus, designed to aid in locating wrecked planes. As the tail of the plane invariably remains intact in crashes, they have designed a short-wave radio device, to be placed on the tail of planes, which automatically sends signals| when a jolt or crash starts the| mechanism functioning. The signals | can be heard within a radius of | 100 miles and can he picked up and | followed by a directional finder.

GIVES EXPLANATION FOR HAWAII'S SNAKES

HONOLULU, T. H, Nov. 3 (U. P.). —A possible explanation of the recent discovery of deadly pit vipers on the supposedly snakeless Hawaiian Island was advanced today by David Fullaway, entomologist of the Territorial Board of Agriculture. As the Chamber of Commerce fretted over the discovery, Mr. Fullaway said it was his belief the vipers had been brought to Honolulu in glass jars containing “viper juice.” This “juice,” he said, is imported by some Orientals on the islands for medicinal purposes.

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musical talent and = permitted Yehudi Menuhin, young violin virtuoso, to give his concerts. In the tradition of the stage, the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra decided to accompany the violinist. To walk out on strike as members of the American Guild of Musical Artists, whose contract specified that every artist appearing be a member, would be breaking faith with the public, Guild leaders said. Mr. Menuhin said his contract contained nothing about his being a union member and he demanded to play without joining the Guild, To do so, he said, would be ‘“degrading,” and this brought him into controversy with other noted artists who belong to the A. G. M. A.

Exception Taken

Among these were Lawrence Tibbett, Gladys Swarthout and Frank Chapman. Mr. Tibbett, as A. G. M. A, president, promised at the outset of a four-day controversy. that the Guild would waive its union demands and allow Mr. Menuhin to appear. But the A. G. M. A. Board of Governors in New York, through a statement by its vice president,

refused the seaman a place on the writers’ project. Detectives said Mosher apparently had been at sea.

TIMBER FIRE LOSSES HEAVY IN KENTUCKY

Damage in Mountains Said To Be $100,000.

———

FRANKFORT, Ky., Nov. 3 (U. P.). —-More than $100,000 in young timber has been destroyed by forest fires in the mountain regions of southeastern Kentucky, it was announced here today by Kenneth G. McConnel, state forester. Mr. McConnel attributes the fires in that section to extreme dry condtions during the last few weeks. All blazes have been put under control but extreme danger exists there unless heavy rains come soon, he said. Mr. McConnel said 250 men from

the Forestry Department and 250 CCC boys have been fighting the fires and that 1000 more CCC boys

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GONZALES, Tex., Nov. 3 (U. P.). —Husbands who find it difficult to convince their wives that lodge! meetings last so long can cite the | Gonzales Odd Fellows. The local lodge claims the record for the longest unadjourned session. It opened at the usual hour on June 18, 1860, and never closed. | Many years later a secretary inscribed: “A call to arms broke > up

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HELLO, FLORIDA— IS IT WARM THERE?

COLUMBUS, O,, Nov. 3 (U. P).— Like the birds, Albert Heise, 14, migrated with the coming of cold weather. His mother told police today that Albert ran away from home, leaving her this note. “I'll be gone until warm weather.” .

Indianapolis is, governmentally speaking, an economically administered city with taxes commensurately low as compared to other cities of its size, and in keeping with the demands of a growing, progressive, healthy municipality.

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It was my privilege to serve for five years as mayor of Indianapolis, my home city where my family has lived for more than one hundred years. I left office in 1935 conscious that at no time had any official act of mine run counter to the wishes of those who take pride in their city, who wish it to continue to be a good place in which to live.

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