Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 November 1938 — Page 18

i might have been unemployed, the

1 bor received the major share of the

PRIVATE WORK BAINS THROUGH

PWA SURVEYED

[He Talk Here

Every 45 Cents Spent Adds a

Hour of Employment, Report Shows.

: Times Special .“ WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—More

than one man-hour of work in private enterprise has been made possible by each 45 cents spent by the

PWA, the Federal Labor Statistics|#

Bureau reported today.

The report, giving the results of a = five-year analysis, was made to PWA a

Administrator Ickes. : Bach million dollars spent on PWA permanent improvements resulted in more than a million manhours of work in construction and industry for workmen who otherwise

bureau reported. The Federal Gov- : ernment puts up 45 cents and communities contribute 55 cents {for each dollar expended on local PWA projects, it was explained.

Labor Gets Major Share

"© The report stated that almost every industry received orders through PWA projects, and that la-

. funds expended on PWA projects. ~ The report showed that, of the various type projects, strest and highway construction provided the greatest amount of direct and indirect employment, furnishing for éach million dollars spent about 1,150,000 man-hours of work. Water supply projects ranked next, it was reported, each million dollars providing about" 1,100,000 man-hours of work. , The ‘type of project furnishing the smallest amount of work for money spent was steam power and light projects, the report said. An estimated 800,000 man-hours of employment was furnished by each million dollars spent. Such projects, howéver, constituted a minor proportion of the projects erected by PWA, it was said.

POSTOFFICE WAIVES BAN ON LETTER SEALS

. The use of Christmas seals and stickers on the outside of letters and packages in the mails will be permitted again this year, Postmaster Adolph Seidensticker, said today. * Mr. Seidensticker explained that the postal regulation which ordinarily bans such seals and stickers has been suspended by the _Postoffice Department during December. He warned, however, that decorations should not be placed on the same side of the letters and pack-

Governor A. B. Chandler

Kentucky Chief to Address Grid Banquet Here On Dec. 7.

Governor A. B. (Happy) Chandler of Kentucky is to be the principal speaker for the annual Indiana University football banquet to be held Dec. 7 at 6:30 p. m. at the Indianapolis Athletic Club, it was announced today.

Toastmaster of the dinner, sponsored by the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis, is to be C. Walter McCarty, managing editor of the Indianapolis News. Guests are to include the varsity football squad, President Herman

LB. Wells, Coach Bo McMillin, Di-

rector of Athletics Zora Clevenger, Indianapolis high school football coaches and players. The dinner committee is headed by W. D. Cameron, chairman, and Plies Allan Warne, club president; Ralph F. Thompson, Cecil W. Weathers, Leroy Sanders, president

lof the “I” Men’s Association; Kevin

Brosnan, Mark P. Helm and Leo

' |W. Shumaker.

SUSPECT SUICIDE IN MUNCIE DEATH

MUNCIE, Nov. 28 (U. P.).—Authorities said today they believe that Page Cunningham, 54, Muncie contractor, whose body was found

‘by two hunters a week ago, com-

mitted suicide. A pistol belonging to

Mr. Cunningham was brought in yesterday by Richard Williams, they

ages as the addresses.

said.

‘Imony . from Post

. U. CLUB BOOKS 60V. CHANDLER

INAYLORTOGET ‘FINAL’ REVIEW

Farewell for Ft. Harrison

Chief Fixed for 10 A. M. Tomorrow.

Ft. Hatrison soldiers at 10 a. m. tomorrow will march in a farewell

. | military review for Brig. Gen. Wil- : liam K. Naylor, retiring post com-

mander. Originally scheduled for Saturday,

“i | tions. Col. L. A. Kunzig, 11th In- ‘| fantry, will be trocp commander of “iv |the formation which will be held + lon the streets of the Army post.

Gen. Naylor will receive the cereHeadquarters Building. With him will stand Lieut. Col. J. H. Davidson, post executive officer, and Capt. Elvin H. Burger, Gen. Naylor's aide.

End of Long Career The retirement of Gen. Naylor, who has reached the age of 64, is mandatory. It marks the end of a long Army career that began with the Spanish-American War which he entered after graduation from the University of Minnesota Law School. It continued through the China Relief Expedition, the Philippine Insurrection amd the World War in which Gen. Naylor, served as chief of staff of the 33d Division and the Ninth Army Corps. He came to Ft. Harrison from the University of Illinois where he was professor of military science and tactics. He and Mrs. Naylor plan to spend the winter in Florida.

DISLIKED HIS JOB, SHOOTS BOSS, SELF

GARY, Nov. 28 (U. P.)., — Patol Yurchak, 44-year-old railroad worker, was in critical condition in Mercy Hospital today of bullet wounds self-inflicted after he allegedly shot and killed his employer, William Govert, 55, master car builder for the Elgin, Joliet and Eastern Rairoad. Yurchak, dissatisfied with a new job that Mr. Govert had assigned him, went to the car builder’s office in the Kirk yards Saturday afternoon and demanded that he be shifted back to his former job as a welder, police were told. When Mr. Govert refused, Frank Zaldowdek, a clerk in the office, told police, Yurchak yanked out a revolver and sent a bullet into his employer's chest. Hospital . attendants believed Yurchak had little chance to recover. & set,

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Dr. Ludwig Lewisohn, Jewish novelist and lecturer, will discuss the situation facing world Jewry - and the liquidation of European democracies at a Zionist District open meeting forum at 8:15 o'clock tonight. The meeting will be in the American united Life Building.

KIWANIS OFFICERS TO ATTEND SCHOOL

Times Special - LOGANSPORT, Nov. 28.—Fourth and fifth divisions of the Kiwanis Club will assemble here tonight for a school of instruction for new officers. Baird F. Cox of Logansport, state chairman of the Wiwanis education committee, will preside. Cities to be represented are Logansport, Lafayette, Kokomo, Noblesville, Crawfordsville, Tipton, Peru, Monticello, Rochester, Winamac and Frankfort.

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New ‘Split’ Legislature ~ Repeats Situation of 1887

‘When the Indiana Legislature meets in January, with Democrats controlling the Senate and Republicans the House, the situation will be a close parallel to’ the 1887 session, according to Ray E. Smith, editor of the Hoosier Sentinel, Democratic organization newspaper.

“|eriek’ J. Robinson, ‘of Clay, Putnam

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Turpie. “Wild confusion broke out as Rep. . [Robinson ‘elected a Senator!” Mr. Smith said. “The merriment and celebration in Indianapolis hotels that night can well be imagined. “The fight over the presiding officers of the Senate and the election

H i i of a Senator consumed so much WE: Mullins, Drink

In '1887,/the G. O. P. controlled®

the House, 55 to 45, and the Demo¢rats controlled the Senate, 31 to 19. In the 1939 session, Republicans will have a 51 to"49 majority in the House and the Democrats will control the Senate, 34 to.16.

The assembly that convened 51 years ago “devoted most of its energies to fighting over who

*|should preside in the State Senate,

and in electing a U. 8. Senator. Only. three other important measures ‘were passed, Mr. Smith said. No sooner had the assembly met to organize on Jan. 6, 1887, than the fight over the presiding officer of the Senate broke out between Col. R. S. Robertson, Lieutenant Governor-elect, Republican, and A. Green Smith, president of the Senate, Democrat, the editor continued. The Marion Circuit Court settled the dispute . by ' declaring Smith eligible to be : presiding officer, it was recalled.. Today the Legislature no longer elects a U. S. Senator, that function having been taken over by the voters, but it did back in 1887 when David 8. Turpie, Democrat; Benjamin Harrison, Republican, and General Allen, Greenback Labor, were candidates. Mr. Smith records how bitter the contest for U. S. Senator must have been when the members of both Houses met to ballot on Jan. 16, 1887. “The 12 days up to that time, 43 he said, “had been spent fighting over who had a right to preside in the State Senate. Everybody was in a fighting mood at noon, Jan.

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