Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 December 1938 — Page 2
Military Alliance Plan Avoided by U. S. at - Lima Parley.
~ =~ (Continued from Page One)
the proposed action of the congress ~ that he has decided to push- his project or at least submit for the approval of the various delegations proposals which if they do not go as
| far as the United States’ maximum
desires, at least approximate the
United States maximum point of | view.
| ..It is also possible that Secretary Bull submitted the project in its present form in the hope that what‘ever consessions may be necessary in toning down its terms, the project will still leave sufficient strength to assure successful consecration of a eommon American front against foreign menace. United States delegates are carefully preparing the ground by seeking to allay any fears among Latin American delegates that the United . Bfates is courting trouble with Euro7s pean or Asiatic powers, and that : tin America might be involved. ~ , They are making it known also that the United States disclaims any ambition for economic domipance of the Western Hemisphere.
Hull's Speech Likely To Stress Co-operation
By WILLIAM PHILLIP SIMMS Times Foreign Editor AINA. Peru, Dec. 10.—This afternoon Secretary Hull is scheduled to speak before the first plenary session of the Eighth Pan-American Conference. . ©'No inkling of the subject matter - was allowed to leak out in advance. Unusual secrecy surrounded its preparation. But because of the disturbed state in Europe and Asia, it may go down not only as one of the most vital in Secretary Hull's career but as highly important in the history of Pan-American efforts at co-operation. ‘Some of things the Secretary will, not say were indicated last night in ‘a radio speech by Assistant Secretary of State A. A. Berle Jr. It will not involve the United States in any -system of military alliances with the rest of the Americas or attempt to do so on pretext of continental solidarity or hemisphere defense. It will not seek to advance our trade in the Americas or elsewhere at the expense of others as foreign propaganda has sought and is still seeking to make believe that the United States wants. It will not call on
American republics to join in an|«godq save the King.”
armed bloc against any nation or - group of nations. But it will almost certainly deal in a modern manner with Bolivar’s dream of ‘“co-opera-‘tive peace” which as Mr. Berle said . is'something “new in history.” =2< Foreign Ideas Unpopular “this fact, namely that the Amer{eas are seeking co-operative peace ther than some sort of hostile tion against others, never was more in evidence than here in Lima t now. While foreign ideologies =f even more unpopular than ex- , no delegation, by any - stretch -of the imagination, desires to: alienate overseas nations. «On the contrary, as President Benavides of Peru made clear in the opening speech in Peru's Hall
EDEN DECLARES ALL DEMOCRACY
U. S. and Britain Have Same Ideals, He Says; Hints Common Danger.
(Continued from Page One)
National Association of Manufacturers. There, the handsome, young statesman made his first public appearance in the United States where his great-great-grandfather, Robert Eden, had presided as last Colonial Governor of Maryland before the American Revolution. His defense of democratic rights and principles was spirited. He discussed the Englishman’s place in the “gathering storms” of world strife but did not attempt to prescribe any course of action for the United States.
Laughs With Audience
Of Great Britain he said: “We know that we are destined in our land and in our generation to live in a period of emergency of which none can see the end. If throughout that testing time, however long or short it be, we hold fast to our faith, cradle it in stone, and set steel to defend it, we can yet hand on our inheritance of freedom intact to the generations that are to come.” He spoke of conflicting ideologies, of “a new form of idolatry; the worship of the state,” but he mentioned no totalitarian country by name. Touching on a question that seemed uppermost in his audience's minds, he said, “England is not seeking to lure others to pull our chestnuts from the tire.” When he said his visit here “has no political signe®icance whatsoever,” the audience roared with laughter. He met that crisis by pausing a moment, then laughing
too. George VI ‘Toasted He had entered the ballroom amid cheers, and was seated on the dais under five American-flags and five Union Jacks. Beside him was Charles R. Hook, retiring president of the Manufacturers’ Association. Before introducing Capt. Eden Mr. Hook proposed a toast to “His Majesty, King George.” The band played V. A.’L. Mallet of the British Embassy then proposed a toast to President Roosevelt. Capt. Eden arose modestly, but with self-assurance; for the speech that -was broadcast by 300 radio stations. He commended President Roosevelt and Secretary of State Hull for promoting the BritishAmerican trade treaty. “I belong,” he:said, “as'so many of you do in this room, to the war generation, a generation which is sometimes referred to as the missing generation. It is a generation which has, quite literally, been decimated. Almost every family has suffered . . . and, as inevitably happens, we have lost our best.
of -Congress last night, “All groups|Yet perhaps the survivors of that as well as all men in all geograph-'|generation have a right to give ical centers today await the out-|their message to the world, to the
- come of deliberations here. But we are proud of the fact that they can do so without fear. The posi_..tien of the Americas is one of co- ~ aperation, not of defiance. They wish to be strong in order to be respected but.there is not and can
not be a continental imperialism!
either in economic, spiritual or po- | litical spheres.” Mr. Hull's speech must and will fip into this general picture. The entire world, quite as Presi- © dent Benavides said,. is keenly in- * terested in the outcome of the con- -. ference. In the Hall of Congress last night were British, French, German, _ Italian, Japanese and other foreign “correspondents and radio commentators, all exceedingly busy.
Mexican- German
Accord Rumored
WASHINGTON, Dec. 10 (U. P).— Reports that Mexico is entering . closer economic relations with Germany presented President Roosevelt y with a potential test of his continental solidarity program. .The reports were that Mexico has 2 entered an oil-for-manufactured barter agreement with Ger- : many under which she would sell about 17 million dollars worth of pe- ~ troleum in exchange for German ufactures. The oil involved re-
can Government from American and British firms last spring. | The State Department was unable to confirm the report but ex5 “deep interest.” One offi-
said that confirmation of it t be regarded as the beginning a move by the totalitarian powers p gain freer access to Mexico's rich
ipply of materials—especially minand petroleum—in which the dictator-military states are deficient. - “Greatly Concerned” “The State Department emphasized the United States was not conofficially with Mexico’s dis-
“greatly concerned” over disposi-
ed. " #1t was learned officially that the sited States, in proposed future ootiations with Mexico, will seek ution of the oil expropriation n along the lines of the retly completed agrarian settlent. Under the latter, a represenof each nation was appointed adjudicate claims, and Mexico to pay not less than one dollars annually until paynt has been made in full
Ce —rr ON WELDING BUSINESS
m R. Garten, president of Garten Welding Co., will his “Twenty Years in the Business” at the Rotary y meeting Tuesday noon at the VD 1 Hotel. Mr. Garten is a t- -arms and direc-
y was expropriated by the
“ever, it was said, this He :
of properties and materials that ve been expropriated but for no compensation has been re-
vigorous combative new world which is taking shape around us at this time.” He said that 20 years after the “war to end war’’-we can see how remote we are “from the goal of our hopes.”
Eden Talk Interpreted
As Community Plea
By FREDERICK KUH (Copyright. 1938. by United Press) NEW YORK, Dec. 10.—Anthony Eden’s speech last night seemed a strong bid for an Anglo-American front in defense of democracy. He repudiated any suggestion that Britain was trying to get other nations to pull its “chestnuts from the fire,” but the ex-British foreign secretary made clear his belief that the flames of autocracy were spreading among the common chestnuts of Great Britain and the United States. The British want democratic America to aid them in case of war against the totalitarian nations, and it was this desire that prompted another British dissident conservative, Winston Churchill, to tell a leading American diplomat that Britain was content to see the United States build more and better warships. Capt. Eden approached the ‘idea of an Anglo-American entente warily. He emphasized common interests, praised the recent trade agreement, amiably complimented Secretary Hull's efforts to increase the flow of international commerce, and then struck his keynote by dwelling on the identity of the British and American conception of the state. Without naming Germany, Italy or Japan, he placed- their way of life in sharp contrast to what he described as the Anglo-American ideology. He left no doubt whom he meant in alluding to those who have set up “a new form of idolatry; worship of the state, to which all men must bow down, and to which they must sacrifice their freedom of faith, speech, worship.” Until his resignation from the Cabinet in February, Capt. Eden's most recurrent public plea had been for a system whereby democracies and dictatorships could inhabit the same planet peacefully. It was a different Capt. Eden last night who spoke of “strident challenge, deriving authority from a totally differ‘ent. philosophy” other governments were throwing out, who told his American audience how aware Britain was “of the need to defend ourselves, materially and spiritually, from gathering storms, to make sure where we stand, what we stand for, and having made sure, to stand rm. ”
MARRIED 55 YEARS Mr. and Mrs. Samuel R. Teeters, 2154 8. New Jersey St. will celebrate 55 years of married life Monday. Both natives of Morgan County, Mr. Teeters is 83 years old and Mrs, Teeters, 74. They are the parents of four children, 11 grand(Shlldeeg, and four great grandchilJ
FASCISM PERILS
STBERIA (U.S.S.R)
Map shows the fishing areas where Russia has refused to renew leases. Sakhalin Island is the scene of the dispute.
11,000 APPLAUD ANTI-NAZI DRIVE
Pack La Guardia’s Rally; Scotland Yard Probes Anti-Semitism.
NEW YORK, Dec. 10 (U. -P.).— Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia’'s citizens’ rally against oppression packed Carnegie Hall with 4000 persons last night and kept 7000 others standing outside, listening to speeches over loud speakers and applauding with a din heard for blocks. Agriculture Secretary Wallace; William E. Dodd, former Ambassador to Germany; Senator Green (D. R. 1), and the Rev. Fr. Fulton J. Sheen, Catholic theology professor, were among the speakers who denounced antiSemitism and anti-Christianity in Europe as well as in America. The Mayor, presiding, explained that the meeting was to ‘‘express sorrow and sympathy with the victims of oppression in Central Europe.” Fifty detectives were conspicuous inside the hall. The Mayor had received a letter two days before threatening his life for his aitacks on Nazis. 3
Urges Economic Co-operation
Dr. Dodd said that “if democracies, who can still save world civilization, are once able to co-operate in economic affairs and toward the realization of a democratic ideal, they can offer solid fronts to Hitler and Mussolini in Europe and Japan in the East.” Secretary Wallace pleaded that the United States remain a haven for persons of all races and creeds. Senator Green, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, denounced Fuehrer Hitler by name. He recommended three things for Americans to do to combat the spread of world hatred: (1) Make continued and active protests; (2) give active aid to the oppressed; (3) oppose vigorously those who try to create “un-American distinctions” in this country.”
Scotland Yard Probes
Demands by Nazis
LONDON, Dec. 10 (U. P.).—Scotland Yard is investigating charges that efforts have been made in behalf of Germany to get British firms trading as German agents . to “Aryanize” their staffs—to dismiss their Jewish employees, it was understood today. The investigation was made with the knowledge of the Home Office, it was said, on the ba:.is of statements made to Scotlan! Yard officials. It was recalled that Foreign Minister Rickard J. Sandler of Sweden, in a speech at Gothenburg Thursday, protested against alleged German attempts to exercise undue influence in Swedish affairs. The Federal Council or Cabinet of Switzerland last night decreed measures to suporess agitation dangerous to the country and provided for far-reaching protection against Nazis and Communists.
Memel Stirred
On Election Eve
PANEMUNAS, Memel Territory, Dec. 10 (U. P.) —German nationalist feeling was stirred intensely today as the campgign closed for tomorrow’s election for members of the Memel Territory diet. Germans, at least in this southern tip of Memel Territory, believe that their days under Lithuanian sovereignty are numbered, despite the studiously correct attitude which the German Government has maintained. Nazi quarters in Berlin have asserted that they -will be satisfied if Lithuania grants Memel @ full autonomous rights as guaranteed to them under the Memel statute by which the allied powers formally transferred Memel Territory to Lithuania. German leaders in Memel have avoided talk of union with Germany. Nevertheless Germans here believe that union will come, though not at once.
SPANISH WAR QUIET; NEW DRIVE AWAITED
HENDAYE, French-Spanish Frontier, Dec. 10 (U. P.).—Spanish Loyalists continued strengthening their fronts today in expectation of a great Rebel offensive, possibly aimed against Barcelona. For the moment, the war fronts were reported quiet. Better weather brought, renewal of air yd Reb raide
University {*
41 600,000,000 Budget Increase Hinted At Tokyo.
TOKYO, Dec. 10 (U. P.).—The Domei News Agency reported today that supplementary budget estimates which ‘Army and Navy leaders are compiling might amount to $1,634,400,000 “because of the necessity of
preparing a g a in st simultaneous hostilities with China and the Soviet Union.” Coincidently the Government created the new post of Inspector General of Military Aviation, named Lieut. Gen. Hideki Jojo, Vice War Minister, as the Inspector, and announced that it intended to pay increasing attention to aviation. Relations with Russia took another turn for the worse as the Foreign Office made it ‘known that a clash was threatened in the Russian end of Sakhalin Island where, it was alleged, Russia was trying to expel Japanese oil workers. As regards the fisheries dispute, officials asserted that Japan intended to continue fishing off the Siberian Coast even if Russian leases were not renewed and that fishing ships would be protected by an armed patrol if necessary.
Japanese Protest
Both the oil and fishing questions are of tremendous importance to Japan. -, It was made known that the Government had protested to Russia against what it held seemed a sys-
tematic effort to cripple Japanese oil fields in the Russian ‘end of Sakhalin Island, which lies off the Siberian Coast at the north end of the Japanese Archipelago. Russia forcibly expelled 55 Japanese workmen from the fields Nov. 30, it was asserted. Now, it was added, the Russians were trying to expel another 67 Japanese workers. The workers refused to leave, Foreign Office sources said, and a clash was feared. The Foreign Office holds that the alleged Russian tactics amount to a repudiation of the freaty of 1925 giving oil concessions to Japan in the Russian half of the island,
Litvinov Insists On Rail Payment
MOSCOW, Dec. 10 (U. P.).— Maxim Litvinov, Foreign ~Zommissar, has repeated his refusal to negotiate a long term renewal of leases for Japaneses fishermen off the Siberian Coast until Japan makes good a defaulted payment for Russia’s share in the Chinese Eastern Railroad, it was made known today. M. Litvinov and Shigenori Togo, Japanese Ambassador, had 2 long
| conference Thursday, a communique
issued: threugh the Tass Agency disclosed. Ambassador Togo insisted that there should be no connection between the fisheries question and the ‘payment for the railroad, which Manchukuo defaulted, but which
Russian viewpoint. M. Litvinov then said that Japan's railroad guarantee must be observed unconditionally before any fisheries convention was signed. He repeated his offer to negotiate a temporary convention. During the talk there were mutual charges of violation of the Portsmouth treaty. M. Litvinov said that Russia could not recognize Japan's right to decide herself that only clauses of the treaty disadvantageous to her must lapse while advantageous clauses ‘remained - in force.
Navy officials today confirmed that the gunboat Sacramento is due to leave China soon for the United States but said there was no lag so far to replace her in China. 7:
DALADIER IS UPHELD BY NARROW MARGI
Chamber of Deputies Vote 315-241; 53 Abstain.
PARIS, Dec. 10 (U. P.).—Premier Daladier won a narrow and temporary victory in the Chamber of Deputies early today when he was given a vote of confidence by 315 to 241, with 53 deputies abstaining. The vote was on the general policy of. the Government. It had been expected that Mr. Daladier would win it. But in doing so he failed to rally any permanent majority committed to his support to replace the Socialists and Communists who now are in opposition after two years of the Popular Front, : Conservatives and Nationalists who voted for Daladier made it plain that they did not commit themselves as regards the future, and that their votes would depend on the individual issues involved. The climax of the chamber debate was angry. Only the intervention of neutral deputies prevented a free-for-all fight between Socialists and Nationalists - because the Nationalists persisted in interrupting Leon Blum, Socialist leader, during his speech.
French Anxious for
Quiet in Tunisia (Editorial, Cartoon, Page 10)
‘TUNIS, Dec. 10 (U. P.).—Police and mobile guards took special precautions today to prevent week-end outbreaks by French and Italian partisans. Despite semiofficial reports of an agreement between French' and Italian popular leaders to discontinue street demonstrations, it was reported persistently that Frenchmen, Arabs and Italians all planned mnonster manifestations either today or
BUSINESS EDUCATION
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eva " ost gi! In
i
PAGE 2 i AF, INDIANAPOLIS usso-J apanese Clash on Sakhalin Feared; :Mexican-German Trade Pact Rumored;
Hull Suggests Anti- Aggression Front
Japan guarantees, according to the i
WASHINGTON, Dec. 10 (U. P.) —|
By # Lincoln 8337.
With $167 Cash of His Own,
He Started Shoe Store 54 Years Ago.
By JOE COLLIER
OU couldn’t get within hailing distance of George Marott today because of a picket fence of 60-year-old juniors that had him trapped in his office trying to outremember him. He was as usual, at his shoe store on Washington St.—the same street he has done business on for 54 years—and impartial observers said that on his 80th birthday Mr. Marott came out
match. Maybe a little better than “very well indeed,” because he picked up where they left off and answered questions about old Indianapolis like he had. memorized the back of the book. Mr. Marott explained that he had planned nothing but a Yorkshire pudding for his birthday, .and he won't talk above a whisper about that for fear the doctor who told him not to eat Yorkshire pudding will learn of his plans. Mr. Marott has made an embattled stand on the pudding issue and even now it is being prepared for him and other members of the family for dinner. Until then, Mr. Marott says he will do his usual day’s work if he can get out of memory lane long enough, and says the only difference he notices in himself now and when he was 21 is that he tires a little more after he has worked a 12-hour day than he used to. Mr. Marott seems to think that little indisposition will blow over as he gets older. “I am happy to have the congratulations of my friends,” he said, “and to know that I'm in good health and prepared to discharge all the duties I'm obligated to perform.”
E says those duties are more pressing because of taxation which he says places an unusual burden on earnings. Back in the old days Mr, Marott started business with $167, a chattel mortgage for $200 and $2000 in credit from 10 shoe manufacturers. Among the things mortgaged was a piano which he had presented to his wife as a wedding present, “That $167 represented all I was able to save in four and a half years of work as a shoe clerk. I had to beg my wife to loan me the piano for the mortgage, and I had this credit from the manufacturers. “In seven months I found that I was making money at the rate! of $3000 a year, and then a bank falls with $700 or $800 of mine n it. “I found I could assimilate it, and so I decided to pay off the mortgage two months before it was due. It worried me. Well, it was one Saturday when I decided to pay it, and after I quit work at midnight, I felt so happy about getting rid of the debt that I bought three stogies for a nickel and went home smoking one. “When I got home I put my arm around my wife and she said, ‘Why, George, you've been smokng.’ “I said y had and then I told her I hdd paid off the mortgage and that once more the bed was ours and the piano was hers.
very well indeed in the memory .
On His SOth Birthday George Marott ~~ Out- Remembers Some
of City’s Best
‘Well, sir, 54 years ago . . .
SATU RDAY, DEC.
0. S. TO CALL OUNTNESSES IN FRAUD TRIAL
IState Claims $162,000 Bogus Warehouse Receipts Issued.
U. 8. attorneys said today they plan to call at least 100 more witnesses to. testify in the trial of. five persons charged with participating in an alleged million dollar’ mail fraud. _ Calling of Government witnesses: alone will require another week, it was announced. The trial opened. Monday. Defendants in the Federal Court.
“ltrial are officers of the Continental | Credit Corp. of Winchester or of,
{one of its subsidiaries. Of the 45 bank officials who have’ been called to the stand by U. S,. Attorney Val Nolan, all have testi-
Continental salesmen which were backed by warehouse receipts.
What Prosecution Charges
In each case, they testified, they later found that another bank or individual had received a warehouse receipt identical with the one they held as security on the note. Of those who testified only nine said that they had received any payment on their notes.
dence will be produced to show that $162,000 worth of “bogus warehouse
ants.
that the defendants have - issued some warehouse receipts which were overvalued 90 per cent. Banks now holding notes of the Mineral 1Felt Co., a subsidiary of the Continental Corp., find their collateral
valuation, it has been charged. The Defendants C W. Cox of Fremont O., Croghan Bank & Trust Co. president, yes~. terday testified that his bank had loaned the Continentdl firm $27,000
said his bank has received in re-
“She burst into tears—tears of joy, you know. And I did, too.
“Well, after she went back to bed, I turned up the coaloil lamp —we didn’t have gas in our oneroom apartment because we were too poor—and I pulled over. a chair in one corner of the room and I stayed up until 4 in the morning smoking the other two stogies. “I was never happier before nor since.” Mr. Marott took a reflective puff from his cigar. “The first day I opened my shoe store, which was in a building that then stood next to the one. I now occupy, I made $11.21 above what my wages would have been as a clerk. “In five years I had the largest shoe store in the city.”
2 8 =
HATEVER plans Mr. Marott had for not noticing his 80th birthday were wrecked two days before it happened. On Thursday night the Marott Hotel had its annual dance. “It was a pretty sight,” he said, “with nice music and happy people. Someone wanted to take my picture, and when the flash went off someone else said ‘Birthday.’ “Then, by jove, the orchestra
“played ‘Happy Birthday to You’ and they were two days ahead of time, you see.” The “by jove” slipped out but it’s authentic. Mr. Marott came to this country from England when he was 17 years old and clerked in a shoe store for his father until he opened his own. : Once Winston Churchill was a guest of Mr. Marott at the Marott Hotel and they were talking. “He asked me why I never had written the story of my life and I told him that that would be 4a little on the egotistical side and he bristled. “I told him that I had not had much time to read books because 1 was so busy in commerce, and then he seemed calmed down. “ “Then you've never read any of my books?’ he asked. “‘No,’ I said. “ ‘Would you care to if I sent some to you autographed when I get back home?’ he asked, and ~ said I would. “Well, he got back at me. He sent me an autographed copy of his autobiography.” About that time another memory quiz was called and Mr. Marott once more defended his title as
City Remembering Champion.
payment for that loan all but $13,500. The payments have been made by the original makers of the notes
nental company, he said. Defendants standing trial are: John W, Moore, president of Con-
Mr. Moore and secretary-treasurer. and vice president of the Indiana Warehouse Corp.; Kenneth P. Kimball; president of the Kim-Murph
Co., treasurer, and Russell E. Wise,
tion.
GLOSSBRENNER TO SPEAK
speak on “The Miracle of Grace? at 7:45 a. m. tomorrow over Station WFBM. Arlene Dux Scoville will be the guest soloist, and Mr, and. Mrs. William Terrell will present a, duet.
(Editorial, Page 10)
By RAYMOND CLAPPER Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, Dec. 10.—Last month the American people at the polls shifted somewhat to the right, nearer toward the middle of the road. This month, American industry— as you will note from the new plat-
ment well worth reading as a broadvisioned declaration by industry— seems to be shifting a little toward the left. The two viewpoints are closer together than they have been in nearly a decade.
These are signs that class warfare may be cooling off, and that both sides may be coming to realize that, while it may be difficult to get along with ‘each other, it is even more difficult to get along without each other.
As the N. A. M. platform explains, the United States is nearing the end of nine years of sharply arrested economic development. Never before in. our history has such a long period passed without recording a new high in industrial production and individual well-being. From that starting point the industrialists might naturally have gone on to say that President Roosevelt had failed and that it was time to wipe out all of his works and let industry run the show alone in the good old-fashioned way. Instead, the industrialists stated that our progress depends upon a agriculture and labor, in operation with Government.
Co-
tomorrow, and authorities fared there might be clashes. French authorities were anxious to prevent new outbreaks. It was held that a continuance df demonstrations, even if they were in favor of France, might embarrass the French Government © by lending basis for Italian complaints that
4order was not being preserved.
ROME, Dec. 10 (U. P.).—About 3000 high school pupils tried to reach the French Embassy today to hold a demonstration. Mounted carabinieri blocked all streets leading to the Embassy, drove back the students and finally dispersed them.
form adopted by the National As-|%: 1sociation of Manufacturers, a docu-
united effort of industry, commerce,
“All of these groups have made mistakes, and we in industry admit our share,” the platform stated.
The two sections of the platform dealing with business responsibility and labor relations are significant of an attempt by responsible business leaders to take a broader view of their obligations. Industrial management was urged
“Interest itself actively in the economic and social needs of the times . . . publish frequently simple and informative statements concerning financial and other operations . . . maintain standards, deveiop and improve products by research, make price adjustments as rapidly as improved processes permitted . . . effect the maximum volume of production, distribution and employment that can be maintained continuously . . . conduct business so that it ‘is at all times a desirable citizen of the local community in which it operates. ...” As to laber relations, the platform said: “Industrial management recognizes that employees who wish to bargain collectively are entitled to do so, in whatever form they determine, through their own freely chosen representatives, and with-
out intimidation or restraint from any source , . . employers to maintain a well-defined labor policy suitable to the conditions- of the company; to provide opportunity for free interchange of ideas between management and employees on all matters of common interest, adequate opportunity for prompt consideration and adjustment of complaints and fair wages for work performed, with incentives where they can be fairly applied as a reward for individual or group accomplishment; to maintain good working conditions. . . . Industrial management should endeavor to cushion the effects on individual employees of new processes and labor-saving machinery; management and labor should co-operate in using every practicable means to provide continuity of employment, and should study the annual wages of employees in relation to their hourly
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HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle . in Guido's 1 Georges —, 150 S ANVILJS! scale. former 0) GAS] 22 Cetacean. alos A 23 Fiber knots)’ 11 Body 4 : 1] 24 God of war.) soldiers | 26 After the or 12 Chinese wax. manner oO 13 Bele, SWEDEN CIT] a7 Double, 14 To put forth, A] 28 Gaelic. 16 Custom. H M 29 To feel 18 Alteration MA E displeasure) ‘hand. A 31 Leg bone, ° 21 Closing scene 32Pedal = in a play. extremities! 25 Loading ~ 35 Norse god. contrivance. ' 43 To renew a 3 To vex. 38 Deputy. 30 Burdensome. front. 4 Fruit. 39 Pats of a 2 Bankruptcy. ” etter. 35% mare, jEcpariee, SToduwe 4 Sperbets, 34 Garden tool. niles 6 Fish. 42 Ten cent 36 He fought in 52 Full of 7 Lilies. piece.’ ; the fissures. 8Loom bar. ~ 44 Roof point heavyweight 53 In his prime 9 Grain. covering. ——. + he was the 12 He was also a 45 Ventilating 37 Bulk. - —— fighter in stage ——. machine. 38 Naval France. 15 Eagle's claw. 46 Devoured. assistants. 64 He was — 17 Trojan. 48 Blue grass, 40 Toward the in America. 19 Rumanian 49 Hops kiln. . lee. VERTICAL coin. 50 To observe. 41 Kindled. 9 Culmination. 20 Highest note 52 Note in scale AY rE IDET i 10 0 i2 13 19 1S 16 17 | 10 19 20 2) {22 123 |24 25 30 Jl 2 3d 36 37 38 39 40 Ti WE 4) | 22 2 7 9150
0, at
fied that they purchased notes from: -
The prosecution has said that evi-
receipts” were issued by the defend-. Mr. Nolan has further charged
is worth only 10 per cent of itg
which was backed by various notes: with total face value of $40,000. He.
and independently of the Conti
tinental; John W. Moore Jr., son of -
Co.; Ralph S. Phillips, Mineral Felt’
Union City, counsel for Continental and later receiver for the corpora=
Herbert M. Glossbrenner will
FOR SeELRY
LS" : nr ha 4 WEST [§ VLR
LOANS From |
