Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 April 1939 — Page 14

PAGE 14

GREEN'S SNIPING

© ATU. M.W. HITS

0.1.0.S MIDRIFF

Administration Now Finds Mediation Role Growing More Delicate.

WASHINGTON, April 8 (U. P.) —Labor Secretary Perkins said today that negotiations between the A. F. of L. and C. 1. O. have brought them “decidedly closer together,” although no agreement is imminent, She said at a press conference that in the rival groups’ negotiations their minds have met on one or two important items. She forecast that their committees will meet again within a week or ten days.

By LUDWELL DENNY . Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, April 8.—In trying to settie the soft coal shutdown, which went into the second week today, the Administration again is hampered by the C. I. O-A. F. of L. feud. By using his small Progressive Miners Union to snipe at John Lewis, United Mine Workers, William Green of the A. F. of L. has revived hope among anti-C. I. O. operators that they can break Mr.| Lewis’ alleged dictatorship. Al-| though a Green victory on the coal} front is highly improbable, the spread of interunion warfare to this key industry embarrasses the Administration in its efforts for industrial recovery and general labor

Democratic organization, is shown

$55,000 in 1933. =

Foes Cla

peace. To make a bad matter worse, the | Administration has been maneuv-|

increasing bitter bituminous nego-| fiations. With Mr, Lewis and the] operators deadlocked, the alterna-| tive of peace or violence in the coal} fields depends largely on the medi-| ating efforts of the Federal Govern-| ment. | Lewis Angered But Mr. Lewis is angry because Secretary of Labor Perkins revealed to the public that the closed shop jssue—either direct or in the in-| direct form of elimnating the strike| penalty clause—is the cause of the deadlock. And the operators, especially the anti-C. I. O. group led by Southerners, are angry because of the alleged prounion bias of the| Administration. | Under these circumstances the mediating job of the Administration! is unusually difficult. And the Administration is human enough | blame the A. F. of L. for contribut-| ing to its embarrassing situation—| for if the A. F. of L. sniping against the United Mine Workers had not forced Mr. Lewis to seek protection in a closed shop contract provision, or at least elimination of the| strike penalty clause, the bituminous dispute doubtless would have| been settled peaceably a week ago.| This also makes it more difficult for the Administration to restrain the knockout fight which the A. F.| of L. will attempt next week against] the C. I. O. on Capitel Hill. Cn] Tuesday the Senate Labor Com-| mittee will begin hearings on proposed amendments to the Wagnsar Labor Law, while House conservations will renew their drive for an| investigation of the A. F. of L | charge that the Labor Board is pro-| Cc. 1. 0 Mr. Lewis ‘Uncomfortable’ | : Though the Administration and] C. I. O. lobbyists were able to block | these moves for several weeks, the} A PF. of L. is now in a position to] cause them much trouble. Paradoxically, Mr. Lewis as Labor Roard defender is now uncomfortable because Mr. Green, Board]

im Income Case to Wreck Machine

KANSAS CITY, Mo, April 8 (U. P).—Missouri Democrats led by Governor Lloyd C. Stark prepared an obituary today for the Tom Pen-

Persecuted, Pendergast Says

\

NIM ant gf

Times-Acme Photo.

Thomas J. Pendergast, boss of the powerful Kansas City, Mo,

(second from left) as he postea

pond after being indicted by a Federal Grand Jury on charges of violating the income tax laws. One count said he failed to report on $260,000 in 1936; another charged him with evading taxation on

Tax

dergast political machine, whose bald, corpulent, hard-fisted boss faced ered into a delicate position in the Federal charges of income tax evasion.

ELLIOTT TO DAD: 'YOU OR GARNER’

Young Roosevelt Believes Texan Is Choice Unless FDR Seeks 3d Term.

Thomas J. Pendergast, 66, born of Irish immigrant parents, who left a Kansas City railroad yard office 28 years ago to begin a career in politics and build one of the nation’s tightest political machines, saw little hope of surviving as “the boss.” Finger-printed in Federal Court while accepting service yesterday on a warrant charging that he profited $315,000 in the settlement of an in-

surance rate case but failed to declare it in his income tax return, the man who has created governors

FT. WORTH, Tex, April 8 (U.| P.) —Elliott Roosevelt today told his

| father, the President, that unless he|

decides to run for a third term, Vice President Garner, a native]

Texan, probably would get the] Democratic nomination. | The rangy soft-spoken second son |

of the President obviously directed | his remarks toward his father last night in a semi-weekly radio broad- |

cast over his Texas state network. Foresees ‘Forked Road’

He said that the “nation will encounter a forked road in our political future. It will be up to the voters to decide whether we take the left road toward a more radical liberalism, whether we swing down | the right toward conservatism, or whether we continue down the] middle of the road between the] fence rows that likely will mark the Democratic party line.” | The reference to Mr. Garner as a | Presidential possibility was the sec- |

fond in as many weeks, by Elliott

Roosevelt. | He said that several wrong in-| terpretations had been placed on his observation that Mr. Garner was] “riding the crest of favoritism right now as Presidential timber.”

Says Garner Boom ‘Is On’

“These interpretations amuse me,” | he said. “My observations were|

and lesser state officials for a decade and prorated their power, said: “They persecuted Christ on Good Friday, and nailed him to the cross.” If Pendergast, who must enter a plea on the charges April 24, is convicted, his supporters as well as the followers of Governor Stark, who once was a Pendergast protege, will recognize Mr. Stark as the winner. The two men, who went to the political wars like father and son in 1936 when Mr. Stark won the gubernatorial election, split a short time later and their battle was carried to the electorate last November over their respective choices for a state Supreme Court seat. Governor Stark elected his candidate and since then has made war on the “boss’ at every opportunity. Republicans, long without power in Missouri politics, saw the indictments and the Grand Jury's announcement that “we have just begun” as the death of the Pendergast machine and the possibility of capturing the state for the G. O. P. in 1940.

512 HOOSIER FARMERS

PROMISED REA LINES

critic, is using the Board machinery | nothing more than that of a news ®mes Special

through Progressive Miners’ appeals | to pinch Mr. Lewis and the United| Mine Workers. Or, as the irreverent}

commentator.” “I observe further this week that | the Garner boom is on and unless |

WASHINGTON, April 8. — The Rural Electrification Administra-

phrase it, Mr. Lewis is being bitten|the President should choose to run ton has approved contracts for 176 by the teeth he put into the Wagner| for a third term—a matter about additional miles of electric lines to

Law. To the antiunion minority of soft] coal operators this is very funny. Even though they cannot hope to unseat Mr. Lewis, they believe that added strength for the small A. F. of L. union would serve to balance and restrain Mr. Lewis in the coal industry and elsewhere. It is a fact, of course, that the United Mine Workers Union is the heart of the C. I. O. Of more importance, perhaps, it is the main pocketbook of C. I. O. So in sniping at the U. M. W., his old union, Mr. Green is touching the prestige and purse of his enemy, the C. I. O. The danger inherent in a continued bituminous shutdown increases daily because of its effect on other industries. Particularly, negotiatfons for national anthracite contracts open next Tuesday. Hence the Administration's effort to settle the dispute no matter how hazardous politically the role of mediator may prove.

CONVICT FACING DEATH | GETS ADDED SENTENCE

DETROIT, April 8 (U. P) —Sidney Markham, New York gunman who was taken from death row in Sing Sing Prison to stand trial for illegal possession of firearms, was convicted yesterday and sentenced to 30 years in prison. Markham will be unable to complete the term because he is under sentence to die for the slaying of a Brooklyn poultry dealer. tested to Federal Judge Edward J.

He pro-|

a thing—he will be hard to unseat | from the drivers’ seat he now fills.”

Prosperity— Ah, but It’s Very Simple

WASHINGTON, April 8 (U. P) —A new plan for prosperity pencilled on a penny postcard mailed from Brooklyn, N. Y., to President Roosevelt: “Please open a government matrimonial office where all people on relief or working on WPA jobs could get acquainted & get married. Make a law that everybody 21 & over have to get married &

{ which I neither know nor predict serve 512 Indiana farms.

A contract with the Miller-Bax-

ter Co. of Indianapolis was approved to erect 55 miles of lines serving 158 farms in Whitley, Ailen, Huntington, Wabash, Kosciusko and Noble Counties. One hundred and twenty-one miles of lines to serve 354 farms in Carroll, Cass, Clinton, Howard, White and Tippecanoe Counties will be built by the A. A. Electric Co. of Cicero. Construction of these two projects will provide nearly 29,000 man hours of employment in direct labor alone, the REA announced.

ELINED

ELE | Mine EFITTED | Women's

Clothes

TAILORING CO. 235 MASS. AVE.

those on relief the Government will support & they will need for the babies, carriages, clothing & etc. & all factories will be busy like bees & you'll have back prosperity.”

EDITOR URGES MORE | PROBES OF FAILURES

CLEVELAND, April 8 (U. P).— John H. Van Deventer, editor of Iron Age, said today he believed ‘there should be fewer Government | investigations of successful business

CHAS. W. §S

Flumbing and Heating

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TOLTE

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HUNT PAIR WHO SEIZED, ROBBED PHYSICIAN HERE

South Side Doctor Tells Police of Abduction; 2 Others Held Up.

Police today investigated the reported abduction and robbery of a

South Side physician, two holdups,

a burglary and purse shatchings. The doctor told police that when he returned to his parked car on Senate Ave. near the State House last night, two men ordered him

into the car and after driving for several hours stopped in West Indianapolis where three other men got in. He said that the men told him they were looking for another man whom they named and searched for unsuccessfully at several taverns. The doctor said that about midnight the men stopped at Raymond and Harding Sts. and took his money and watch.

Left in Car On Market St.

He" reported that after driving around for another hour the men left him in his car on Market St. near the State House and disap-

peared. A W. 36th St. youth reported that while he and a girl companion were sitting" in his car parked on Ditch Road near 79th St, two armed men robbed him of $1 and a watch. A bandit fired two shots as he fled from a liquor store at 1109 ProStecs St. without obtaining any oot. William Moeller, 71, of 1617 Lexington Ave, the clerk, said that when the gunman looked into the cash register he laid his weapon on the counter. Mr. Moeller said that as he grabbed for it, the bandit turned from the register, seized the gun and fled, firing wildly as he left. Girl's Purse Seized

Lucille Mullinix, 21, of 103 W. Walnut St, reported that as she was walking on S. Pine St. between Maryland St. and the railroad tracks a man seized her purse. Mrs. Gayle Finch of 1175 W. 29th St, reported that two boys made an unsuccessful attempt to grab her purse as she was walking on 30th St. near Annette St. Mr. and Mrs. Owen Watts, 1512 N. Pennsylvania St, reported that jewels valued at $150 were taken from their apartment during their absence.

NAB COUNTERFEITERS DUPING FLEEING JEWS

WASHINGTON, April 8 (U. P). —German police have smashed a European counterfeit ring which sold spurious U. S. currency to Jews and other persons seeking to escape from Nazi-dominated territories, it was learned today. The U. S. secret service was advised that several arrests were made in Vienna and Praha. Several of the spurious banknotes

have turned up in the United States through regular foreign exchange channels. The counterfeiters, the secret service learned, operated through “black bourses’—illegal foreign exchanges markets—in the former capitals of Austria and Czechoslovakia. Some of the purchasers of the fake money managed to get out of Germany and a number of the bills tendered in France and England reached the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

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Tells on Grandson Deserter

ROCHESTER, April 8 (U. P.) —His grandmother's fear that the United States would be involved in a war today had placed Lester A. White, 20, in the Rochester jail pending action by the U. S. Army. White told police that he deserted from the Army at San Pedro, Cal, March 29, and hitch<hiked to Rochester. When he arrived his grandmother, Mrs. Eli Woodcox, 72, reported him to police. She said that she feared the United States would enter a war and that he would be liable to a death sentence for desertion.

CLAIMS WIFE'S PIES EVEN KILLED BIRDS

DUNKIRK, N. Y,, April 8 (U. P). —Police Chief John J. Warren wondered today what he could tell the husband who complained that his wife's pies were so bad that they killed birds in the backyard. " The husband, unidentified, wrote to Chief Warren that he passed the pies along to the family dog, which likewise rebelled at eating the pastry. The pies were thrown in the yard, the man added, where the birds ate them with fatal results. “What I want to know,” the husband asked, “is, can my wife be prosecuted for cruelty to dumb animals and defenseless birds?”

UNPEDIGREED COW WINS WORLD'S TITLE

AMESBURY, England, April 8 (U. P.) —Cherry, a shorthorn cow without a pedigree, today has been acclaimed the world’s champion milk producer. Cherry produced 4164 gallons of milk in a single year, which statisticians figured was an average of 11 gallons daily. The previous record holder was an American FPresian cow, Carnation Ormsby, with 3869 gallons.

Deaths—Funerals 1

CHAPMAN—Philean, age 73, beloved wife of Louis, mother of Mrs. Opal Bozell, Blanche, Chapman and Mrs, Leo Halfaker, Melvin. Denver, Russell and Warren Chapman, passed away ) night. Services Monday at the home, 1064 W. 34th Burial Glen Haven. Friends invited. Friends may call at the above address after 3 p. m. Saturday.

DONOGHUE—Thomas J., beloved father of Thomas M. Earl P. and William PF. Donoghue, grandfather of Thomas M. Donoghue Jr., died Friday, April 7, at residence, 41 N. Colorado Ave. Funeral onday, April 10, 8:30 a. m., from resi- » services, Our Lady of h, 9 a. m. eased was member r al at ind sion No. J Friends . ome after . m, - urday. BLACKWELL SERVICE, Wi: Sa

KUBITZ—Max H., age 53, husban - gm E. Kubitz, father of Paul oy Ly rother of Hulda Rathsam, passed away Focay. sioRval Monday, 1:30 p. m., F ROS. CE A CHAPEL, Illinois at 10th. Burial Hill. Friends may call at the a

Classified Display

————

Indianapolis Times, Saturday, April 8, 1939

Deaths—Funerats 1 Indianapolis Times, Saturday. April 8, 1939

., beloved husband of father of s. Nand William ._ and passed away Frida neral services wi ERAL

h St., Monday afternoon, April 10, at 2 o'clock. Burial Crown Hill Cemetery. Friends are welcome,

LEDBETTER Isaac, of 520 Holt Rd. beloved father of Dora Clark, Vera Smith, Marv Oakes, William and Charles Led better, brother of Sarah D land, Ore., passed away A

years. Service Tuesday, W. D. BEANBLOSSOM 1327 W. Ray St. Burial Cemetery. Friends invited.

» AY—George, of 2546 1st Ave, east of Mars Hill, husband of Fannie, father of Estora Renner of Somerset, Ky.. Mabie Silbernagel vrtle and 1d! Smith and Eugene May, brother of Daniel be May, passed away April 7. age 6 ars. Services Monda . m. at W. D. BEA - Y, 1327 W. Rav St. Burial Floral Park. Friends ihvited.

MONTGOMERY-—Sue Ann. beloved daughter of Mr. and rMs. Everett Montgomery, sister of Luticia Rose and Emma Jean, passed away Saturday forming. Funeral Monday, 10 a. m., at the FARY. AL HOME, 1604 W. Morris St. Friends invited.

SPALDING—Louise, age 75, beloved wife of Thomas Spalding, sister of Amelia r, Rosa Spier and Harry Lindeman, pastée away Friday. Funeral Monday, 0 a. m, from Y BROS. CENTRAL CHAPEL, Tilinois at 10th. Burial Crown Hill. Friends may call at the chapel after 10 a. m. Sunday.

STRAUSBURG—Anna C., beloved mother of Mrs. Ruth J. Wilie and Mrs. Mable Kinfte}. Rasseq away iday evening, April 7. wneral services will be held at the WALD FUNFRAL HOME, i222 Union St. Monday afternoon, April 10. at 1:30 o'clock, and at the Woodruff Etter Tabernacle, 2114 Miller St, at 2 o’clock. Burial Floral Park Cemetery. Friends are welcome. Friends may call at the Funeral Home after Sunday noon.

VAN BLARICUM-—Jacob, husband of Anna brother of George Van Blaricum, passed away April 6 age 9 years. Services Monday, 10 a. m. a LOSSOM RTUARY, 1327 W. Ray St. Burial Floral Park. Friends invited.

VAN COURT —Eva, age 60, beloved wife of John A. Van Court, mother of Lloyd Van Court, sister of Sam, Thomas and Minnie Reed, departed from this life Saturday morning at the residence, 1536 . Market. Funeral Monday 3 p. m. from SHIRLE ROS. CENTRAL CHAPEL. Illinois at 10th, Friends may call at the chapel after 10 a. m. Sunday.

EIEGLER—Mrs. Caroline, George and Edward L. Mrs. ma Reade, all of California; Mrs. Cora Epvert, Mrs. Clara Douglas, Mrs. Frieda Bowen and William K. Ziegler, gn away Friday morning, April 7, at ner Pome, 219 + 46th St. Private fural services a. m. Monday at th RAGSD. FUNERAL Hi ¥

mother of Ziegler and

. Friends ma i at the funeral home Sunday. ¥ eal

2

Card of Thanks

SMOOT—We wish to thank our kind friends and neighbors for their acts of love and sympathy during our recent loss of son Jack, and also extend grateul, shanks for ihe A floral trib0 our beloved one, . AND MRS. A. SMOOT AND FAMILY

3

In Memoriams

CLARK—Glen E.. who passed away 3 years ago, April 8. 1936. Two dear bright eyes, a tender smile, A loving heart that knew no guile, Deep trust in God that all was right, Her joy to make some other bright. If sick or suffering one she knew, Some gentle act of love she'd do. No thought of self. but of ‘‘the other.” I know He said, “Well done, dear mother.” HUSBAND and CHILDREN.

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| Classified Display

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| Classified Display

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| Classified Display

BOARD INDUSe 83

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UNION TITLE CO. SERVICE WRECKING CO.

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‘CRUISING’ DOGS IRK HUNTINGTON POLICE

Times Special HUNTINGTON, April 8 —Unless persons owning dogs and chickens keep them on their own premises, the police department is going to

swing into action, Mayor Foster E.|

Cutshall announced today. So many complaints have been received of damage to gardens, flower peds and truck patches in the residential district the Mayor issued the warning. He didn’t amplify his statement as to what “steps” the police would adopt.

“Why is it that Government investigations have to do with business success?” he asked. “Can't we learn as poignant lessons from business failures? Are we to get the impressions that it is criminal to make a success in business?”

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