Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 September 1939 — Page 17
| PAGE 186
En
NATION'S LABOR BOARDS FACING NEW ATTACKS
Railroad Executives Plan Action Against Two Government Units.
By LUDWELL DENNY
Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, Sept. 11. —While Washington watches the European war, the domestic war against the Government's labor peace machinery is spreading. The newest attack is on the National Mediation Board and Na-, tional Railroad Adjustment Board, hitherto considered almost model
agencies for settlement of industrial disputes in the transportation industry. At the same time the special House committee under Rep Howard W. Smith (D. Va) is in gestion here picking investigators and lawvers for its hostile probe of the National Labor Relations Board
Meet Thursday.
Methods of combating the drive against the mediation and adjustment boards will be considered by the Railway Labor Executives Association meeting in Chicago Thursday | The official organ of the 15 railway unions, “Labor.” today charged that “powerful influences are at work to substitute industrial war for industrial peace in the transportation industry.” It accused the Saturday Evening Post and the Chicago Journal of Commerce of backing the movement | Answering allegations of cities that the National Railroad Adjustment Board has made possibie the payment of $120000000 a year to workers for not working, “Labor”| said: | “The National Railroad Adjust-| ment Board has nothing to do with | the making of agreements between| the railroads and their employees When cases are properly presented to it, it interprets those agreements. |
Often Uses Referee
“Sometimes it decides in favor of | the railroads, and sometimes it de-| cides in favor of the emplovees. | When there is a deadlock of the ad-! Justment board, the board of mediation names some distinguished gentleman to act as referee, and pavs him a modest fee for his serve fees. “The very large majority of the railroads have accepted the decisions of the board without the slightest quicbble. Some carriers when they lost a case, volubly protest. That happens in courts of law-—even in the U. S. Supreme Court. So far as the railroad unions are concerned, they have uniformly bowed to the decisions of the board, whether they lost or won.”
LAWRENCE COUNTY LAWYER DIES AT 77
Time t Special BEDFORD, Ind Funeral services Boruff, member the Lawrence County Bar for vears, will be tomorrow. He was 77 Mr. Boruff., who died Saturday was graduated from the Southern Indiana Normal College, Mitchell and studied law in Bedford with the late Judge W. H Martin. He was admitted to the bar in 1884 He was married in Indianapolis to Miss Blanche Foster, newspaper woman and founder of the Indiana Woman's Press Club She, a brother and four sisters survive
M'HALE CAMPAIGN MOVES INTO UTAH
Sept 11. —| for James E of
33
Frank M. McHale, manager of the Paul V. McNutt-for-President campaign, left Pheenix, Ariz, today for Salt Lake City after spending eight davs in California. Mr. McHale notified MeNutt headquarters here that the turnout of California Democratic leaders favoring the McNutt candidacy was something he “hardly couid have expected short of Indiana.” He expected to carry his tour into Idaho from Salt Lake City
STREETCAR MAN ROBBED
A bandit held up Charles Stine 29. of 96 N. Irvington Ave. Illinois streetcar operator. last night at the Butler Campus, obtaining a money changer containing about $15, according to police reports
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PRESBYTERIANS DEBATE 6 GOALS
Drs. William Klein and Henry Little to Speak At Session Tonight.
Means of accomplishing the six spiritual objectives set for the 316 Indiana Presbyterian Churches during the coming year were dis-| cussed by church leaders at a oonference todav at the Sutherland! Presbyterian Church | The church has fixed its goal as a 25 per cent increase in church at-! tendance; six new members on confession of faith for every 100 on the rolls; a 10 per cent increase in Sunday School enrollment and a 20 per cent increase in average attendance: everv church member enlisted in at least one activity; fully pledged church budgets, and all women’s groups united into one A meeting at 7 p. m. is to be open to all Presbyterians in Indianapolis. Dr. Henry Little, Chicago, Secretary of the Board of Foreign Missions, will speak on “Our World Task.” while Dr. William F. Klein, New York City, is to talk on “Our Evangelistic Task.” Membership in the Presbyterian Church has grown from 52000 to 70.000 members in the last 25 vears, but Sunday School enrollment, while gaining over the long period, has dropped 8000 from its peak year. church leaders reported. The total benevolent gifts of Indiana Presbyterians last vear was 45 per cent of the peak vear of giving, 1922, "and was 8 per cent above the depression low level of 1933-34.
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But War Has No Part in It
ONDON or Paris? Neither. It's right here in Indianapolis. Three thousand miles from the war zone, Neil Kershaw (left), Indianapolis Water Co. chief chemist, and Keith Emery, filtration plant operator, don their masks in practice for an emergency. The water company uses chlorine, greatly diluted, in purifving the city’s drinking water. In such minute quantities, chlorine is harmless, but in concentrated form it is highly irritating. It was used in the World War but no longer is considered a poison gas. The company never has had a leak in a chlorine cylinder requiring use of a mask, but drills are held as a precaution.
SUN SPOTS MENACE FOREIGN RECEPTION
Bw Seienve Sey WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.—Solar activity is rapidly increasing with the number of spots greatly augmented, according to new photographs taken at the U. 8S. Naval Observatory here. There are 209 spots now observed on the sun, divided into 16 groups. One large group has appeared in the sun's southern latitude and it may menace foreign short wave radio reception because of its angry character. Observers have found that interruptions in trans-Atlantic radio communication frequently accompany active sunspots. It is believed that the increased intensity of radiation poured out by the sun at such times creates at-
rice
| mosphere storms in the radio re-
Nazi Line Has Many Aliases
By Science Sevvive { ASHINGTON, 11.— | Siegfried Line alias Limes Line . . . alias West Wall . + that formidable German array of pillboxes and tank-traps, has changed names twice Siegfried Line has a romantic Wagnerian appeal. But there was a Siegfried Line that caved in, back in 1918. Limes Line seems to have been derived from the old Limes Germanicus, built hy Romans against German barbarians. West Wall is strictly aescriptive . . . and noncommittal. Pronounced “Vest Vall,” if you really want to approximate the German way of
Sept.
| saving it
PLAN SERVICES FOR A | CHRYSLER OFFICIAL ———— { Times Specind NEW CASTLE, Ind, Sept. 1] Funeral services for Charles A. Stiers, for 18 vears purchasing agent| for the Chrysler Corp. plant here.| were to be this afternoon. He was 532 and died Friday night at the home of his daughter, Mrs. J. C.! Hill, Ft. Wavne. { He had been associated with the! Chrysler plant here since it was established. For many vears he was an outstanding amateur golfer. He is survived by his daughter, his wife. | Mrs. Sadie Stiers. and two brothers. |
CHANUTE FIELD EXPANDS | RANTOUL. Ill. Sept. 11 (U. P).— A squad of 250 men is at work on the Chanute Army Air Field transforming a cluster of tarpaper covered huts into a modern aviation city. | With plans abandoned to transfer) the training school to Denver, Congress appropriated more than five million dollars to rebuild the air base, {
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| —Fraternity and sorority rush week
England.’
FRATERNITY AND SORORITY RUSH BEGINS AT. U,
New Students to Register| Wednesday; Orientation
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Police Puzzled By False Clue
OLICE found themselves with a first class mystery on their hands today. | While cleaning out the patrol |
wagon
drunks during found a full sot of false teeth. A checkup of the City Prison failed to disclose any minus teeth,
MONDAY, SEPT. 11, 1939
HOOSIERS REPORTED SAFE IN DENMARK
Noblesville relatives of Mr. and | Mrs. Herman Stoker received word | | today that Mrs. Stoker and her two children have left Berlin and are in | Denmark and that Mr. Stoker will | follow soon. Mr. Stoker was officially con[nected with the Berlin legation of |the Union of South Africa which a | few days ago declared war on Ger- { many.
after carrying a load of the night, they
prisoners
Begins Thursday.
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind, Sept. 1L ‘opened officially at Indiana Univer- | sity here today as hundreds of freshmen gathered for the orientation days, Thursday and Friday. | New students are to register Wednesday, enrollment will be Saturday and classes start Monday morning. More than 6000 students |are expected to enroll. Two new programs will be inaugurated this fall, President Herman B Wells said. | Faculty members will personally | advise the 1800 freshmen in selecting their studies. | The second project is the student | health service which will provide | | clinical facilities with attendant] { physicians nurses, 24-hour emer- | gency service, X-ray laboratory, beds for observation cases and hos- | pitalization. |
Dillard Scholarship
NEW ORLEANS, La. Sept. 11.—| Clinton Mitcham, son of the Rev. and Mrs. James S. A. Mitcham, 1665 | Columbia Ave, Indianapolis, has | been awarded a full-tuition scholarship to Dillard University here, it was announced today. Mr, Mitcham is a Crispus Attucks High School graduate and was president of his | senior class. | |
POLICE OFFICER ARRESTED Patrolman Thomas McCormick, | | 47, today faced drunk and dis-| orderly conduct charges following | his arrest at an E. New York St filling station last night. He was | released under $11 cash bond. |
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BELGIUM DENIES 250 | NAZIS GAVE UP ARMS
BRUSSELS, Sept. French press reports that a German | military airplane had landed at a
Belgian airdrome near Haren, out-| Scotia, to meet his wife, aboard the side Brussels, and that 250 German City of Flint due soldiers had fled into Belgium and | Wednesday. (had been troops, were denied by the National | City of Flint after the Athenia was | Defense Department today.
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Mrs. Stoker is th. daughter of Mrs. C. R. Heath, Nopiesville, and a niece of Perry S. Heath, first assistant postmaster general under President McKinley. Mr. Stoker and his| | family have been in Germany for (U. P.).— | four years. Meanwhile, Wendell Sherk, 104 E. 46th St., was en route today for | Pittsfield, Mass.,, and Halifax, Nova!
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disarmed by Belgian| Mrs. Sherk was picked up by the | sunk, reportedly by a torpedo.
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NDINBURGH, Sept. 11 (U. P.. |
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Please kindly ac as my trustee. I hereby certify tae vou all My possessions tho but few I leave untae my sisters baith Maggie and Libzie. At my dath. I grant tae each an equal share | I'm yours respectfully,
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