Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 November 1939 — Page 12
LAWYER SEEKS
(CONGRESS SEAT|
Harrison’ White Announces
Candidacy for 12th District Post.
~ Harrison White, Indianapolis attorney, today announced his candi-
*
dacy for the G. O. P. nomination|
for 12th. District Congressman. ' Mr. White was an unsuccessful ~ candidate for the Republican nomination for Juvenile Court judge last
year. " “Sccialism against Americanism is the only issue the people should consider,” his announcement said. “Americanism is on the defensive ~ because socialism has America out ~ of balance under the camouflage of Selocracy. ” e many New Deal agencies should be abolished, especially the i Adjustment Administran. 3 + y “The farmers have been haited by the AAA until they have ns . lost their individuality and free- - dom,” he charged. Mr. White said he favors the principles of the Townsend old age
pension plan. . “If there is to be such a thing.as a safety valve for distribution and ‘ balance of spending, I think that - Job should go to the older Americans in honor of gratefulness for having “lived the life,” he said. “The Townsend plan is an American plan. It's principle has been a success where- . ever fried. We should sacrifice the New Deal and give the Townsend plan a chance.”
a————————— BABY SLAIN, MOTHER HELD _ NEW YORK, Nov. 1 (U. P).—An 18-year-old unwed mother today faced charges that she killed her 10-weeks-old daughter because she was ashamed of ‘her unmarried state. 7 FIGHT rere Jou feel it—with swift-acting
COLDS 2
RE Es
Lead Drive for Local Option
Two leaders of the Indiana:
Inside Germany—
MILLION LOSE |J0BS IN GERMAN
TRADE SLOWUP
| Two: Months of Conflict Cut
= Times Photo. Anti-Saloon League’s drive for a
local option law are William F, McConn (left), president of Marion
College, Marion, and Dr, C. Ray chester College.
Carrying forward the Indiana Anti-Saloon League’s plans to obtain passage of a local option law by the 1941 Legislature, a special committee today planned to call a meeting soon of all interested groups in the state. A co-operative council is to be formed to organize and direct activities of various groups toward obtaining passage of such a law. The immediate work of the council will be to “begin work now to elect legislators in next year's elections,” offi-
cials said. Members of the special committee
are Mrs. Paul Halliday, North Manchester, representing the Women’s Christian Temperance Union; E. T Albertson, Indianapolis, State Council of Christian’ Education; the Rev. T. Fred Williams, Lafayette, the Anti-Saloon League, and Mrs. R. R. Mitchell, Indianapolis, Indiana Fed-
eration of Church Women.
Figure It Out Yourself!
foras ‘Little as
s] 612
(Including Principal and Interest)
a Month
AND A SMALL DOWN PAYMENT OF $125
ww OWN»
Plus a Half Acre of Ground
Pay Both Rent and Profit Into Your Own Pocket!
$16.72 is not only MUCH LESS than you're paviiz for rent, but every time you put out $16.72, it goes toward paying for YOUR OWN PROPERTY—not the landlord's!
The House Is Well Constructed
Entirely new, with modern plumbing throughout, plastered walls, ' completely painted and decorated interior and exterior, and mill-
constructed kitchen cabinets. of asbestos or wood siding.
__ Perfectly Located
{Lots are 15 minutes from down town Ingianaps and 3 minutes from Boia ng aisirict. Warren Central Hix h School is near free bus takes children safely to grade Fg
ACT QUICKLY!
Exteriors finished in your choice
HOW to GET THERE Go east on Washington Street to - the Post Road—then turn north to t Street: or, go east on 21st d; er, go east on 10th Street to Post Road, then north to 21st St.
SELLING OUT FAST!
OPEN DAILY, 8:30 TO 5; SUNDAYS, 10 TO 2.
Attendants at Sub-Division All Day Sunday WEEK DAYS BY APPOINTMENT
Lars
Suite
Phone: MArket PELE
1317 Merchants Bank Bldg
Keim, history professor at Man-
The committee was appointed yes-
Tterday aftermoon at a meeting of
the Anti-Saloon League and representatives of 15 .church groups at the Y. W. C. A. “This committee will spearhead our attack on the liquor traffic,” L. E. York, superintenednt of the AntiSaloon League, declared. Earlier yesterday the .Board of Trustees of the Anti-Saloon League re-elected all officers and passed a resolution to work to obtain passage of a local option law. # League officers are the Rev. Mr. Williams, president; ‘United Brethren Bishop H. H. Fout, Indianapolis, president emeritus; Edgar H. Evans, Indianapolis, vice president; the Rev. George T. King, pastor of the Emerson Avenue Baptist Church, cretary; Mrs. Lottie E. Klintworth, ndianapolis, treasurer, and L. E, York, superintendent.
BAPTISTS CONTINUE ATTENDANCE DRIVE
The Indianapolis Baptist Association Committee of 1000 will continue its study of methods to increase
church attendance during meetings tonight and Friday night at the Woodruff Place Baptist Church. Dr. Walter E. Woodbury, New York, Baptist Northern Convention evangelism director, will speak at the meetings, which are to be’ attended by members of the East Side division of the committee. Dr. Woodbury spoke before 750 members of the West Side division at Memorial Baptist Church last night. To increase attendance, he urged that church members list their excuses for not attending serv‘ices and then make a definite statement of intention. Since the campaign began Oct. 15
| attendance at 34 Baptist churches
here has increased more than 10 per cent, pastors reported.
3 MICHIGAN MEN CLAIM ‘DOF’ ‘WEALTH
LA PORTE, Ind. Nov. 1.(U. P). —Three Michigan men today entered- the competition+ for $10,000 cash found on the body of “John Doe,” an unidentified hitchhiker |S ified in La Porte County in August, They .were the fourth group to claim the victim as a ‘relative.” Two claims were still being heard in Circuit Court at Valparaiso. The newest claim was filed late yesterday by William Reeber, Detroit, who said he was a brother of “John Doe.” Alfred Schroeder, Mt. Clemens, Mich., and Walter Schroeder, Clinton, Mich., said they were “Doe’s” nephews and joined in the
claim.
You Can Depend on Arvin's Super-Abundant Heat
NSTALL NO
YOU KNOW ARVIN QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE— DON'T TAKE CHANCES WITH CHEAPLY MADE HEATERS «
WATER
(at Yealess
FOR ALL GARS AND TRUCKS
AS LOW AS
$0.95
® Quicker Heat
® Plenty Even at Low Speatis
® Heats Car All Over
'® Defrosts Windshield Ford
PAY LOW AS)
Oc
PER WEEK
any
PAY AS YOU ENJOY IT
For the car you are driving— Arvin’s the best buy of the year. Tailor-fit
installations for all and Chrysler-built cars and
Chevrolet. Universal models for
car. Installed ‘while you
wait—see us for car heating comfort.
Immedials Export Installation-We Service All Makes
(YOUR CREDIT IS'OK WITH ART
ROSE TIRE
‘ROSER Hi)
LAS
Friday and
open DAILY TOSP. M. (oF ir eo) SUNDAY T0 | 2 P.
Production and Close of ‘Factories.
THE DIAN POL
abort
Strikes Double in First Three Years Of NLRB, Says C. of C. in N. Y.
NEW YORK, Nov. 1 (U. P)— American labor engaged in more than twice ag many strikes in the first three years’ operation of the National Labor Relations Board as| in the three years before the Wagner Act which created the Board, the ‘Chamber of Commerce of New
| York State claims.
A survey by the Chkniber of Commerce disclosed ‘that in’ the three
“| calendar. years in which ’ the Board
(EDITOR'S - NOTE)—Following is the third of a series of uncensored’ articles on conditions in Germany after two months of war.” The writer is a native of ‘Brazil, Ind.) 3
. By GEORGE KIDD ' United Press Staff Correspondent BERLIN, Nov. 1.—-Two months of war have given Germany’s economic machinery a severe jolt, but have not thrown it out of gear. The major effect of the first eight weeks of hostilities were: 1. Roughly 50 per cent of Germany’s foreign trade was: cut off. '2. Industry was slowed up by the closing .of some factories ‘and thie restriction of production in many others. 3. Approximately ° 1,000,000 men were thrown out of work through
the slow-up of industry
4. Retail trade fell off more than 50 per cent. One of the most significant facts disclosed in a survey of Germany’s position is the revelation that except for butter and other fats, her food supply has not thus far been threatened. Plenty of Meat
Germany has enormous food reserves, and for months, perhaps years, she will be able to continue importing from Scandanavian states, southeastern Europe, - Russia and Italy most of the foodstuffs which she cannot herself produce. How long she can continue these imports depends on her ability to maintain her present high industrial production for export barter. Germany ‘produces more than 90 per cent of her own meat, and it has been estimated that her grain surplus this year will be 1,500,000 tons. On the other side of the balance sheet, however, the shortage of fats probably will grow more acute. Gerthany’s whaling fleets, with.-a combined capacity of more than 100,000 tons of Thale oil, undoubtedly will no loner venture into the Arctic, where they would fall, prey to British raiders.
Short on Iron and Oil
The war also will deprive Germany of most of her annual catch of 300,000 tons of fish from the North Sea. Her Baltic catch is about 30,000 tons annually. The war created two other important shortages in Germany — iron and oil. Iron is as important to industry as oil is to the war machine. Thus far the war has cost Germany about two-thirds of her iron ore impétts, representing almost one-quarter of her entire consumption. Some 12,000,000 tons of iron ore formerly imported annually from France, North Africa, Brazil and Newfoundland have been cut
off. ; ; The bulk of the remainder of German ore imports has been coming from Sweden.
Qil Problem Crucial
Oil is one of German's most serious war problems. German military experts have estimated that 12,000,000 tons of oil—some estimates are higher— will be needed to supply the Reich in war time. Today, Germany can provide less than 30° per cent of that amount from her own resources. Rumania and Russia are. the likeliest sources for the balance of Germany’s oil needs. Rumania annually disposes of a 6,000,000-ton surplus. It is questionable, however, whether Germany will be able to transport this amount. Neutral experts have estimated that only about half of it could be. brought into the Reich by way of Se Danube River. Russia will probably have a surplus of about 1,000,000 tons of oil but neutral experts question whether she will be willing to neglect her own reserves by exporting it all Here, too,. the problem of transportation arises. The war further weakened Germany’s already shaky position in regard to copper. The Reich produces only about one-eighth of her normal needs. The war has now cut off the bulk of her imports,
| which came principally from Africa,
Chile and the United States. As for other metals, German will have ‘to depend upon Russia for
her increased manganese require-|
ments, on Hungary, Jugoslavia, Greece and Italy for bauxite; and on- Turkey, Jugoslavia and Greece for chromium. Poland’s zinc resources made Germany self-suffi-cient in that respect. The Allied blockade has cut off the Reich’s rubber supply, and she
can supply only about one-third |
of her needs with artificial rubber, buna.
TOMORROW-—Nazis well nourished, but some of food not so tasty.
ACCEPT HAMMOND BID
WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (U. P).— The Public Buildings Administration announced today that a low bid. of $379,700 for reconditioning the postoffice at Hammond, Ind., was made by James McHugh, Chicago.
Children's SNIFFLES J
and sniffing. | has me tenia, opt 's chest, 1 local cir 7 tion Jill tmpreve Io a] bioos cold ymforts more stig effectively. ER ‘that Ds ny ou | member i you + For Discomforts of
has operated, 1936 ‘to’ 1938, there were 9684 strikes, against 4932 in the years 1932 to 1934, before the Wagner Act became law.
Copies May Be Sent Smith
Lewis Gwyn, chairman. of the Chamber's fact-finding committee, will move at the monthly ‘meeting tomorr ip that copies of the survey be sent Rep. Howard W. Smith (D. Va.), chairman of the House Committee which is investigating the operations of NLRB. Due allowance was made, the report said, for the fact that 1932 was the low for the depression and 1937 ‘the year of strongest recovery. Analyzing the outcome of the strikes in the two periods, the Chamber found that in the 1936-
1938 period: : 1. The percentage of strikes set-
tled by compromise decreased to an average of 28.4 per cent, compared with 31.7 per cent in the earlier period. 2. The percentage of strikes won by workers increased to an average of 44.1 per cent compared with 30.8 per cent in the earlier span of years. 3. The percentage of strikes in which employers won decreased to an average of 234 per cent frém
Complaints on Employers Up
The Chamber stated that the number of complaints against employers totaled 865 in the first eight months of operation of the Wagner ‘Act, and increased to 6807 complaints in the 1938 fiscal year. “It is interesting to note,” the Chamber said, “that during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1938, mote complaints against employers
OPEN WELFARE SERIES MONDAY
Gottschalk First Speaker as ~ Ball State Offers Six Lectures.
MUNCIE, Ind, Nov. .1—Thurman A. Gottschalk, State Welfare Administrator, will give the first
in a series of six lectures on pub-
lic welfare, at Ball State Teachers College Monday. Arranged. by Dr. Robert LaFollette, head of the social science department at the college, the lectures will be open to representatives of Muncie welfare agencies and interested organizations. © ’ Others. who are Virgil Sheppard, Welfare Administrator,
Nov. 1T;
‘| Miss Mildred Arnold, director of the
children’s division of the Welfare Department, Nov. 9; Dr. Oliver W. Greer, director of the division of services for crippled; children, Nov. 13; Dr. George C. Stevens, director of the division of medical care, Nov. 14, and Charles B. Marshall, director of the division of general administration, Nov. 17.
ROTARY GIVES HELM
C. D. Alexander, president of the Bemis Bros. Bag Co. and of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, was installed as president of the Rotary Club yesterday. Luther L. Dickerson, Indianapolis Public Li-/ brary librarian, is retiring president. Other new officers are Dr, Russell S. Henry, first vice president; Aud-
dent; William C. Bertermann, secre-
tary; Gwynn F. Patterson, treasurer,
and Charles C. Branson, sergeant-at-arms.
33.8 per cent in the 1932-34 period. |
speak are ; assistant State|-
TO C. D. ALEXANDER
ley S. Dunham, second vice presi-
alleging unfair labor practices were filed with the Board than the total number of strikes (6760) in the United States in the six calendar years preceding the Wagner Act.”
Chrysler Factory Closed
NEW CASTLE, Ind, Nov. 1 (U. P.).—The Chrysler factory 'here, manufacturing parts for the Detroit assembly lines, was shut down indefinitely at 6:30 g. m. today, throwing approximately 3500 men out of work. - Officials were unable to say when work would be resumed and said the shutdown was caused by a strike at Detroit factories. The plant here had been. working approximately half time for the past ten days.
|
lightful, swift-acting relief from coughs
DOUBLE OATH FOR TEACHER. LANSING, Mich, Nov.”"1 (U, 2).
lend of ¢ Michigan teach in public schoo!
s this fall,
—Michigan school ‘teachers had to! Legislature passed a. law requiring? file an oath of allegiance to fhe tase to file the oaths with the state
Constitutions of the United States
Advertisement
Mother, Mix Your Own Cough Remedy. It’s Fine. ‘|
Quick, Comforting Relief. Saves. Money. Easily Mix
This well-known home-mixed medicine costs very little, but it gives de-
due to colds. It takes but a moment to prepare—it’ s 80 easy a child could do it. And it saves real money. Make ‘a syrup by stirring 2, cups granulated ‘sugar and one cup of water a few moments until dissolved. No cooking is needed. Then get 214 ounces of Pinex from any druggist. Pour this into a pint bottle, and add your syrup. Thus you
tof |make a
fall pint of really splendia cough aedy and -you get abo ue, ¢ times: as much for your money. It never spoils, lasts a family a long ; and children love its taste.
superintendent of public instruction,
And for quick, blessed relief, you'll
say it is truly wo erful. It ob markable action. It loosens the phlegm, soothes the irritated membranes, and’ helps clear the air pa: Pinex is a compo Norway Pine and palatable guaiaco in concentrated form, ‘well-kn its prompt action in coughs chial irritations. Money it doesn’t please you in Bevery. yay. :
un
‘bas a re-
containi
own for and bron-
refunded it
THE MORRIS PLAN PAYS 3%% INTEREST ON SAVINGS
"Stop Youn Bi
Is there a Grouch in Your Home, too?
©® SURE Bill and Mary loved each other. But of fate. : Bill had become irritable, grouchy. Every meal ended 2 in unpleasant bickerings. When Mary asked Bill for the reason he exclaimed, “Bills, Bills and more Bills!
1
We can’t seem to get ahead!
Now, Mary was a smart little wife who read the papers daily. She had read about the MORRIS PLAN a place where people could get loans in a dignified, businesslike way, at a reasonable, businesslike cost.
So she told Bill about the MORRIS PLAN.
Bill (who was.no fool, either) investigated and found’ one of the seven MORRIS PLAN Loans exactly what he needed. He secured a MORRIS PLAN Loan easilyand quickly, at a surprisingly moderate cost. He paid off all his other bills, and now his worries are over, for he can meet the small MORRIS PLAN paysients without
a bit of trouble.
And so Mary and Bill lived happily ever after—even ‘as you know YOU could live if you consolidated all your pestering little bills and paid them off on the liberal terms of a Morris Plan Loan. It will certainly be worth your while to find out! A visit to our offices, a telephone call or postal card brings complete details.
~The drink everybody knows
‘Whoever youare... whatever you do. . . . wherever
‘you may be,.. .when you think of refreshment you welcome an - ice-cold Coca-Cola. For Coca-Cola
5 uss refreshment—familiar to everybody.
* COCA-COLA BOTTLING co.
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
