Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 January 1940 — Page 2

‘NLRB LEADERS HERE ACCUSED OF C. I. 0. BIAS

Advised Organization How To Win Elections, Says Former Examiner.

ZL'imes Special WASHINGTON, Jan. 6.—Theodore H. Freter, former field examiner for the Indianapolis regional office of the National Labor Relations Board, who “testified that the Indianapolis office was operated with C. I. O. bias, was termed a “disqualified,” disgruntled, discharged employee by NLRB officials today. Appearing late yesterday as a witness hefore the House committee conducting the NLRB investigation, Mr. Preter pictured Robert C. Cowarill, Indianapolis NLRB regional director, and his staff as being antiemployer and anti-A. F. of L. . The gangling 33-year-old former G-Man, who is now chief guard at the Federal penal institution at nearby Occoquan, Va., spent a 60day probationary period as NLRB field man at Indianapolis in 1937,

Times Photo.

BRAIN TRUST OUTLINED FOR “WNUTT DRIVE

|Eastern Manager Optimistic

At Outlook Despite Comment on Secretary Huli.

By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Staff Writer i WASHINGTON, Jan. 6.—Although Secretary of State Cordell Hull won the year-end newspaper decision as allegedly being President Roose~ velt’s choice for the Democratic Presidential nomination, Oscar R. Ewing, Paul V. McNutt’s Eastern campaign manager, remains ss optimistic as ever about the Hoosier candidate’s chances. Iq Here this week from his. New York City law office, “Jack” Ewing bustled about taking preliminary steps toward building a policy board for the McNutt-for-President campaign. : i Under the present plan, a leader will be selected for each field, such

Calvin R. Underdown, chief

played varsity football and basketball for Washington High School he learned to fight for a goal. He's carrying that lesson with him into the U. S. Navy. David is 18 and wants to be 2 Navy aviator at the Naval Air Station at Pensacola, Fla. Qualifications for that station include two!

David H. Redenbaugh « « + takes the oath of allegiance from

When David H. Redenbaugh|the Navy.

S

Times Photo.

yeoman of the U. S. Navy.

Lieut. Comm. Joshua C.. Shively was impressed by David's’ record and his ambitions. He placed him in charge of nine other boys to be taken to the U. S. Naval Training Station at Great Lakes, Ill, where they now are. David and his mother live at 761 King St. He was born in Indian-

SATURDAY, JAN. 6, 1940

OPTOMETRISTS TO OPEN SESSION "HERE SUNDAY

State Convention to Discuss Public Health ‘and Public Relations.

The Indiana Association of Optometrists wil meet here tomorrow afternoon at Hotel Severin for its 43d annual convention. Public health and public relations will be major topics of discussion. ‘Delegates will register Sunday morning and. officers, board members and zone chairmen will held a pre-convention session. Dr. B., H. Kaplan, Michigan City, is president. Convention speakers Sunday will be -Dr. Glenn A. Fry, Ohio ‘State University, M. -J. Julian, Better

‘Vision Institute president, New York.

City, and Dr. C. W. Rutherford, ophthalmologist, - Indiaffapolis. Election of officers and discus= sion of a public relations program will high-light the business session to open Monday morning at 9 in the Rainbow Room. Dr. L. N. Wine-

but failed to win a permanent ap- While the Democrats are reveling in the luxury of their $25-a-plate Jackson Day dinner at the |as business, agriculture, labor, etc.,|years college training. apolis and has lived here all his|brenner of Muncie, president of pointment. Claypool Hotel Monday night, the Indianapolis Young Republicans will stage this burlesque scene as a |and he in turn will choose his own| He and’ his mother, Mrs. Ila L.|life. trustees of the public relations diCharges NLRB-A. F. L. Feud rival attraction at the same hotel with a 25-cents-a-plate dinner composed of crackers and milk. Por- |staff of experts to formulate that Redenbaugh, live alone. At Washington he went out for|vision, will preside over the discuss He declared that while in Indian-| traying Abraham Lincoln surveying the milk i crackers scene is Russell I. Richardson. Mrs. Gertrude |particular policy. : | David couldn't afford to go to basketball first during his sopho-|sion.

apolis he was instructed never to| Norris is offering a swig of milk to Glen W. Funk, A : Purdue University, where he wanted more year. He made the varsity,| Reports will be made by Dr.

McNutt Sees Frankfurter

"and Mr. Watson, his chief assistant,

let an employer see charges made

against ‘him. He added that whenever a C. I. O. union won an -elec- : tion, the staff celebrated it as vic-

tory; when the A. F. of L. won they were gloomy. “There was something of a feud at that time between the Indianapolis unit of the American Federation of Labor, probably the Indianapolis

CONVICTED DRIVER

GETS SECOND ‘JOLT’.

B Ul | D S 0 H 00 LS Landon. Jones, Bainbridge, was ‘confronted with a second, unex-

| pected charge when arraigned before Municipal Judge John McNelis

Central Labor Union, I am not just 1386 ClasSiooms Added yesterday and it cost him $10.

Sure what its designation was, and the eleventh regional (NLRB) office,” Mr. Freter testified. von

Charges Untrue, Cowdrill Declares

Robert H. Cowdrill, NLRB re- buildings have been constructed in

Since 1933, Report by U. S. Shows.

Two hundred seventy-six school|stop after an accident Dec. 23 at

Convicted of failing to stop after an accident at 16th St. and Capitol Ave. Dec. 24, he was fined $10 and costs. / That case disposed of, a new affidavit charging him with failing to

30th St. and College Ave was filed and he was fined another $10 and

gional director here, today denied Indiana since 1933 through the as- costs. ‘The $10 costs in this case charges made by Theodore H. sistance of Public Works Adminis- were suspended.

Freter, that hey“threw aside” A. F. of ‘L. cases and handled C. I. O. cases expeditiously.

tration funds.

The new buildings have added Mr. Freter, discharged field ex-|1386 classrooms with accommoda- BEQUEST T0 RILEY

aminer for the Labor Board and |tions for 5544C students to the edunow a Federal Prison Guard at Oc-|cational facilities of the state. These coquan, Va., worked in the regional figures were mage public in a report office here for several months and |Just issued by the Federal Works

was discharged for “ineffciency,”|Agency in Chicago, of which the PWA is a part.

The estimated cost of these new Preter’s charges,” Mr. Cowdrill said. education buildings was more than He also added that a statistical|39 million dollars. record of the number of A. F. of L.|totaled $17.300,000.

‘according to Mr. Cowdrill. “There is no truth in any of Mr.

HOSPITAL APPROVED

Times Special

CONNERSVILLE, Ind. Jan. 6.—

PWA granis|James Whitcomb Riley Hospital af During its first! Indianapolis, Indiana University and

and C. I. O. cases handled while year PWA made grants providing| warren Lodg: 15, F. & A. M. of Mr. Freter was here would not sub-|for 30 per cent of the total cost, but|sonnersville are to receive $12,971.18

stantiate Fr. Freter’s charges.

annual convention as to pass a resolution critizing the board. 1 don’t know which was the cause and which the result in that feud, of course, but when I came there I was immediately struck with the fact that the A. F. of L. cases were

after that contributed 45 per cent. The new buildings

each from the estate of Miss Emma

included 56 ! ; high, 55 elementary, 34 consolidated, Orextrude Boe, ‘Who died here in

8 3 ; | 3 : 1 The union went so. far in an s6” neq elementary and high, and. 11 vocational and other training schools; 37 college buildings; 20, ved by Judge G. Edwin Johnston auditorium-gymnasiums; five public| or pavette Circuit Court. The belibraries and 22 combinations of two quest to Riley Hospital honors the or more of the above buildings. Fourteen new

The final report of her will, ordering the payments, has been ap-

‘memory of her father and mother,

Were Gg. W. and Elizabeth Booe; the be-

not being handled at all, and the|erected at Indiana University and|gyest to the university is to be a

C. I. O. cases were. “When an A. F. of L. case would

come in, very often Mr. Cowdrill ; 2 would look at it, throw it aside with TRADE TREATY WITH ; some remark about its being ‘one

of those damned A. F. of L. cases

who 1 believe was formerly the regional director there, would make similar derogatory remarks. In fact,

11 at Purdue University.

WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 (U. P.).— | County.

of her brother, Charles E. Booe, and the bequest to the lodge is in memory of a nephew, the late Elvis P. Roysdon. The scholarship fund is to be

- | scholarship fund bearing the name

ARGENTIN A AT END used to help worthy students need-

ing financial aid, preferably those from Connersville and Fayette

BRITISH MATE SUES SCARLETT

: a | Public Reaction to Divorce May Rule G. W. T. W. Profit or Loss.

HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 6 (U. P.).— Only the David O. Selznick Studio felt qualms today over Herbert Leigh Holman's suit to divorce Actress Vivien Leigh. Miss Leigh just shrugged when informed that her husband, a London ‘lawyer, had sued, accusing her of misconduct and citing actor Laurence Olivier as co-respondent. ~ Olivier, whose wife, British Actress Jill Esmond, also has petitioned for divorce, simply said “it isn't my place to comment.” ; But the Selznick Studio feared for what the notoriety might do to their $3,700,000 production, “Gone With the wind.” Public Reaction Uncertain

They cast Miss Leigh as the southern spitfire, Scarlett O’Hara— indirectly because of Oliver—and on her performance and box-office popularity depends greatly whether the picture will gross the $10,000,000 necessary to show even a slight profit. ; They have no way of predicting public reaction. The publicity may mean the difference between profit and. loss—and it could just as well be profit. Such an event has been known to boost films in the past. The twist would be almost too ironical even for Hollywood if loss should result, however. Because it was when Miss Leigh came to ‘Hollywood to visit Oliver that she

Mr. Ewing expects this “brain and then the strategists of the

‘|campaign will decide what is polit-

ically feasible. The Federal Security Administrator himself has laid low for some time now, but has been busy abscrbing ideas of which there is a perpetual epidemic in Washington. | Some of these have come fiom. such brilliant intellects as Justice Felix Frankfurter of the United States Supreme Court, with whom the former Indiana Governor had

‘week. Speaks at Raleigh, N. C.

Next Monday night, Mr. McNutt will make his most simon pure political speech since he has taken over the Federal Security Agency, the occasion being the Jackson Day dinner at Raleigh, N. C. oo Mr. Ewing expects great things to come from this. He proudly displays a reprint of a column from the Richmond (Vt) Times-Dispatch to show how well his candidate is being received down South. i The column is a daily feature written by Thomas Lomax Hunter and carries the title “As It Appesrs to The Cavalier.” Praising both McNutt’s appearance and ability as a Presidential candidate, Mr. Hunter stresses particularly his political availability.

“Looks Like Conciliator”

“The Cavalier” concludes: { “In a little while we shall be akle to see the effect of what is an effort to attain party harmony. If it sueceeds we shall hear less and less of party division, and more and more of party unity. Both sides must be willing and ready to make concessions. Neither faction must demand unconditional surrender. They must meet on middle ground. Mr. MeNutt looks like a good conciliator. President Roosevelt, at his first press conference in the New Year, pooh-poohed the Hull stories, shortly after the Secretary of State himself | had thrown them down. '

trust” to base its proposals on facts!

¢c¢ylinder blocks a day. It uses about

‘wheelbarrows full of green sand, two

to continue in mathematics and engineering studied at Washington High. He was graduated in June, 1939. : Then he learned that men could

rise through the ranks and be assigned to Pensacola. So he joined

© Chances are pretty good that the engine block for that new low-priced ear youre going to buy next summer left Indianapolis this morning on a freight car. | The American Foundry Co. at 1535

Naomi St. is one of a half-dozen private plants in the country that make engine blocks. It is the only one in Indiana. It makes all the blocks for one of the largest selling low-priced automobiles. The plant turns out about 2000

367 big ladles of steel and iron, 4400

carloads of Lake Michigan white sand and employs about 375 persons to make the 2000 units.

Founded in 1912 : The company was founded in 1912,

Blaine H. Miller and Guy E. Street took it over. The company was at 531 S. Warman Ave. then. That plant burned in 1930 and was moved

to the present address. In the last eight years developments in process of manufacture and improved methods have made it possible to produce an engine block one-fourth the former price. {The workmen are artisans in sand. | Metal patterns for the sand molds are made by the automobile manufacturer. About 25 separate pieces are cast. The big ones are the barrel, water jacket, port, tappet hous-

Plant Here Makes Engine Blocks for Low-Cost Car

a four-hour luncheon one day this|

form the outline of the completed

ing the completed block. The flames

above the block as it is conveyed

and the edges are smoothed. The

look like knights. They wear allsteel sandals.

In 1919 the present management of |:

won his letter and held down the guard spot on the team which won the 1936 City championship. He also played football as a quarterback in his junior and senior years, winning his letter and playing on the varsity his final year.

poured into the completed mold. The sand cools the metal enough to

engine block. The heat of the metal ignites the oil in the sand. The sand dries and runs out, leav-

from the ignited oil rise about a foot

out of the building to cool. A couple of hours later it is cool enough to handle—with gloves. The block is cleaned with sand blowers

workmen in this part of the plant

The blocks weigh about 190 pounds ard one dropped on an unprotected foot would mean one less foot. Lo :

Kaplan and the following additional officers: Dr. H. F.°Garton, La Porte, first vice president and chairman of the executive committee; Dr, W, L. Van Osdol, Indianapolis, second vice president and membership chairman; Dr. R. H. Scofield, Terre Haute, third vice president and

legislative chairman; Di. Clarence:

W. Morris, Ft. Wayne, fourth vice president and chairman of publicity; Dr. E. C. Doering, Gary, fifth vice president and educational chairman, and Dr. A. C. Anderson, Ft. Wayne,

secretary-treasurer and magazine

editor. Following a luncheon Monday noon, Dr. Marguerite Thoma of Milwaukee, Wis., will open the after noon session with a lecture on ope tometrists’ contribution to. solving the reading problem in Wisconsin public schools. Dr. Thoma was

formerly Marguerite Fry of Sey-

mour, Ind. Dr. Irvine Lueck of Rochester, N. Y., will speak on the same program. The convention banquet will be Monday at 6:30 o’clock at the roof garden followed by an address by Dr. W. B. Needles, president of the Northern Illinois College of Optometry, Chicago, on “How Optoms=

‘etry Will Fit Into a National Health

Program and What Qualifies Op=tometry to Take Part in Such a Program.” ;

T

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Those stories were written in 1939, ing and fly-wheel cores. he laughed, and “I hope that the White Sand for Molds

writers have turned ove i Introduced fo Agent for 1940.” The writers, oa Dow Jour White sand is used for these

He introduced his agent to the dicted a Hull-Jackson or Hull-Fay- molds. It is cleaned and dried, then dark-haired beauty with the green ley ticket with F. D. R.’s hlessing, | mixed with oil to make it stick toeyes and the hour-glass waist. The |did no such thing, however. _ |gether—one part oil to about 45

agent was Myron Selznick. He took Message Brings Comment parts sand. It is blown into a pat-

é g ‘her to his brother, Producer David- : : i. CAUSES ‘INCIDENT’ |o. selznick, then testing hundcds When the President praised the|le'n under pressure and then vio _ of girls for the vital Civil War role. | reciprocal trade treaties in his mes-|°'? ed so that it drops ou

“ y »!sage to 0 y breaking the mold. Dave, meet Scarlett O’Hara,”|Sag Congress, stories popped out Nears azo they tamped the sand

fhe > - 3 Les puelly ye: i Bl i Miss Booe also left, bequests of | stepped into the organdie gowns of Watson.” > for a reciprocal trade agreement $1297.12 to the Con ille First Fr T Was Crivicized’ with Argentina. Methodist Church Tors ¥ .Upon questioning by Edmund| While oe proposed Beane) i ’ L Toland, committee counsel, Mr.|Was regarded as one o e severes : Freter detailed his investigation of tests of the trade, treaty program, ATTACK ON BRITON the Bartell overall case at Rich-|officials saw in its collapse relief mond, Ind. from growing criticism by agricul“In that case, it seemed to me tural interest at the moment when that almost all the cases would fail,” Congress begins a fight over its exhe reported. “They were individual | tension.

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‘ELINED Men’s EPAIRED | A=. EFITTED | Womens

Clothes SHANGHAI, Jan. 6 (U. P.).—An

J

an active part in all the question-

* quarters until at last he saw the

. discrimination cases. I gave my rea-

Secretary of State Cordell Hull attempt to assassinate

eas i hillips, British Secretary. of the sons why I didn’t think they would |appears as the first witness before |P M : stand oy 1 was criticized I the House Ways and Means Com- Municipal Council, the governing got back to the office for those find- [mittee Thursday to urge. that his body of Shanghai's International ings, but not very seriously. Not as Pet program be continued beyond Settlement, quickly developed into a

in the case of the Roy S. Bailey Co., [the June 12 expiration date.

where I was sent back, after having

made my report, to reinvestigate. H ATCH ASK S TIG HTER

Apparently in line with the instruc-. tions I had just received that the union was always right. But I still came back with the same findings and the same recommendations,

British-Japanese incident today. Two gunmen, said to have heen Chinese, fired four revolver shots at Mr, Phillips. He escaped injury.

The gunmen fied but police of the ‘NO P OLITICS’ ACT International Settlement said the

Japanese - controlled = gendarmerie

WASHINGTON, Jan. § (U. P.).— | admitted that it was holding three

‘whereupon another field examiner Senator Carl A. Hatch (D. N. M) Suspects.

was sent out to investigate.” Prodded further by Mr. Toland, the witness charged that both Mr.

of L. or “independent” unions, “asking whether the C. I. O. had a majority there and advising the C. I. O.

leader that he had better get busy Federal and organize, because they couldn’t|making rank.

completed the final draft of an amendment today that: would ex-|to them. Cowdrill and Mr. Watson would talk | tend prohibitions of his “no polito C. 1. O. union leaders in regard to| tics” petitions for elections filed by A. F.| agencies financed wholly or in part with Federal funds. The existing act applies only to below policyThe state amend- of Will H. Smith, U. S. Collector

British military authorities demanded surrender of the suspects

a —

act to state employees of INCOME TAX CREW

WILL TOUR STATE

Deputy collectors from the office

hold off an election much longer, | ment will be introduced in the Sen-|of Internal Revenue in Indiana,

nd things of that sort, and to let [ate Monday. 2 8 Under the proposed amendment, state Monday to assist taypayers in

Federal funds would be withdrawn filling out 1939 income tax returns. from state agencies if their employees violate the prohibitions. The|ers are invited to use it to avoid

him know when they had a major

ity.” : : Returns -to Capital

will begin a two-week tour of the

“This service is free and taxpay-

When Mr. Cowdrill informed Mr. |." qo0c fot a ; : VL ) i pply to voting or pri-|the last-minute rush and long waitFreter that his appointment Was|,,te expression of personal convic. ing lines at various offices,” Mr.

not made permanent, according to.

Mr. Freter, he added: “I didn’t

Smith said.

choose. you, you know. You were wished on me by Washington.” So he came back to Washington to learn more about it, haunting the outer offices at NLRB head-

assistant secretary, Mrs. Bee Stern. = Mr. Freter said: “She told me that nothing was ever. in the record against me or my work except that the board— and now I am trying to quote the exact words—‘the board felt that your family background is not such as would fit you for this sort of work.’ That was all she would say.” * Mrs. Stern reported today that Mr. Freter had “obviously misunderstood” what she had said. “IT do not recall my exact words, put I probably said he did not have the proper background,” she explained. “By that I did not mean family background, but his own previous experience.” . _ Halleck on Committee ‘Rep. Charles A. Halleck (R. Ind) is a member of the committee conducting the investigation and takes

08 er hearing the Freter {testimony, the committee adjourned until Monday. _ At the same time, the Labor ‘Board made public its fourth anual .report in which it denied of bias in favor of the Con-

Demonstrates Arm Brace

role.

$310,000 APPROVED FOR JOBLESS BUREAU

* Governor M. Clifford Townsend today approved allotment of $310,000 to the State Commission on Unemployment Relief, ; The appropriation is the first t be made out of the unused $1,800,000 relief fund authorized by the Legislature back in 1933. 9 The fund was never used by the Relief Comission because of heavy spending by the Federal Government in Indiana. The Relief Commission was reorganized recently, with Dudley Smith as director, to resume activities which had ‘been abandoned for more than a year. The $310,000 appropriation is for six months and will be used for certification of needy persons to WPA rolls and for distribution of surplus commodities furnished by the Federal Government. :

IRESTRAINS POLICE IN

‘BALLY ALLEY’ DRIVE

Circuit Court Judge Earl R. Cox

{today granted a temporary injunc-

tion prohibiting City police from interfering with “bally alley” devices in taverns.

He set Feb. 3 for a hearing on

the permanent injunction asked by Rollin Stewart, distributor of the mechanijcal devices. In a suit filed yesterday, Mr. Stewart denied police claims that the machines are for gambling purposes. He said he had $5000 in-

‘property loss if police confiscate them.

MISTAKEN IDENTITY HALTS FUNERAL RITE

‘BRAZIL, Ind. Jan. 6 (U. P).— The Lawson funeral home today

was seeking means of disposal of a body shipped here from Ramsey, Ill, for burial under the impression that it was William Lloyd, 66, a former Brazil coal miner, When relatives were assembled

vested in them and would suffer a

Godfrey | Myron said. Miss Leigh got the like measles pointing out that this

means the President does want Hull the treaty-maker as his successor. | Admitting that he is a man lof’ outstanding character and ability, the McNutt backers point out that Secretary Hull is far from having the zip of their 48-year-old candidate. : { 4 2 =» } SENATOR SHERMAN MINTON (D. Ind), who toured all the Army posts by plane before the session started, reports that the only Demo* cratic candidate the rank and file talks about, aside from the President, is Paul McNutt. i The Senator heard a lot of talk about Thomas E. Dewey among the Republicans, he said, and spins his own theory of why this is so. He says: “All their lives people have beer going to the movies and seeing the snappy young District Attorney clean up big bad gangsters and politicians and-gend them packing off to jail. Then ‘the reward comes by his being chosen Mayor or Governor. But even the most imaginative movie never went so far as sending the District Attorney directly to the White House.” Po

2 x = I

REP. LOUIS LUDLOW (D. Ind.) returned here pleased as Puck about

Press Club. | “It was a stormy night and the crowd wasn’t large, but I' had the most enjoynmient I ever had in making an informal speech to men who are members of a profession which I followed most of my life,” Rep. Ludlow reported. | “But best of all was the fact that they seemed to enjoy my reminis-| cences as much as I did.” ” ” ”

CLARENCE A. JACKSON, acting

the opening session., James Pen-

smuggled him in on the House floor

|and he sat through the President’s! address just as though he were aj new member of Congress, #1

» Ld »

“WILLIS AND HILLIS” will be the Indiana Republican ticket for Senator and Governor, respectively, Rep. Forest A. Harness (R. Ind.) predicted upon his return here. The latter is from Kokomo, Rep. Harness’ home town.

City-Wide

his reception at the Indianapolis |

assistant to the Federal Security! Administrator, got a prize seat for|

nan, Senator Minton’s secretary,|

in by hand. Then a good work-

LEON E"Rmcse —

man could make about eight an

hour. . Now a crew of thtee makes

1

about '150 an hour. The molds are baked four hours at from 400 to 650 degrees. Then they are painted with graphite so that when the metal is poured in the sand won't stick to it.

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The individual sand molds are

carried through the plant on conveyer belts, assembled and glued together. Men do the heavier work and women handle the lighter pieces. : The mold is placed inside two outer molds that make up the sides of the engine block. These sides are made of green sand molds that have more oil—it’s really black. Green sand is used here because it is more economical and has

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patterns by a machine called a sand slinger. The sand slinger throws sahd into the pattern at the rate of four wheelbarrows a minute. It comes out with stream of sparks that would take the skin off a hand. Metal 2900 degrees hot is then

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frist and hand muscles, weakened by diseases V