Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 March 1940 — Page 12

Board in 1893.

PAGE12 | Rare Boo LM de i in

Miss Helen Rogers, State Welfare, Department librarian, has a job of cataloging 65 boxes [of rare old books. They were inherited by the department from its predecessor, the

old State Board of Charities. Miss Rogers has found from the material she already has cataloged that most of the material is rar¢ and some of it extremely valuable. Most of the books and pamphlets

s Show Progress

30 Years in Same

: | Welfare Work

According to Miss Rogers, |

iss Greeley kept up an active rs is

of publications with charitable | departments in pther states and added these to her library. ¢ The collection also includes older publications from state agencies and private welfare groups. Miss Greeley purchased and kept in the permanent library the books that

| were accepted from time to time as | standard authorities on charities.

Miss Rogers believes the collection will be of wide interest among social workers because it will help measure |

‘the progress made since the 1890s.

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SEEK TO ENLIST |

IN INDIANA TOUR

Operations G Group Members Discuss 1940 Program For Flying Fraternity.

The operations committee of t. > All-Indi day for | a busy 1940 program for members of the “Hoosier aviation traternity.” At a ceting in the Hotel Washington yesterday, representing the leaders in ‘all prancies of private 1d commercial aviation [in the state discussed ways to interest the 300 Indiana. CA A student pilots in the Tcur activities. Walker W. Winslow. ‘pera ons committee chairman, pointed out that in [June tine 300 student pilots in the CAA ‘training courses in colleges and universities throughout the; state will become full-fledged fliers. Committee members discussed possible dates and itinerary for the organizdtion’s annual state-wide air tour and predicted a record number of plane and pilot entrants. Last year more than 50 planes tr k part. Among committee members attending the meeting were Walter Smith, Indianapolis Aero Club president; George Gamsjaeger, gales).

School; Robert shank, Hoosier Airport president; Capt. L. I. Aretz, superintendent of Purdue University Airport; Maj. Charles E. Cox Jr., director of CAA student training third region, Chicago; Capt. Clarence Cornish, Ft. Wayne Airport superintendent and chairman of the Governor’s fact finding committee on aviation: I. J. (Nish) Dienhart, Indianapolis Municipal Airport superintendent, and Col. Roscoe Turner.

LIST LAKE COUNTY VETERANS’ GRAVES

Times Special

HAMMOND, Ind., March 22.—

in’ Lake County through a WPA project is nearly 80 per cent com- | plete, John Moldovan of East. Chicago, past First District commander of the American Legion, said today. When registration is ‘com-

8 plete, a file will be kept in the

Crown Point courthouse and a mas-

ter file will be maintained in the World War Memorial Building in Indianapolis

Eyes Sore? Tired?

| Here s prompt relief! Bathe eyes with | Laveptik. Burning, inflammation, sore- | mess, tired, strained feeling, * itching {from local irritations all relieved. Also Vs soothes, refreshes. No harmful 18s. 25 years success. Get Lavoptik | wday. (Eye cup Included. ) All druggists,

STUDENT PILOTS |

the committee|

manager for the Roscoe Turner. “Air

Registration of all veterans’ graves

a Air Tour made plans t7-| [&

That bird stuck in the bonnet of film actress Tamara Desni might be a love bird. This picture was taken just after she recently left a London registry, following her marriage to Roland Gillétt, film executiye. Miss Desni recently di--vorced actor Bruce Seton.

COUNTY'S APRIL CCC QUOTA 131

Youths to Be Enlisted on One Day, Thomas L. Neal Explains. Marion County’s CCC enrollment quota for April has been set at 131, Thomas L. Neal, Marion County Welfare director, said today. The quota for the state for the month is 1230 as compared with 1520 in January and almaost 2000 six months ago. The reductions:are in conformity with President Roosevelt’s recommendation that the national strength of the corps be reduced from 300,080 to 280,400. Because of the lowered quota, it is planned to enlist all youths on April 11 instead of the tormer twoday enrollment period, Mr, Neal said. } Four: Indiana camps are to ‘be discontinued. They are at Angola, Lagro, Brookville and Waveland. With the reduced quota it will oe poussiie LO s.awOl all dud youths in Hoosier camps, Mr. Neal said. Formerly, a part of Indiana's enrollment had been sent to camps

in other states.

ENE a LIT

336-337-339-341-343 W. WASHINGTON ST.

_< “AMERICAN BEAUTY” GAS STOVES Ey

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AMERICAN

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“THE MODERN

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“AMERICAN BEAUTY" ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS

LABOR CONCERN 'g

SHOWN OVER FBI

Fear Watch at Plants With Army Orders Might Lead To Union Persecution.

(Third of a Series)

By THOMAS L. STOKES Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, March 22.—Labor organizations have shown concern,

f |in their publications and otherwise,

over a new activity assumed by the vision of the FBI—providing

have Army and Navy orders. J. Edgar Hoover, FBI chief, told

tee in January that there were then

of greater emergency there will be apnroximately 12,000.” While this supervision is designed to protect plants from sabotage and theft of documents, according to Mr. Hoover, labor organizations fear that FBI agents who might have an antilabor bias would -use their | positions and their close contact with the management to persecute union members.

Report Employees Dropped

Already, according to reports from Detroit, employes lish that they are Americans have been dropped in automobile factories which have war orders. : The FBI head said his agents were calling in corporation executives and discussing plant protection methods with them. Asked

if this service was limited to “casual conferences,” he replied: | “Yes; but ultimately it will be a matter of inspection. Our function will be to survey the plant to see that the necessary protective steps have been taken, or to see that the plant does install necessary provisions to protect the plant against sabotage or destruction.”

Lack of Protection Cited

The FBI, he said, has been getting “excellent co-operation” from many factories. When Rep. William P. Lambertson (R. Kas.) said he ° thought plants had efficiency people and private bureaus which furnished protection, Mr. Hoove replied that this was. true only to a certain degree, as regards fire protection, but not against sabotage or destruction. “I have been very much surprised at the absolute lack of protective measures in mdny of our great industrial plants,” he added. The FBI supervision presumably envisages a rather intimate knowledge of the plant personnel, and in the mind of labor this is connected with the broad interpretation familiar in the past as to what constitutes “radicals” or tendencies.” ; Veteran labor leaders recall’ how, as an aftermath of the “red raids” of 1919-20. when 5000 persons were arrested in dramatic forays, the FBI was used in the 1919 steel strike, the subsequént coal strikes, and the railway shopmen’s strike of 1922 — which Attorney General Harry Daugherty broke by getting a sweeping injunction that tied labor hand and foot. In this strike the FBI, under William J. Burns, investigated 2000 individuals.

Investigated Senators

‘FBI also investigated Senators and rifled their offices during the in-

-jvestigation of the Justice Depart-

"A

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a Supreme Court Justice, was appointed Attorney General in 1924 by President Coolidge, he put a stop to such activities and reduced the | Bureau's functions to those sanctioned by law. In a statement May 15, 1924, he said in part: “The Bureau of Investigation is not concerned with political or other opinions of individuais. It is concerr.ed only with their conduct and then only such conduct as is forbidden by the laws of the United States = When a police system passes beyond these limits, it is

‘| dangerous to the proper adminis-

tration of justice and to human liberty, which it should be our first concern to cherish. Within them, it shculd rightly be a terror to the wrongdoer.” At that time J. Edgar Hoover, who succeeded Mr. Burns at the head of the FBI, submitted a memorandum to Assistant Attorney General William J. Donovan in which he said:

Jackson Takes Stand

bered that the activities of communists have not up to the present time constituted a violation of the Federal statutes, and consequently, the

Recently, in ordering a re-invest-igation of the Spanish Loyalist ar-. rests at Detroit, Attorney General Jackson declared that the FBI would never, as long as he was Attorney General, persecute anybody for opinion, political, economic or

look into the general intelligence division and its activity.

grown,

CLAIMS STOLEN: CAR: | IN JAM]

SOUTH BEND, Ind., March 22.— ||

WINDS UP

Times Special

headquarters to claim it. When he appeared, police booked him on charges of keeping a gaming device. In examining machine, police said they found a quantity of baseball, gio tan and hockey lottery cke

) : ; | onic = al38

rv dh ITe|

FREE DRESSING

|| west sheer |

POULTRY

11 N West St.

re-created general intelligence & : or | | protection of industrial plants which | |

540 such plants and that “in a time

by Rep. Clarence Cannon (D. Mo.) |

“radical |

A 37-year-old local resident reported || to police his car was stolen. The following night, the machine was| recovered and the man went to}

: ol

SABOTAGE DRIVE,

1a

the House Appropriations Commit-| |

who can’t estab-|

{ It was under Mr. Burns that the| i

cluding Senator Burton K. Wheeler When Harlan Fiske Stone, now |

“1t is, of course, to be remem- |]

and other ultra-radicals

Denartment of Justice, theoretical- |§ ly, has no right to investigate such | activities as there has been no vio- |} | lation of Federal laws.”

social, and indicated that he would |

NEXT—How FBI authority has ||

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