Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 March 1941 — Page 30

“PAGE 10

STRIKERS GIVEN RIGHT TO PICKET

v “Some of mitted this to our strikers

19 Treated in Hospital

those agents have ad-

Action Follows Leaders Threat to Use ‘Force, If Necessary.’

(Continued from Page One)

Fourteen strikers, four city one state policeman had received, hospital treatment, mostly for head, injuries, in the last 24 hours. | There had been widespread club-| bing, fist fighting, overturning of/ automobiles and hurling of gas bombs by both sides, the strikers! fusing gas bombs taken from over- |

now added another point to its previously announced four-point settlemen program. The fifth point, he said, called on the company to, agree lo establish “an honest sys- | turned police cars

tem of collective bargaining | Although the strike was called be- | Mr. Rife said there were no Pres=icause E. R. P. members attempted | ent indications whether svmpathy|tg hold an election of officers at the | strikes might be called at the giant plant. Mr. Riffe announced that! steel concern’s other plants | the following demands now were beA company statement said that jhe made: 1. That strikers be re-| “all steel making departments are yyrned to work without loss of sen- | working at full capacity.” [fority; (2) that the company forbid “Almost 80 per cent of the reg- ithe E. R. P. election on company ular forces are at work.” it added.|property; (3) that the company! John C. Long. Bethlehem public abide by a National Labor Relations relations director, said the normal Board decision holding the E. R. P. force on the 7 a. m, shift would be tg be a company union; (4) that the | about 8500 workers lcompany agree to a Labor Board The company, it election to determine a collective Was awaiting a reply to Governor bargaining agency for the employees. Arthur H. James’ telegram to the U. S. Mediation Board at Washington, asking immediate action “to relieve the threat of serious rioting and serious delay in defense work.” before taking any action Mr. Riffe cherged that some of | the violence attributed to the strik- | ers had been the work of “paid | agents of Bethlehem Steel.” “We know that most of the cars | wrecked in town were wrecked by paid agents of Bethlehem so as to get the State Police here he said.

was indicated,

80,000 PLANES BY 43 1S GOAL

U. S. and Britain to oo 7-Billion Bill Flown to | F. D. R. Ship.

(Continued from Page One)

FREE!

(NOTHING TO BUY)

Radi? Phile o w 1 OG Bo! 0

of the possibility that this country may convoy war supplies to Britain. “The Roosevelt Administration already is bringing the war right to our shores by opening up our shipvards for repair of belligerent vessels,” charged Senator Bennett' C. Clark (D. Mo.). “The next thing will be a demand for convoys and then an American Expeditionary Force. Things are moving very rapidly.” But Senator Claude Pepper f(D. Fla), an Administration stalwart, | doubted that the convoy questicn would come up soon. He expressed | confidence that American war ma-| terials will get to Britain “despite | Hitler's threats.” The 80,000-plane program, officials

said, undoubtedly would entail further marked expansion in air-| craft production facilities. Of the 33,000 planes now on order, 19,000 are for the United States and 14,000 for the British. The lend-lease appropriation contains funds for 10,000 more for the British. | Defense Production Chief William | S. Knudsen, who believes this coun- | try can produce twice as much as Germany when it gets started, expects this program can be completed by mid-summer 1942. Well-informed defense officials re- | vealed that Britain's original war-| aid requests totalled approximately $15,000,000,000. Informed that this

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Twenty pickets of the C. I. O.

|

Farm Equipment Workers’ Organ-

izing Committee and two policemen suffered minor injuries last night

in a scuffle at the plant gates of McCormick Works, Chicago, when homes. Above, a C. I. O. picket is from the scene of a fight. Police

the International Harvester Co.'s A. F. of L. workers left for their being carried away by his buddies details were ordered to the plant

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Hurt in Harvester Strike

| abatement and his

| (U.

NEW ANDERSON TRIAL ORDERED

Relief Fraud Conviction Set

Aside by State Supreme Court.

(Continued from Page One)

Chi(m

Mr. Anderson in which Mr. son testified he was told that ' body” one of his two stores and that he

told the trustee that “I thought we |

ought to check his office on that, | there was something wrong down | there.” Mr. Anderson added that Quinn said, “Go ahead, Sonny, will take care of itself.” Judge Richman's opinion said that he did not think the jury could | reasonably have drawn an inference from this confersation that Anderson knew the orders for “Woodson,” issued two months later, were fraudulent. “The answer of the trustee would have tended to allay any suspicion the appellant may At least it did not cast the burda upon him to make independent in-| vestigation as to the bona fide of] each of the thousands of purchase orders beyond that required by the] trustee's method of doing business,” the opinion stated. | The high court found nothing wrong in the lower court’s action in overruling Mr. Anderson's plea in| motion for a|

Mr. |

[change 51 veh of venue,

CHINAMAN ERR ERRS IN | ESTIMATE OF COP

BURLINGAME, Cal,

P.). — John Lee, Chinese, re-|

for the third time today to avert violence when A. F, of L. workmen |lieved himself in fervent Cantonese |

report at the plant which had been strike,

closed for three weeks by a C. I. 0. |

CITY ROUSED B DAYLIGHT ISSUE

Huge Crowd Is Expected Tonight at First Hearing. (Continued from Page One)

measgo into} probably

would not published,

ure. Thus, it effect until about June 1 Mr. Wood said he would seek an to determine whether the

can pass the ordi-

nance before the 1941 acts are pub-'

lished. Offhand, doubted it. At the office of City Clerk John Layton, petitions favoring daylight] time have been filed by the General |

Motors Acceptance Corp., the personnel and planning department | of the American United Life Insurance Co. the Indianapolis Paint Varnish and Lacquer Association and

he said, he

CORN CONTEST NOV. 3

CHICAGO. March 26 (U. P.).—| The 1941 National Open Husking | Contest will be held Nov. 3, Dave Thompson, associate editor of the Prairie Farmer, announced today.

Patrolman for running

when him

Charles stopped | through a stop]

| sign.

“Take it easy,” Patrolman Thomas

{said in passable Chinese as he wrote

the language S.

ticket. "I learned when I was with the 15th U. Infantry in Tientsin.”

Ander- | ‘some- | was cashing false orders at/|

it |

March 26 |

have then had. | §

Maggie, the chimpanzee at the Sportsmen's Show, will drop anything to go for a ride on a tricycle. who always insists on going along. Maggie and baby are part of the attractions of the show, being presented until Sunday in the Manufacturers’ Building at the State Fair Grounds.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1941 |

)p Off Old Block SERBS SEETHING AT AXIS TREATY,

Students Arrested i Demonstrations; Police Carry Tear Gas.

(Continued from Page One)

quarters that the Cabinet which took the country into the Axis would soon be replaced by one of greater “strength” to act during the months to come. Cvetkovitch and Cincar-Marko-vitch arrived by special train. They alighted at the Topcider suburban station from which they had left Monday night for Vienna. They were met by fellow Cabinet ministers and diplomatic representatives of the Axis Powers.

Serbian Area Seethes

to reveal at Kragu=

clash came

The first real the public anger, jevac in central Serbia, where a big crowd gathered in the principal street, carrying old Serb war banners, and broke through a police cordon. Demonstrations were started spontaneously at many towns as soon as the news was made publ that the pact had been signec Patriotic manifestations and mass protests against co-operation with Germany were held at Knjazevac, Cacak, Kraljevo, Gorni-Milanovie, Cetinje, Podgorica, Ursac and BelaCrkva among other places. The biggest demonstration held at Knjazevac, where towngpeople first cheered boy King Peter and then, joined by soldiers and their officers from the local garrison, demonstrated against the pact,

was

Anything that is, except her baby,

FARMER FOUND DEAD

CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. March 26 (U. P.).—Ray Clark, 45-year-old | __Ripley Craig, 74, died today sevCounty found dead of a gunshot wound in auto yesterday. Friends said Mr. | Clark had been despondent since the | Connells, |death of his wife a year ago.

Montgomery

in his

was in the car.

The soldiers were wildly cheered by civilians. When officers finally ordered the soldiers back to bharracks, they insisted that they be sent to the frontier. It was noted that the demonstra« tions were almost completely confined to Serb territory. The Croat and Slovene districts were reported

AUTO KILLS CLINTON MAN CLINTON, Ind., March 26 (U.P).

farmer, was|

eral hours after receiving a fractured skull when he was struck by

an automobile driven by Dwight | 19, Dana, Ind. Connells was absolved of any blame.

A revolver |

|

The contest will be held in La Salle |

m

KENNEDY STRIKES A "LIGHTNING BLOW"

(Continued from Page One)

County,

This can be done by ‘instruction in the home, the public schools and wherever people gather to discuss’ problems of this kind.” Then, as though issuing orders at | a fire, the Chief dictated these com-

mands to be followed in case of fire: 1. Get everyone in the building to | safety. 2. Call the fire department. 3. Fight the fire if there is - | ment available. to do so safely. |

Sound Alarm First

“If an individual faces the ermerg- | ency alone, he should sound the! alarm first and then fight the fire |

| the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of |

country could not super-impose a rogram of that magnitude on the existing national defense program, the British pared their list of requirements down to $9,000,000,000. Defense authorities then cut it down to the §7,000,000,000 figure submitted to Congress.

Adis ints sitids

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Music. One petition circulated by a citizen bore 232 names also was! filed. Petitions have been filed by Brotherhood of Carpenters Joiners, Local 60, and the Railway!

against the proposal

Division 103.

the United | and | TION TO OVERCOME DELAYED |

Conductors of America, Indianapolis |

if it is possible to do so safely.’ ls The Chief relaxed in his chair, (satisfied. The secretary departed | [to type the message with a heading | at the top: “FIRE CHIEF URGES EDUCA- |

| ALARMS."

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The Germans apparently

have | in {taken advantage of this fact to ship |tive convoys for merchantment pass-

| troops to Libya. Their terminal port ing

War Moves Today

from Page One)

The Fire Department's first pub- |

along the Mediterranean route con-ino other active duty other than to {necting Italy with North Africa.

{keep the Italian warships bottled up

their ports and to provide ac-

through the Mediterranean.

|is undoubtedly Tripoli, which is 300 British warships thus were able to

miles from Sicily,

embarking point.

During the active operations of the | was able to prevent supplies in any con-| the | The fleet at that time had!

the British Army in British Mediterranean

Libya, Fleet

siderable Italians.

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the nearest Italian concentrate off the Libyan coast.

No Help to Graziani

(send relief. In his public report on | Libyan operations, Marshal Graziani, who has resigned, complained {of the lack of mechanized units. Germany had large quantities in re(serve, but the British blockade of|

{Libya made it impossible to trans-|

port them. Now the Libyan blockade has had | to be lessened because of the neces- | sity for meeting the new situation {in the Balkans. The Germans thus have a chance to move into Libya and are taking advantage of it. There is, however, a strict limit to | the opportunity | ships to Tripoli. The British still | have warships on duty along the

Despite the gravity of Italy's posi- | tion the Germans made no effort to!

| |

|

i |

for sending troop |

| crossing and London reported last | week that several enemy transports |

| | the Mediterranean. Respite Likely to Be Brief

Large groups of shipping can be detected without much difficulty, but individual vessels have more immunity. It is reasonable to assume, therefore, that the reinforcements | reaching Tripoli are conveyed spo- | radically. Once the British have completed their movement of troops and material to Greece, they can pay more attention to Libya. Resumption of i the former heavy patrol in Libyan | waters would cut off future supplies | in any quantity which the Germans | would require for a serious cam- | paign. | Reports that Marshal Graziani's | resignation of his command is due to the Germans taking over control | of future military action in Libya

however, a probable offensive directed against the British.

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{and supply ships had been sunk in|

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