Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1941 — Page 5

| BAN ON STRIKES

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HILLMAN URGES | 3 SHIFTS A DAY | ational Defense Agency to} Seeks to Put Presidential! - Speed Rearming Urged ‘Sacrifice’ Request

By Committee. - . a Into Effect.

WASHINGTON, Nov. 7 (U. P.).— Associate OPM Director General (§ Sidney Hillman said today that the|: United States must “end the idle‘#.These laws, the resolution stated, ness of machines” by inaugurating |i vould remain in force so long as three or four shifts daily in all key |} nis ana, Grand en mo he defense plants. na and] § “ ess has been ei it a disloyal act and criminal peo derable progres in BE pn pansion of shift operations in the defense industries and there is prospect of more progress along this

ficiently that no enemy | for arrest |Shud, BEL through to this-country's| tion with the conviction of Dr, ’ i ¢ — : ! mad . % a reline. hE Xr pi Be £5 Yi 2 3 : RE vi acilities and is reported to be| But carelessness or inefficiency in B. Arbogast, Knox County cor Congressmen, - Home From difficult; getting the land.|site selection, it is contended, has|0n charges of presenting fal “We t Indies er 1 en are arstood meant a waste of millions. =~ |claims for medical services to Vine es ies, : : the govern-1' The - Government "is: spending A ; , Sree. ~ jment generally co-operative, but|about $316,000,000, ori these Atlantic Setar ows POOR During aren Enmity to U.S. . [local government officials obsirucs [bulwarks, with, the Army's outlay|TeD!S Vesterday, the defense toe tive. 4 SRT © |set at $2001000,000 and the Navy's at|claimed the indictinent did not le of the congressmen returned|$118,000000. specify’ which ‘claims were false. .

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By CHARLES T. LUCEY : : Times Special Writer: “WASHINGTON, Nov. T—A story of excessive construction costs, poor : locations, and, in some cases, enmity ‘THEY ~| toward the United States, has been HAVE SUCH brought back from the new Carib-| wid bean Sea and air bases by a House 7° A WELCOME | Naval Affairs Subcommittee. FLAVOR. I NEVER The congressmen have just returned from an air tour of the West

* Mr. Hill-| James F. Counts . | Indies Islands in which hundreds of wml Rgds of * ames F Comuyman, 3, form millions of dollars are being spent

man told the United Press. h President Roosevelt told labor| © Clipart, Ind, garage manager, |i, provide new military outposts. delegates from 33 nations attending| "2% among those reported lost at |A second subcommittee now is makthe final session pf the International| sea in the sinking of a British |ing a similar investigation.

Willie Bioft : nferen esterday | shi t . At Puerto Rico, the congressmen Labor Office conference 'y y p en route to England. He was found that barracks and other

own to the last soldier, the last that Americans must submerge| a contract technician employed |. ship, the last tank and the ‘last their labor-industry differences and by the R. A. Sundiogs gn Toca Sun, an } > .

i ” 2 ” | e. ; ; work “three shifts a day” to help “Words will not scare them; th defeat Hitler. ve ; TE Concrete flooring’ is reported to show Sat OE how loudly BROWN E, B [OFF Mr. Hillmen Roped is bin REPORT BLAST KILLS bsve uk sevemsl fost Jom Ine 3 speak we do not yet carry a big management and workers M A NY N Zi WOUNDED Ee i oy installey, ni)

ck. We can only impress Hitler ; i industries “will co-operate to ex- ha : : working night and day to pro- ; pand production further slong Je] rockH oO Novi 7 (C. Ps dajhage It Trang sew ne % i A A ER A TELE : » duce munitions of war for the de- " lines proposed by the President. HTHiTets of Tori Catia a Avene an been found in Puerto THE SMOKE OF SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS CONTAINS

# | (Continued from Page One)

| fotos in defense industry, or gny wilful obstruction of the defense program.

Qlense to desert therefrom.” + The resolution reminded the naon that the Legion: for 22 years advocated adequate defense as Hecessary if the nation was to live. $ “Democracy on Trial” |

$ The committee warned that our gaval and military i Rhown to the totalitarian. powers

Hocracies to whom we have pledged out aid and to hasten the day en our Army, our Navy and our r Forces will’ be the strongest on I§nd, on the sea and in the air. “Democracy is on trial for its life. That means that freedom ffom arrest without charges; the ht to trial by jury; the right

Union Leaders Convicted Of Extorting Thousands From Movie pn (Continued fronr Page One)

Some of the so-called “continuous process” industry plants already are. working 160 hours a week with four 40-hour shifts “and I believe

|that this operation can and should

be expanded,” he said. "Knudsen Agrees OPM Director General William

ors being transported from Narvik through Sweden to Germany in two ambulance trains were believed today to have been injured in a naval engagement or |a mine explosion off the northern. coast of Norway.

LONDON, Noy. 7 (U. P.).—A Norwegian government spokesman said

Rico. : In Jamaica and Trinidad the congressmen found that some of the new military facilities had’ been located close to large swamp areas, making necessary a constant fight against malaria. . In some of the islands the Government has built great numbers of

28% LESS NICOTINE

tested—less than any of them—according to independent scientific tests of the smoke itself!

ve; to inherit and to be in busi-| In his summation Mr. Correa told|He has been calling for longer|Finland are now hospitalized inl ould have been adequate in such ness are on trial for their existence. the jury: working hours and privately has Norway. oh ; OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS Worker ‘At Bat’ “If these racketeers, these Chicago | expressed a desire for uninterrupted | , | hood] tt 1 h production of war materials on a| J ; - :“In the world series of .war, the hoodlums, can get fo a place where |g) os} oi "hacis. He also has ap- en wo man who fashions weapons with his| they can cast their shadows over the pealed.to aircraft plants to remain : Now FOR Hands at the worker's bench is up lives of 125,000 American workers|in operation over holiday periods. : RISTHAS # bab. He can stand still while| (the membership of the I, A. T.| Mr. Hillman pointed out that most ie CHG ries are called; he is a member|s E) and their families, it con-|of the key defense industries already c 6 a teafn; he must hit now or the|stitutes, in my mind, gentlemen, a|are operating on “multiple shift” : ame (is lost. : ' | national scandal. -. |schedules. Most of the blast fur“Our sons are risking their lives| After the jury had announced its|naces, steel and rolling mills, and America’s flying forces. We can’t verdict, Judge Knox said: chemical factories are running three Have them crac up in an old| “I'm quite certain your verdicét|or four shifts a day, he said. But ate because somebody struck out|will let fresh air into a lot of homes |some machines still stand idle durVultee or North American. - in this country. Certainly that is|ing part of the 24-hour day which 3 ‘We've. got to make the American something that is eminently de-|could be used in manufacture of People put the I in crisis, the ME|sirable. armaments, he said. \ iR mechanized forces, the WE in| “Now, I don’t believe that there| “We must end the idleness of ma- ¥+ Weapons and the US in U. S.” is a firmer believer in labor unions |chines,” he said. “There must be no [- » Other resolutions urged the Fed-|than myself. But all labor will|Week-end blackout in our defense 3 government to fully equip the|doubtless be glad to have the tinions | factories.”

ose an occupation; the right 8. Knudsen was known to have ap- : : / ; ¢ : : : : . that according to information from a ALY LA fins ion NR ae He fun officials sald it was the biggest|proved of President Roosevelt's call Norway “thousands of German war Wooden manaits ae has Brought : / —=lHE CIGARETTE ike; the right to contract; to|shakedown on record. -|for a “three-shift” defense program.|wounded” from| the battlefields of investigators, who say tent shelter : : \

te Guards, giving consideration purged of such individuals as these. prior need of the Army to give|If union labor is to endure, it must| Lcd Mine Shifts Increased e ogo military training and dis-|rid itself of men who stand ready| Immediately following delivery of #plineiand that an immediate sur-|to sell out labor when it suits their |the President's speech, Mr. Knudsen vey and! development of an ade-|purpose.” and Mr. Hillman requested all lead | ohiate domestic supply of war re-| Witnesses — including Nicholas producers and lead miners to operress be made. | a Se HIAITY and Albers Wats ate mines 3 thelr Jasin pro-/ i I's | ner o arner Brothers, and Aus ductive capacity, 24 hours a day, s § Defense Groups Urged C. Keough, vice president of Para-|days a pas jill where possible, ¢The National Defense Committee| mount, had testified that Bioff had |seven.” rfeommended to department com-|sneered at such sums as $10,000, and| Military uses of lead include the nders that they immediately set|they had paid him as much as|manufacture of bullets, shot, : shrapnel, shells and insulators for airplanes. TEE Fr : : 1 " Labor Department officials said a : ; i h : wg ) 8 * &K\ 17 1 i

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» national] defense committees to][$50,000 at a time in cash. convince state authorities that the A Protege of Browne

erican Legion be given superion |of and responsibility for air-| Bioff, they said, had done the col- survey of 299 typical defense plants | 3 = Z Tq

ciaft warning service and the mo-|lecting, but Browne was the power revealed that between December, ization and training or air raid|behind his threats. 1940, and June of this year forces ~wardens. ; Bioff, 41, is a product of the Chi-|working on the second and third The committee urged Legionnaires|cago “alky” and gangland era. . He shifts were increased by 46 and 67 td encourage the giving of men in|admitted he had never worked as a per cent, respectively. Employment form pickup rides; inviting them|stage hand, after having told a Cali- |quring the same period at the for Sunday auto rides; inviting them |fornia legislative committee he had, plants rose frorfr431,300 to 560,300. ‘homes; providing them with their|for 14 years.

metown newspapers and contrib=| Although he had only a third : ying | good readingk material to Blade {ication he vanced, Rim. APP ROVE BOND ISSUE : libraries. | self rapidly e on, and when oT as ER vned that Francis M.| Browne became president in 1934, FOR F ILMING RECORDS | Spllivan, Washington, has been ap-/he made Bioff West Coast repre- The County Council today au-

pointed national legislative director|sentative. succeed John| Thomas Taylor,| His career was interrupted last |thorized a $35,000 bond issue for the

0 has been granted a leave of|year, when he was Hrqught bask to | county recorder’s office to have its ; al : g- absence to serve as assistant direc-|Chicago to complete his sentence records filmed for special storage. eX RRR ARE i , td °F re Sheen ; #1tQr of public relations with the War| for pandering, columnist ‘Westbrook Councilmen in ange of | Yaad 2 1 YA : 0 5 ; Attractive, LOW, - P= Department, Pegler having exposed his record. : Nay g 3 2 We 1} NR i E tailored ?style S ; JS : Pt Browne also arose from sordid be- |the recorder’s papers was the first SEL : Ae Spe hae A% mounting. Brils si i Ly | GUARDIA| TO TESTIFY i Ss in the gangster area in|step in a plan to photograph other x : EN ry By liont diamond. | - | NEW YORK, Nov. 7 (U. P.).—|Chicago, but, unlike Bioff, he was |county records so that they can be ; EA ee ; rw A / Ns. eanor Roosevelt and Mayor|oncé a movie projeetionist. He be- stored in a vault as a protection 50c A WEEK Fiorello H. La Guardia left on the|came a power in the Chicago local, |from loss by fire and other damage. same |train for wil eit today. and, after Tommy Malloy, so-called| Councilmen elected George Sad-

ar. La Guardia, will testify before a|czar of the Chicago projectionists,|lier as president of the council for

Spnate committee on a post-war|was assassinated in typical gang-|1942 succeeding William Harding.

bfogram of public works and keep aster fashion, Browne succeeded to George Kincaid was elected “vice / te House appointment. : president. k

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