Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 February 1947 — Page 2
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only a weak imitation of what had|Bernie Bierman,
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relations board.
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when ; hours. One of the passengers was [mitted to work in industry-also was :
originally been proposed. Instead| pine bus and rail traffic was the next stép|of permitting women to work all|gurtailed throughout Minnesota, By
would be appointment by the gov- the new bill simply would|Iows and the Dakotas, North ermor of an arbitration board of |oriend the work period Which Western railroad passenger trains thres whose settlement would belongs at midnight to 1 8. m. |frem Minneapolis to Huron, 8. D. . foal In this form the bill was said to|were halted and southbound Great Hint Party Support satisfy most of the sponsors who|Western trains to Omaha, Neb. Both strike and. lockout are out-|wanted the old’ “no night work”) were stopped. ‘jawed in the bill and violators limitation ended. The main idea, Rock Island Cancels either In the workers’ or the em-|it was said, was to enable the work- The fiand lnes canceled ployers’ camp would be liable for|ing.of a second shift of women Rock ab of Des fines of $500 to $3500 and six|employees and in most industries train schedules mgrth Sic Yoade. 9 months in jail. the single hour extension is enough | Moines, but the company reported abou Mr. Edick's association with the to do this. last night that trains Were running — ya Republican party as secretary of In the house, the labor committee] = 416 in other direstions. shake “ultimat $8 genial Sate committas lens the was expected 10 shilke off iis Jethar- The cold ‘wate was ® of c attitude major Mies snd nies a bills it has for recommenda- | move into the Atlantic states today She 10st hires Weeks shice thay were ments were forthcoming from tion. ‘The bills are mostly labor-|and to reach Bostan tomorrow) disclosed a copyright story | +. O.P, policy makers. Because of | sponsored measures and Saduge Horning. ar Santying SHOUSH farce es. the bill|such items as labor's state wage to 1 SPPIOPHALAD Satse: el) and hour law,.s minimum hourly degree mark. By Monday it was | Phyel silioune, Mx. Sak SA, see mittee Instead of to the more |wage of 65 cents and a state labor expected to have moved out over|the names of several captains, lieulenient labor committee the Atlantic.
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ll before the grand jury or use them il as witnesses.
il | istration for development of a win-
| known preliminary activities of the
}{E. Ostrom, county chairman, and
| was on the receiving end
ion its fight against the regular Replbli
SURRE R
"STOPS BLOW-—Fulton Lewis Jr. radio commentator, who of a one-punch "brawl" last night.
Remy Reported Ready to Resign
Police Cleanup Now Said to Be Demand (Continued From Page One)
said. “There hasn't been any decision made on the subject that
Included in his list of alleged
“The only way I could get a lot of this information was to promise
‘As the result, he said, it will not be possible to call these persons
A thorough shakeup of police is seen as a necessary maneuver to “take the heat off” the city admin-
ning candidate for mayor. These reports are tied in with
city hall G. O. P. factions to carry
statement as meaning a slur on [hus wit. Mr. Lewis said he meant + [no insinuation toward Mrs, Roose[velt. Au
nar
not to disclose the identity of the Whether he thought some of the
“You're a lar,” Mr. Lewis quoted Roosevelt, ;
“Well, if you say I implied anything insulting -your wife then you're a liar yourself,” Mr. Lewis re"Up Frem the Floor Mr, Lewis sald young Roosevelt then cursed him, and just about that time Mr, Harrity brought one up from the floor—not too effec-
tively. A guard immediately sepa-
given and taken along with a few handshakes. He The Roosevelts and Mr. Harrity later went. night-clubbing. The fight followed a half-hour going-over of Mr. Roosevelt on the program—most of it about his trip to Russia, . Mr, Taylor quiszed Mr. Roosevelt about his alleged statement that the United States was supporting the United Nations for purely selfish reasons.” He sald these same remarks contdined in a report sent by the U. 8 embassy in Moscow to the state department, Remark Was “Impossible” “There is a further report the American ambassador sent over and that report did not leak out to the press,” Mr. Roosevelt said. Mr. Taylor asked Mr. Roosevelt if the alleged statements of Mr. Roosevelt in Moscow were “made to embarrass Secretary Byrnes and the United States”. “It was impossible for me to have made that remark and I think it was quoted in order to embarrass me,” Mr. Roosevelt replied. Mr. Roosevelt then was asked
information given him‘by Premier Stalin was “When the head of the United
rated the men and apologies were |
- tors Vandenberg and
Bill Foon Veto
ANOTHER REASON why you shouldn't count on income-tax cut this year: i Any Republican-passed bill is almost certain ‘to be vetoed. Two~ thirds’ vote to over-ride would be doubtful.
to debt retirement. 2 = = ; WHEN CONGRESSIONAL leaders go to the White House, only House Majority Leader Charles Halleck (R. Ind) drives his own, privately paid for, automobile. Both majority and minority senate leaders have government cars and chauffeurs and so does president pro tem of senate. Speaker of house has government car and house Democrats recently bought one for house minority leader Rayburn.
- *» » Tariff Battle Looms LOOK FOR bitter G. O. P. in-ner-party warfare over tariffs Truce terms advanced by SenaMillikin don't even come close to satisfying high
protectionists. Administration yields almost
i af} $5Li3E iti a
i i :
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cratic votes, and our it has good chance them.
pointed court will hack away at their bills. Their proposed: remedies are different from Mr. Roosevelt's, One (by Rep. Smith, Wis), would limit tenure of all federal judges, including supreme court, to 10 years, Senator Wiley (R. Wis), chairman of judiciary committee, favors it. Other strategy calls for legislating specific matters out of supreme court jurisdiction—por-tal-to-portal, railroad rate-mak-ing, control of marginal and tidal oil lands.
» » » Homebuilders at Chicago convention this month will demand government revise régulations so larger homes.
ed by Rabbl Hillel president of organization
It's been Silver,
anything there'll be more trouble.
Judge Criticized By Talmadge
ATLANTA, Ga. Feb. 8 (U. P) —
Governor Herman Talmadge opened himself to possible contempt of court proceedings today. He accused a superior court judge of writing in advance a decision declaring acting Governor M. E Thompson the legal chief executive of Georgia, -He made the charges at a press conference. He was asked if he expected contempt action. He replied that he never speculated on “what the other fellow might do.”. He made the charge against Superior Judge Claude Porter, who decfded in favor of Mr. Thompson in Rome, Ga., yesterday, while Tal= madge attorneys were arguing a similar case at McDonough. Mr. Talmadge issued a written statement saying he had been ine formed -that the Rome judge “reached in his pocket and pulled out an opinion he had already written and proceeded to read it.” Mr. Talmadge said the case had been set originally for Feb. 12 and “for some unknown reason Judge Porter heard it yesterday—without notice to anybody.” Mr. Talmadge sald “the suit is patently collusive. It was brought
by friends, against friends, befors friends and for friends.”
can machine headed by Henry
il! James I. Bradford, former ‘county!
ll chairman who now is the leading
if {liquor dealer in Indianapolis. |
| city hall faction.
Groeming a Candidate The Bradford-Ostrom machine
| associates are saying “we told you Hl|0” in connection with city hall's graft troubles and are silently going | if about their business of grooming “Jij {their own candidate for mayor. |
These developments indicate that | the mayoralty nomination battle |
‘Miwin eclipse all other fights be- |
tween the G. O. P. regulars and the | The anti-machine leaders (most- | ly city hall) are basing their]
i} strategy on the fact that they won
f}{2 sweeping victory in the 1946 elec-
| man Ostrom.
tions by nominating Prosecutor
i} Stark and Sheriff Albert Magenil heimer against the Bradford-Os- | litrom candidates.
The alignments behind various |
{candidates at this time are vague. |
Ceril 8. Ober, treasurer of the!
liregular G. O. P. committee, is
definitely running for the mayorally nomination and, apparently, has the silent blessings from Chair-
Entertains . Committeemen
|| conspicuously lately. He has had ward chairmen and precinct com-
| {N. Bobbitt, city corporation counsel
| Schumacher, president of the eity }icouncil, and Mr. Remy; oor
Mr, Ober has been entertaining
mitteemen as his guests at several dinners recently. : : Others mentioned include Arch
and former chairman of the state Republican committee, John A.
None of them will talk about it, however. Mr. Bobbitt is aligned personally th Mayor Tyndall and is regarded playing a waiting role to “see hich way_.he ought to jump.” Mayor Tyndall's position in pickg his successor is obscure. Rankled by Snub His recent removal of Jesse Mcurtry as police chief, replacing him with Chief Howard Sanders was a definite break with Mr. Remy. The safety board president was ot even consulted by the mayor in the police chief shakeup. And Board President Remy appeared to be nkled by the snub. This also is a factor in the combackground of city hall politics on the eve of the mayoralty campaign. Since Mr. Remy is known to be aligned with Mr. Hitkman, witere oes Mayor Tyndall and Mr. Bob tt stand? ; No one has offered an explana-
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