Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 August 1947 — Page 13
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MONDAY, AUG. 4, 1947
To Restrain
Hutcheson
Baltimore Man Sues For Right to Rejoin
to William L. Hutcheson, president of the international, and all other officers in
headquarters Indianapolis to refrain from interfering with his reinstatement as a member of the Baltimore union.
the agents who had “stolen and embezzled” it from the funds of the Baltimore local. The suit charged that the international officers have refused to make any attempts to recover the
if
... J New Lawsui
> Writ Sought
ve dt
t Filed In
CHECK INVOLVED IN UNION CASE—This check for $244,038, paid by inter-
national headquarters, Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, to Baltimore Local 101, as compromise payment in alleged embezzlement of Local 101 funds today became an exhibit in another lawsuit in the case filed in superior court here.
money from their agents. In addition to the injunction against the international officers in connection with reinstatement of his membership, Mr. Hanson asked that the defendants be ordered to approve his payment of $225 in back dues in order to make his reinstatement complete. In another suit filed in superior court here last June, Coraell I. Cuthbertson, president of the Pine Bluff, Ark, local of the Carpenters union, asked $200,000 damages from international officers. He charged that international officers made a “fraudulent settlement with their chief agent em-
.' bezzler and made no effort to re-
cover losses, eventually forgiving the balance of the loss amounting to $200,000 solely for. their own benefit and. to purchase the silence of the embeg2lers.” The legal fight over the Carpenters union funds started in 1945, when the Baltimore union officers demanded in Superior court suit here - that international
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make an accounting of some $600 - 000 of disputed funds handled by the Indianapolis headquarters agents. * At a hearing of his action later, integnational officers failed to produce all the records on expendi-
| tures and the case was continued |
for further financial reports.
——
‘Hartley to Speak Here
On New Labor Law | The Indiana State Chamber of | Commerce has announced it will {conduct a two-day seminar on the | Taft-Hartley labor law Sept. 24-25. Rep. Fred A. Hartley (R, N. J), | co-author of the law, was “booked {as chief speaker. Spokesmen for |the Chamber said the institute
{ would be “in the nature of a work-
{ shop for management representatives.” “It will be a down-to-earth study of practical problems which employ{ers will face in dealing with unions land with employees under the new
officers rules,” the announcement said.
.
cery of
vos sizes
Shop,
Floor
SEEKS REINSTATEMENT — Gotthard Hanson, ousted Bal-
timore union president, filed injunction suit,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .
Alleged Carp
a ge
penters |
Indiana Airport Funds Slashed
CAA Allots $1,252,601, Cut. of $533,854
Times Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, Aug, 4 — More than one-half million of federal funds for airport programs in Ine diana was cut off by the Civil Aeronantics Administration today in making new allocations to match reduced appropriations made by the 80th congress. Instead of a total of $1,786,455 allocated for the state by CAA last February, the new total allocation of federal aid is $1,252,601, a reduction of $533,854. Combined with funds to be put up by sponsors the program now provides for a total of $2,663,452 to be spent on 23 Indiana airports. . Federal funds for Weir Cook field in Indianapolis were slashed from $471,000 originally asked for by CAA to $200,000. The sponsor's share is set- at $242,500, making the total proposed expenditures there $442, 500.
This sum is to be used for land purchases amounting to $85,000 and for runways, lights, grading, drainage and other improvements amount’ 1g - to $357,500. Similar cuts in federal allocations
‘ment plan for non-teaching sehool
Wyatt Strikes Back
In School Pension Row Robert H. Wyatt, executive secretary of the Indiana State Teachers
association, said today that Hoosier teachers are in favor of a retire-
employees. Mr. Wyatt answered a charge by Ross Teckemeyer, secretary of the State Employees’ Retirement fund, that superintendents and teachers in some Indiana school systems had “thrown cold water” on a plan whereby custodial employees would come under the state retirement fund.
Mr, Techemeyer warned that unJess the non-teaching employees were admitted to the pension plan, “we'll find’ many schools closed for long winter months . . . because custodians will join unions and strike.”
were made in airport projects at Gary, South Bend, Anderson, Connersville, Kendalville, Ft. Wayne, La Porte, West Lafayette, Purdue, Knox, Warsaw, Richmond, Coving-ton-Veedersburg, Bedford, Michigan City, Terre Haute, Greencastle, Delphi, Seymour, Evansville, Jasper, Tipton and Crawfordsville, CAA explained that the -allocations were based on the area popu~ lation formula provided in the 1946 airport act and on the $45,000,000 1947 appropriations plus the new
Vigilantes Slip, But Get Their Man
Tacoma Village Posse Forgets ‘Briefing’
The Tacoma Village vigilantes get their man, A group of village citizens, armed with war souvenir weapons, lay in walt most of last week for a persistent prowler. They were organized to get him, with pre-arranged signals for fanning out on their manhunt as soon as he might be spotted somewhere in the neighborhood. Early yesterday morning Harry Montgomery, 31, of 1407 N. Senate ave, knocked at the door of Robert Bogan, 3061 N. Tacoma-—ave. He said he was looking for his sister's home and was lost. Mr, Bogan and Howard Allen, both members of the vigilante group, sailed out after the “visitor.” As the quarry opened up a longlegged stride, two other posse membérs joined the chase, They were Bob Robbins and Cleo Teegarden. The quartet cornered Montgomery in the 3200 block on N. Tacoma ave, They found he was armed with a clasp knife with a six-inch blade.
1948 appropriation of $32,500,000.
Robbery Fails =
POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., Aug. 4 (U. P).— Two youthful Philadel~ phia couples were held without bail | today after robbing a tavern to get: funds to finance their elopement They were identified by police as - James R. Hazlett, 19; Julius Berese, | 19, Elaine Pole, 16, and Jeanne’ Adcock, 17. ’ They were captured early yesterday after a wild chase through ° the Westchester countryside during which they exchanged shots with a state policeman before driving into a roadblock. Police said the two boys held up a tavern proprietor, Frank Buano, robbed him of $150, cut the telephone" wires and fled. : Police -said they admitted break- . ing into homes and garages an stealing articles from automobiles on their trip from Philadelphia,
they were armed only with a bottle, a razor and a flashlight. All the carefully laid plans for using the souvenir arsenal had been forgotten in the heat of the chase. i Montgomery was slated to appear in municipal court late today. But since they're not sure he’s the char acter they really wanted, the vigilantes will remain on guard to ride
After a quick survey, they found
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