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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 10

Location:
Detroit, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE DETROIT, RESS WEDNESDAY, OCT OBER 2r 1934 10 could ba Inserted Into an Bar Bill Need Tokio Seeking Harriman Asks A eablnat meeting that followed the Anglo-Japanese conversation Border Cities News Briefs Relief Costs Near ah All-Time HigK County Asks $3,060,000 November Need Report to Urge Fireproof Ships Stricter Liability Law Also Demanded Naval Equality Is Emphasized NR A Shakeup I Hotel men of the Border Cities Ford Co. Inventor Is to Be Honored Johansson Will Speak Before Education Luncheon Carl Edward Johansson, dean of the Ford Motor Co. inventors, will be the guest of honor and speaker at the Manual Arts and Industrial Education luncheon Friday noon at the Ford Administration Building gave the proposal long consideration. It was Indicated, however, that no decision will be reached until Japan's plans are revealed to the American delegates, Norman H. Davis and Admiral William H.

Standley, at their talk tomorrow. The British, headed by Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald, prob Wants Ratio Left Out Would Curb Lawyers' C. of C. Head Urges Request for $3,060,000 for In Detroit and the rest of vXf County during November-al, time high record lines of of Future Treaties Acts, Pioneers Told New Recovery Plan The proposal to Integrate the Bar CINCINNATI. Oft.

23 (A. A LONDON, Oct 23 (A.P.) Japan today told Great Britain that she WASHINGTON. Oct. 23 (A. Three major maritime reforms were formulated today in Govern casa ioaa and trnnh fronv Communists were reooi' Tuesday in Welfare circles ably will confer with the Americans Thursday.

This will give the two standing together for new plan for national recovery in which covernmental activity would will meet in Windsor Thursday to discuss the new license fees in the sale of beer and wine. The new scale calls for payment of $300 minimum with a five per cent tax on sales exceeding $5,000. Many hotel authorities, it Is said, regard the new rates as excessive. The Border Cities Service Committee will launch a drive 30 for $40,000 to be used by the Red Cross and the Victorian Order of Nurses. Hopes for early appointment of a financial controller for Windsor dwindled Tuesday when R.

J. Moore, suggested for the post, was riven a nositlon in the provincial of Michigan, which will come before the Legislature in 1935, Is intended to give lawyers power to discipline members of their pro ment quarters to prevent recurrence hs limited to judicial functions con Addition of 354 families the rolls of the keeping the substance of tne present treaties wWch Japan proposes to renounce, an opportunity to Emereencv Relief cerning codes formea oy lnnumry Itself, was proponed tonlRht by fession, George E. Brand, prest to 58,514. Administrator il. dent of the Detroit Bar Association, Henry I.

Harriman. president of the agree on their reply. Ballengcr said that 47,596 of ih. Anelo-Japanese conference. It was United States Chamber or merce.

on Schaeffer Road. The luncheon will be one of the features of the Michigan Education Association convention here Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Johansson has been knighted by the Swedish Government and has been decorated by France and the Swedish. Engineering Society of America for his work in inventing the Johansson Gage Blocks. The blocks have made possible a standard of measurement in machinery by which parts to the limits of one millionth of an inch can be made.

The secret of thu blocks has never been disclosed. ri announced, would be resumed Harriman explained the plan he- fore a meeting of the National Asso Tokio's main points, growing out told the Detroit Business Pioneers Tuesday at a luncheon in the Savoyard Club. It will require the help of business men and the publte generally to pass such a law, he warned. The plan doea not make the legal profession a closed union, he declared, nor does it advance the In or the Morro Castle disaster wuicn took 132 lives at sea. The Commerce Department's bureau of navigation and steamboat inspection was reported reliably to be nearing completion of its report to.

Secretary Daniel C. toper. The report will recommend: 1 Flreproofing of all vessels. 2 Practical examinations for able-bodied seamen. 3 Revision of the law limiting liability of ship owners.

The report will, not concern Itself with charges of negligence against the Morro Castle's ciation of commercial urgnniminm Secretaries. It calls for a wholesale reorganization of the NRA and the of her dissatisfaction with the ratio principle which allows Japan department of municipal affairs. only three-fifths the naval weapons ittmines in Fort Street district alone." ger declared, "and there's a iinp, there two blocks long. Things 1 serious." For October, the County, doIl expenditures were $2,300,000 j0(l. P.

Toole, chief auditor stated it. said that he sent a request to th. State Emergency Relief tration for a budget of establishment ol a live-man amm' Istrative board. Suggestion of abandoning street Britain or tne united states may have, were these: car service in -jecumsen orougni wants navies henceforth limited on the basis of their total tonnage and demands that the word ratio be left out of future treaties. Those, in substanc were the proposals submitted by Ambassador Tsuneo Matsudatra and Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto at today's Anglo Japanese meeting which formally opened conversations here among Japan, Great Britain and the United States in preparation for the 1035 naval conference.

The Japanese further insisted that Britain and America recognize "the principle of equality in defensive armaments Nippon's plan would classify ships of war as offensive and defensive weapons and thus get rid of the ratio plan which, Japan maintains, keeps her on an inferior footing, Tokio's scheme, especially that part concerned with the equality principle, tonight apparently had the British scratching their heads in perplexity. Observers were puzzled as to just how the proposal SuFjrestlnR the adoption of a new recovery act Harriman expressed a nrotests Tuesday from the 1 The powers should agree that Countv Trades and Labor Council terests of lawyers at the expense of other groups ID society. Would Compel Membership The Bar Association at present, Artist of Liberty Japan may have equality, "in principle," in defensive armaments. that such action would force fami belief it should, as rar as possioie, be "a civil rather than a criminal statute," and its score limited to Interstate business unless thera Is lies of the 220 street car employees onto the welfare rolls. The change Mr.

Brand said, is merely a volun 2 The ratio system snould be bolished, and defensive ships Loan Poster Dies was proposed at a Tecumseh Coun "express legislation by the stales. Would Clarify Section 7-A cil meeting Monday night. The limited on a total tonnage basis, instead of by categories. cars would be replaced by buses, 3 Each nation would drastically supporters said. Amplification and clarification of disputed section 7-A that relating Beneker Was Born in Stmt in Dttroit tary association of part of the lawyers in the community, without real authority, to which the public and other lawyers look to hear grievances and punish unworthy attorneys.

The proposed law, he said, would require all attorneys to belong to the Association, to pay dues of $10 Grand Rapids reduce "offensive" armaments, thus cutting down the chances of any war of aggression, while building any "defensive" ships within the tonnage limit agreed she feels she needs for security. Two Pickpockets' TRURO, Oct. 23 (U. Gerrit AlbertUB Beneker, 52 years a year or leas and to obey its rul Bonds Forfeited old, nationally-known artist who VSWffi sketched the poster for the last liberty loan drive in World War days, ated or an embolism today Fail to Appear After at his summer home. Born in Grand Rapids.

Repeated Delays Jan. 26, 1882, he was graduated from hijrh school in that city and studied at the Chicago Art Institute. Angered because two alleged He began his career as a maga zine illustrator in 1905. He Is represented in permanent at pickpockets "who ave a record or 100 arrests between them" failed to appear Tuesday for trial, after having been given several adjournments. Recorder's Christopher E.

Stein ordered their bonds the Butler Art Institute, Youngs-town, the Grand Rapids Art COMFORT HEATING PAD Water-proof cover, 3-heat thermostatic control. Silk cord and plug. Guaranteed. AC or DC. Association and the Wichita (Kan.) high school.

forfeited ana issuea capiases ior to collective Bargaining ukbwihe was proposed. "My own conviction," Harriman said after reviewing objections to the NRA, "is that a permanent Industrial act can be drawn which will be of great value to industry and labor and which will not improperly burdon the, consumer. "The new law should" be enforecable through legal procedure as in the case of the act creating the Federal Trade Commission. Incidentally, the new act should remove any possible conflict between the authority of the new board and the Federal Trade Commission and possibly consolidate them. Puts Codes t'p to Industry The new litigation should place upon industry the sole responsibility of formulating codes of fair competition, and the Government should have no authority to impose or modify codes.

If the Government does not approve of a code It may state the modification It desires, and Industry must then determine whether it will accept the changes requested or go on without a code. This balance of authority between industry and government will prevent encroachment on the publio interests by industry and atop bureaucratic control by government price fixing and specific limitations on production should seldom be resorted to. This does not mean that open price-fixing should be prohibited nor does it mean that codes should not contain provisions prohibiting a mem His liberty loan postee depicted their arrest The men, Max Weiss and John a rugged working man with arms akimbo, and carried the slogan, ings. The Governing Committee would have power to Investigate acts of attorneys, to summon witnesses and take testimony at private hearings (or public, if the accused attorney wished), and hand down rulings subject to review by the State Supreme Court Lawyers Divided The demand for this sort of regulation la coming from the public as mueh as it is from attorneys, Mr. Brand said.

Sixteen states have adopted such laws since 1921 and In many cases, he said, the legislatures acted In response to pressure from, laymen. "Lawyer, In fact," said the Bar Association president, "are divided on the question. Many of them oppose any-form of discipline or control." Howard A. Harvey presided at the Pioneers meeting. Another guest was Charles Roscoe Miles, of Greenfield Village, who dresses as Abraham Lincoln did and is a student of Linooln's career.

He is a grandson Hary Hanks, who was a sister of Nancy Hanks, mother of the Civil War President Guy Empey Divorced LOS ANGELES, Oct. 23 (A. Arthur Guy Empey, who wrote "Over the Top" and other war stories, was divorced today by Mar 'Sure, We'll Finish the Job!" Besides his wife, the former Flora Brown, referred to by Assistant Prosecutor Howard Bowman as nationally known pickpockets, have Judd Van Vranken, of Marcellus, N. whom he married In 1907, he been free since July io on ROXBURY fe9 leaves two daughters, a son and his bond each. They were arrested June 6 on a Jeffesson Ave.

street car after, It is charged, they had stolen a purse containing a penny srents, Bartel A. and Pauline leneker, of Grand Rapids. from Leo d'Amour, of 374 Dick- For Nautraliting Ovtr-Acidity usa EFFERVESCENT Carbonates Compound (CITKA TED) Sweet Tasting. erson. SINUS TROUBLE In addition to the larceny charge, Fountain Syringe or Hot Water Bottle Guaranteed Bowman revealed, the men face counts of attempted bribery.

The MADE HIM BUND street car conductor, Chester Bas-sett, who assisted in the arrest of Fin MM, New Dtvottt Life IMpIng Othtrt. I mifferM for ywrt with Infwtwi lmw. tt thi the men; Amour and nis sister-in-law, Huldah d'Amour, and Pa plfht at my ritrht fy. went tbrounh torture wblrh oniy toons wnn iimiur troume understand, ihu wlp whlrh brlpwl me I rail Katmplne. Jiwt 49c 79c trolman Pled Sheperd, who made the arrest, have been approached Dread It lrjlrf vour nrtfitrtl.

a nil mm what hsniwni You will be muej. Only le per a Dpi (ration. Now and offered money to drop the case, Bowman declared. old here by all Liggett and Walgreen Drue Store. guerite Andrua Empey.

Covplftit, 19M. B. J. amoll Totwcos twuvuf ber from selling his product at less than his cost or that limitation of machine hours is not in some instances desirable." Asks Laws for Labor Mr. Harriman declared thera hag been dissatisfaction with Section 7-A "because the great right of collective bargaining has been assured to labor without the corresponding obligations and liabilities being imposed.

I believe in collective bargaining through representatives chosen by labor without coercion of employers; but surely this also implies without coercion of labor organizations or other parties. "If labor organizations are to be given wide powers In connection with collective bargaining then labor organizations should be Incor I 735 aj Ik 4 wkl (v lis porated or in other ways made subject to suitable laws, as are the employers. Strikes should not be called in any plant until, by a secret ballot, taken under fair rules, majority of the employees have expressed their desire to strike. There Is a right to strike; there is an equal, or superior right to work." Taxpayers have yet to meet the problem of New Deal financing, Willis H. Hall, manager of the tax research department of the Detroit Board of Commerce, warned In another address of the convention program.

Detrolter Cites Tax Gains "The trend In national taxation Is upwards," Hall asserted. "One of GET A the biggest problems confronting business today Is Federal taxation. Regardless of whether you approve or disapprove of the New Deal, you cannot escape the fact that Its cost will have to be repaid, and It can y.ET WM -JX Ill: only be repaid by the levy of higher taxs; taxes, which of themselves will be the heaviest drag on the re WHEN YOU FEEL "ALL INH- coverv of te Nation's business and employment. A Hall pointed out the danger of loss of local autonomy in the almost universal demand of smaler units of WITH cm government for state aid in repairing and altering streets, aid for i schools, welfare disbursements and similar assistance, with the state EL the first object of appeal and then CRAWF0RD winner of the Maryland Hunt Cup. of the strenuous sport of steeplechase a Camel smoker.

Everyone is subject to strain. Hence the importance to people in every walk of life of what Mr. Burton says below about Camels, the federal Government. "The same taxpayer must Inevitably pay," he pointed out Tax limitation amendments have rot actually brought saving in government cost because legislative bodies have found a way of arettinz i jIx KM v. dLj CFr around them, he asserted.

In Michi gan a $34,000,000 sales tax and $3,500,000 pronertv tax were siibstl-tuled for the original $23,500,000 property tax. TOBACCO MEN ALL KNOW: r. tana I I 'aJ5f I I HOUSEWIFE. Mrs. Charles Daly says "We all know how much energy a woman has to put into housekeeping! My way of renewing energy is to smoke a Camel.

Camels pick up my energy when I feel tired. They have a mild, delicate flavor that a woman likes." My ay of renewing energy is to smoke a ave you ever tried this enjoyable way of heightening energy? Camels ore made from finer. More Expensive Tobaccos Turkish and Domestic than any other popular jirand. 'f Davenport Brewery Bought by Pfeiffer Co. Stockholders A group of the stockholders In the Pfeiffer Brewing of Detroit, Tuesday announced acquisition of the site of the Old Independent Brewing and Malting Co.

at Davenport, la. They plan to Install modern equipment in the plant, and operate a brewery with a capacity of 1,200 barrels a day. Carlton Smith, secretary and treasurer of the Pfeiffer company, said the same group had Interests In a brewery at Oklahoma City and at Saringfield, Hi. I I i 9.mymam TRAIN DISPATCHER. 1 need healthy nerves," says Russell J.

Woodman, "for there just can't be any mistakes on this job. Camels never upset my nerves. And they are full of real flavor 1" ROMPT DELIVERY Smokers everywhere have discovered for themselves that Camels give thera a delightful "energizing effect." Here's a typical experience. Crawford Burton, the famous American steeplechase rider, is speaking: "Whether I'm tired from riding a hard race, or from the pressure and tension of a crowded business day, I feel refreshed and re-stored just as soon as I get a chance to smoke a Camel. So I'm a pretty incessant smoker, not only because Camels give me a 'lift' in energy, but because Lk 'ir- they taste so good! And never yet have Camels upset my nerves." Note these important points: that Camels taste so good.

And that they make available your stored-up energy. You have heard the experience of others. Science tells us that Camel's "energizing effect" has been fully confirmed. Try Camels yourself. You can smoke them constantly.

For Camels are made from finer and MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS. They never taste never get on your nerves. Clean, Courteous Service SPORTSMAN. Rez Beach, famous big game fisherman and writer, says: "Whn I have a big fellow safely landed my next move is to light a Camel, and I feel as good as new," RESCREENED wt-Solvay 2 'K 9.50 sS'ttr- o.oo rv.il i TT7irs AIR HOSTESS.MarianMcMichaeI, of American Airlines, says: "When the run is over, my first move is to light a CameL A Camel quickly relieves any feeling of tiredness." CAMEL CARAVAN with Clan Cray's Casa Loma Orchaatra, Walter O'Kaafa, Annotta Hanshaw, and othar Haadlinara-ovar WABC-Columbla Natwork. Tuesday, 10 p.m.

E.S.T.-9 p.m. I Thursday, 9 p. m. E.S.T. 8 p.m.

CS.T. C.S.T.-8 p.m. M.S.T.-7 p.m. P.S.T. p.m.

M. p.m. P.S.T. iiiLi i.

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Pages Available:
3,662,451
Years Available:
1837-2024