Daily Globe (Newspaper) - July 12, 1937, Ironwood, Michigan It rains on the rich and poor alike if they are unable to swipe an IRONWOOD DAILY GLOBE It Is difficult for a stout woman to get away from solid VOLUME 18, NUMBER 199. ASSOCIATED PRESS WIRE trawa SERVICE MONDAY JULY 12, 1937. 10 PAGES SINGLE COPY 5 CENTS 2 6 INJURED IN STRIKE RIOT Soviet Plane Heads for America Seek Distance Record Second Attempt to Span Roof of m SAN FRANCISCO IS GOAL Fork Hits Girl in Eyeball Two puncture wounds of the right eyeball were suffered by 8 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bernice Ironwood yesterday when a fork she was using to unties a shoe lace slipped and struck her She received surgical treatment for the in- jury this The outcome of the injury will not be known for several July Soviet airplane flying toward the United States today was rapidly ing the north At p. m. a ill. C. S. the plane reported its position by radio as 70 degrees north about miles from the north It was not expected to reach the pole until about 24 hours after the which was at 3.22 a. m. 22 p. m. Sunday C: S. T 1 Seeking a distance record in the second Soviet attempt to span the roof of the world by the plane has yet to a polar storm and a vast waste of polar ice. Brief radio reports reported all well aboard the plane and she was making excellent speed on the first stages of the flight to the United Flies Above Clouds The Soviet air ace Mikhail reported he and his two com- panions passed the latitude of Archangel at a. m. a. C. S. and left the continent of Europe behind at noon a. C. S Except for small the fliers will be out of touch with land for from 24 to 36 hours until they strike the Canadian mainland and point their red-winged monoplane towards the United States Pacific They took off at 3 22 a. m. p. C. S. with few formalities on the Arctic sky trail blazed by three other Soviet fliers who reached June 20. They were expected to pass Franz Joseph following the same route as the trail In the face of apparently weather for low flying in the foggy arctic GromoS on page THE NATIONAL BEHIND THE Washington BY KAY TUCKER reason you have heard only hearsay smatterings of the famous re- meeting is they don't want the world to know how concerned they are over the Supreme Court battle's effect on party The judicial was mentioned only in though it was the cause of the last-minute sensing the depth of the hates party the President and Mr. Wheeler sought to frame a formula that would stave off a political no matter how the con- They agreed to suppress political arid personal de- monstrations and dirt to the best of their ability and shook hands on the It was a surprisingly friendly Both the President and Senator who arranged the tried to impress on Mr. Wheeler that a fierce filibuster would jeopardize legislation on faim and power which he The only tiff of the talk occurred at that for the ator shrugged his shoulders as if to suggest that Mr. Roosevelt er than himself was responsible for the threat of a legislative No Serious Accidents De- spite Heavy Week End Traffic on Six persons were none of them in week end auto- mobile accidents on the Gogebic Week end traffic was with many persons enroute to nearby lakes to seek relief from the Miss Helen 75 Thomas suffered a fracture of the right wrist when the car in which she riding with Andrew Stupak turned over on the highway near Mercer Saturday She was taken to Grand View Woman Hit By Car Mrs. Andrew who has been visiting tives suffered injuries of the back and knees when she was struck by a car near the spring on the on the Lake Superior The car was driven by H. C. 156 who reported the accident to the sheriff's The injured woman was en to Grand View Her in- juries are not regarded as The infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John R. sustained a cut on the forehead when the Grenfell car and a car driven by Lawrence Chiapuzio of Anvil collided near the Eureka mine at o'clock Saturday DeLloyd 201 Lake suffered a cut on the head when the car he was driving ran into the rear of another car on two miles west of Hurley at 6 o'clock last The car ahead stopped suddenly to avoid collision with a third car that came denly out of a side Anderson was taken to Blacksmith is Hurt In a motoring accident which was not the result of traffic tions Emery Ironwood suffered amputation of the ring finger on nis left hand and a crushing injury of the small Elias had raised his car on a jack when a tire went flat on the road near Bessemer and it fell off the He then used a pole to raise the car and was attempting to replace the jack when the pole broke and the car fell on his The accident happened at 7 o'clock last Elias underwent an operation on his hand at View pital and then was Mrs. Rose of Ironwood lost control of the car which she driving yesterday afternoon and it careened into the ditch along the Lake road near Little Girl's There were four people in the car but none of them was iously Occupants of the car included Carini and Francis of Hurley and La Verne Nomi of Mrs. Andreini received several cuts on her arms and The ers were badly shaken Damage to the car was estimated at BITTER DEBUTE Some Others Deny That Filibuster is ally Under RULES ARE ASSAILED July an- parliamentary squabble during debate on the court led today to that a filibuster on the measure actually was under Each side in the bitter attempted to blame the other for blocking important The outburst came soon after the senate began the second week of debate on the debate which thus far has progressed to the exclusion of all other affairs except those especially privileged to take Senator O'Mahoney Democratic Leader Robinson was to throttle de- bate on the most fundamental sue presented to the senate in two Filibuster Going carefully phrasing his remarks in question asked if O'Mahoney didn't know that when he invoked the filibuster was in progress and an effort was being made to abuse the privilege of debate by interrupting the senators who had the O'Mahoney had the floor at the Under the rules he could be halted by Robinson only when the administration leader asked him a The Wyoming senator began his fight on the court by attacking the rules he tne tion had invoked to force a vote on the Just before O'Mahoney started he and other senators op- posing the had blocked of a conference report on the appropriation of the war They also blocked introduction of the farm O'Mahoney said he had objected o the war department in der to point out extraordinary rules under which the court de- late is Rules Not Unreasonable The quick-speaking Wyo ming who was once an of- icer in the Roosevelt ion's little spoke before galleries and a well-filled enate With Senator the ad- ministration half turned to O'Mahoney bitterly legislative rules invoked by the administration to bring the senate on page Seized as Traitor from public activity for more than a Jacob J. head of the official news was revealed y the Ural Worker as under ar- est on charges of being a The newspaper condemned as having done amage to the Russian so many recent presidential the tax the denunciation of dunces Roosevelt's last-minute in- salved no sores on Cap- itol It's not F. D. The antis are in no mood to abide by Marquis of Queensberry Both sides are resorting to throat tactics on and off the White are scheming to split the opposition ranks by jealousies among the anti- Roosevelt headliners ors Clark and Byrd They are taunting them with re- ferences to their with old-line G. O. like tin of Townsend of Davis of In re- turn the Democrats are friction between the faction and the Republican troublemakers foment these feuds on the other side of the It is doubtful if the Roosevelt Wheeler pact will for ii binds nobody except themselves The board of strategy realize that their only game is to get tough that the distinct danger of party dis on page YOUTH EXECUTED July exander 20, son of a retired coal died in the electric chair at Rockview iary this morning from the sex slaying of 16-year-old Helen a high school The young slayer died as he re- cited the 2oo 91EHKNB) SCENES Classified DEAR good at reasonable Call be- tween 6 and 7 at 340 E. Arch St. Phone 177S-R. Bight calls within an hour and a sale of was the re- sults reported from one insertion of this you an ad in Call me at 1100? y f ff Aircraft Carrier Expected to Launch 63 Planes July vas mid-Pacific hunt for Amelia Ear missing believed dea by some naval was call ed off today in the isolated Phoe nix islands sector and searcher awaited arrival of an aircraft car rier to open last resort The carrier steamin southward from was to reach the search area and launc her brood of 63 planes by Rear Admiral Orin G. Murfin 14th naval district announced the navy had complete its fruitless search of the more than 200 miles below the equator and far south of th course Miss Earhart and her navi gator had plotted in seeking blea Howland The aviatrix and her navigate Frederick J. July 2, presumably within a shoi distance of Howland the goal on a mile flight from New Admiral Murfin said the Lex ington had been assigned to areas already scanned b planes from the battleship Color ado and to search other likely re gions along the TWO AVIATORS INJURED WHEN PLANE CRASHE July Two Kewaunee aviators were ally injured yesterday when the airplane stalled and crashed whi they were attempting to land at th Leo 36, filling static operator and licensed died few hours after the Adolp 31, student died ear today at Kewaunee Th plane was owned by wh bought it second-hand seven months City Commissioners Criticize Civic lice Vlore Showers But Hot Weather Will The Localized thundershowers brought elief today to many sections of the ation sweltering in the heat wave hat has left 337 Government forecasters predicted here would be more showers bul hat generally the humid weather would continue at least an- ther day in the northern half of he nation and in southeastern Buffalo and N. en- 68 degree The first ain since mid-June fell in rn North Driven Out by Flood Forecasters said most north cen ral states could expect showers late today or but the mercury ose again toward the scorching nineties in D. C and many other Between 300 and 350 families in six West Virginia communities wen driven from their homes yesterday when two creeks Showers in some places rainfall that reached were reported in sec ions of Iowa Wy and several New Englan In 10 Lake Michigan gathers were burned and stocke when lightning struck a tree un der which they had sought shelte during a Severa were knocked unconscious ana late revived by 6Z Dead in New York At a windstorm night unroofed several build uprooted trees and damage Detroit's temperature droppe 18 degrees in five hours after night It reported a maxi mum of 91. Many cities along the Atlanti seaboard sweltered m 90 to 100 de gree New York state led with a fa list of 62. New Jersey fol lowed with 44 and Connecticut ha 38. Michigan's figure was 27. July 12 toll deaths attributed to the six day wave in Wisconsin an upper Michigan stood today at 1: The blazing its heat tern occasionally by ers and veering sent th mercury upward again today to ward the 90's. Frank federal meteor said some relief was in stor perhaps by late for th extreme eastern portion of Wiscon on page i July Frank Murphy had the promises of Democratic leaders today that they vould do all in their power to give im the legislation he wants when The promises were elicited at a Island conference con- cluded during the week with dissatisfaction over patronage in smoke from the pipe of party The 500 Democrats who bled for the described as a celebration in honor of the BY PROTESTS Criticism of civic organizations have adopted resolutions ies and acts of in con- with the lumberjack strike was voiced by the city commission t its meeting this ism of Arne chief of also was The discussion was prompted by of telegrams from a union in Duluth and from J. T. Bernard of eth protesting against the fracas hich occurred here a week ago Wednesday when several strike eaders were beaten and the strike wrecked as an after- nath to the stoning of logging Denies Advance Knowledge Mayor H. M. Dick said he had Chief Kujanson knew if the affair at 5 o'clock in the and Commissioner Joseph Meigher wanted to was the chief of Meigher referred to Kujanson as a fine chief of Chief Kujanson when in- that he had any advance of the He said a man named John Maki told hin arly m the evening that he had heard a raid on the Palace hall was Deing planned between 7 and and that the men who were planning it were congregated a Kujanson said the police officer was stationed at toe where a dance was in and that the officer remained here until the dance was over ither officers were instructed to make more than the usual of trips on Garvey Praises Member Kujanson also declared that h made several trips in his car tc Longyear but saw no one and also made several trip to the hall and in the the ast time being at p. m. A officers on patrol with the po ice car reported that everything was quiet and that there were nc indications of any disturbance ir When the hour T and 8 passed with no indications of a the chief said he considered report the result of an unfounded a number of which had been circulated ing the course of the Commissioner Raymond E. vey said he admired age in going before the throng at Palace hall when the ance there occurred at a. m. Mere Meigher also declared that it was the opinion of the governor's com- mission for investigation of the when he appeared before it to testify last that the on page Demos Promise to Pass Murphy Bills he legislature 29. returns to Lansing irst quarter of the Murphy voted endorsement of the governor's Questions about the governor's labor policies were not officially The governor was jubilant over the apparent will meet again in two weeks and complete he told the has been already is prodigious but we will complete the We are not afraid of hard The promise of the party ers was that the legislation closest to Governor Murphy's heart would be enacted either in the formal end of the regular session or in the special session to start ately Chief among the measures to which they referred on page 141 ARRESTED mm Guns Blaze for Hour as lice Besiege Union PLAN PLANT REOPENING BULLETIN July C. Sheet and Tube company vice- telegraphed Gov. M. Clifford Townsend today that the company's Harbor plant will be reopened tomorrow morning and asked national guard protection for returning The governor replied there was no necessity for state since all pickets bad been Rattle of Machine Gun Fire Causes Consternation in July rattle of machine guns tonight told ping that the five-day battle be- tween Chinese and Japanese troops along the 10 miles west of the had been The new outburst of firing be- gan at 10 p. m. a. C. S. and half an hour later was still on Resumption of fighting caused consternation to where tension had been relaxed because the day had passed without ther An armistice had been in although neither side would say an agreement had been It was the sixth night of conflict along the where nese and Japanese first clashed Wednesday A pan's North China George Gershwin Fails to Survive Operation for Brain July striking has ended the career of George whose in lifted jazz music from tin pan alley to the level of the He came up from song plugger to compose scores for film musicales at a reputed 000 a He was a Pulitzer prize 38, died here day of a brain tumor after a futile One specialist had flown here from Berkeley anc Dr. Walter of was ready to fly from New Trains and Truck Loads of Logs Are Being Shipped in Governor Murphy's commission for investigation and settlement of the woods strike met today with a number of loggers to get their sion of the That woods operations in the dis- are not at a standstill was in- at Watersmeet yesterday where a long train loaded with logs and pulpwood was sidetracked in the Logs also were being hauled yesterday in Iron county which has riot been by the lumberjack which Is now chiefly confined to gebic A train of logs and alsd was sidetracked In Hurley unit ot garrison on night maneuvers collided with part of the Chinese 29th Each side said the other fired July nese war office announced today that the vanguard of a Chinese army advancing from the south op- ened fire on Japanese positions west of Peiping at 11 a. m. p. E. S. Sunday The war office communique de- clared the Chinese brought the critical situation in anese relations to the breaking Japanese garrison is fully prepared to cope with he communique the direction of march rom the the vanguard might have been that of the troops the Chinese central government was reported to have sent to orce the 29th route The war office spokesman de- tailed widespread Chinese troop movements reported by army ad- rices from the zone in North where fighting has been in progress since Army on the March The Nanking government's crack central he already was on the march toward the Hankow The ments of this 12 miles west of have formed the battle for some It is lifeline to the rest of Gen. Wan and Gen. Feng were reported to have moved from to and is 22 miles south of the scene of the heaviest is en miles farther Both towns Prominent Scientists on Carry on Studies Members of the a group of prominent scientists in- in problems of industrial were guests today of Dr. H. F. and the Montreal ing Co. The regular annual ing is being held at the Montreal mine and will last for two An informal program has been This morning there was an inspection of the examining rooms and Dr. L. director of the Saranac Laboratory at Saranac N. discussed the modifying influence of hematite on the reaction of ca. X-rays were discussed by Dr. Homer L. director of the X-ray Laboratory of the Trudeau N. Y. This afternoon there was to be an inspection of the surface mining equipment and ventilation A short talk on the geology of this section was to be presented by R. M. Ph. head of the geological department of Michigan College of Mining and Technology Hough A banquet will be served Tuesday the group will be taken under ground at the treal In the there on page He and Ira his who writes were working on the for a new motion An illness a few days before had been though a nervous Saturday hi lapsed into a coma from which hi did not The body was to be sent .to New York today for born in Brooklyn showed his first interest in must at the age of 10 and received a meager education in it. At 19 h wrote his first musical in had its pre miere in 1923 at Aeolian with the aid of Paul nigh club Lovers of the classic had come to but when Gershwin and Whiteman they rose to The Blue Rhapsody ed a gap between jazz and the His popular sold more than His Thee I a musical comedy ing Washington's political won him a Pulitzer prize in 1932. July men died today of bullet wounds in a clash between police and strikers near a steel workers committee headquarters bringing to 15 the toll of the old steel Six other persons were wounded in the Police arrested 141 charging them with suspicion and disorderly or holding them on open charges for Fulgencio identified as a native of Mexico and a former Re- public mill was the first to Coroner Edward Reno said a calibre revolver bullet crashed through the back of Nick 45, died of a gunshot wound in the abdomen several hours after the Police said they had not determined his Plan Other Openings Plans went forward for the reopening of the last major units of steel mills closed by the railroad to war office spokesman Chinese troops un- der Gen. Shang Chen and Gen on page are on the strategic the CULLED TO TESTIFY Expected to Be Questioned Concerning Fight at Governor Announces But Company Officials Deny It. East July Gates of the Youngstown Sheet and Tube company mill remain closed today while some steel workers puzzled over whether the seven weeks old strike was settled or The picket line was disbanded shortly before last midnight after Gov. M. Clifford Townsend an- a settlement Com- pany officials denied a settlement had been A celebration turned into confusion and at 8 a. m. today the picket line was Twenty minutes later it dis- banded again but at 9 a. m. Jack Rusak steel workers organization committee strike Instructed the pickets to march but to off company Two men reported to police they were during the stration last night and early today which was marked by tapping of kegs of beer and several fist July em- ployes of the Ford Motor company's service department were sub- by the government today to testify at the national labor re- lations board hearing of charges that the company violated the Wagner act. The men are Fernando and Archie They were expected to be questioned by board attorneys concerning the fight at the Ford River Rouge plant gates May 26 when more than a dozen union members and organizers at- tempting to distribute union lets were beaten and The United Automobile Workers of America charges employes of the Ford service which lices the company started the This has been denied by company Today's first witnesses testified further concerning the Frederick a Detroit Times testified he and the driver of his automobile were chased from the riot scene by three men in another car who identified themselves as Ford service Arnold testified the chase began when he sighted his camera to take a picture of the A man he knew as he testified shouted a get break thai strike which at its height made men idle in seven These are the works of Youngstown Sheet Tube Co. at Indiana where 7.7CC workers have been In Federal Judge Mell G. Underwood ordered iate hearing on Its merits of a C. I. O. suit to enjoin the use of tional guardsmen in the Mahoning Valley strike He reserved de- cision on the state's efforts to ob- tain a change of Can Supply Names Frank sub-regional di- rector of the announced he had informed Chairman La Follette f the senate civil liberties the supply you with he names of some Republic Steel who participated in the Citing the committee's ion of the Chicago Memorial Day fatal to 10, Hardesty told Senator La Follette work of committee cannot be com- pete without the record of the premeditated murder in 100 Charges Guns blazed intermittently for nearly a hour as uniformed and special city police besieged a two- story frame building in and near which strikers and sympathizers had The structure is 500 feet from the main en- to a Republic Steel Corp. More than 100 men were in tody held in the city and county jails to face possible Ohio national rushed miles the battle paced posts they had left only last Friday when peace apparently had returned to this Major H. O. former army officer named by Police Chief ley Switter to aid him during the steel claimed the steel ers started the violence by stoning him and firing upon Charge No Provocation Harold J. Steel Workers Organizing Committee re- search charged the officers fired shotguns and tear gas shells into strikers and Police Officers Leo liam Fellabom and Austin Kraft said nearly 200 men gathered out- side union headquarters before 11 p. the hour at which a change of shift is made in Republic's by metal alloy An automobile drew to a stop at the curb and its on the Kelley A shouted order from Curley to the driver to shut off his lights on FORD INVESTORS TO BE PAID SOON Motor Co. announced today will be paid to em- ployes within a few senting semi-annual returns on ings in the Ford investment plan Employes are permitted to invest a maximum of one-third of their wages under the which has been in operation since 1920. THE WEATHER UPPER Mostly local day and in west portion not much change in Partly cloudy with scattered tonight and not so warm in ex- treme east portion HIGHEST AND LOWEST Green Bay and Raleigh 98; Milwaukee 97; 46. Santa Fe 50. The maximum temperature for the 24 hours Ing at noon was 88 tha for the same period 61, IN SPA PERI