Trial* Examiner for Trade
Commission Will Be
Buried Tomorrow.
Millard Fillmore Hudson, 75, trial
examiner for the Federal Trade Com
mission, died yesterday after a short
illness in Emergency Hospital.
Mr. Hudson was a recognized au
thority on the law to prevent unfair
competition. As a reward for his aid
In perfecting this law, he was made a
special attorney for the Trade Com
mission when the law went- into effect.
In July, 1918. Mr. Hudson was ap
pointed acting chief examiner for the
commission and was promoted to chief
examiner in January, 1920, holding
this position until July, 1928, when
he was appointed trial examiner. In
the latter capacity he conducted
hearings of cases pending before the
commission.
Mr. Hudson was the author of a
number of articles on history for
leading magazines. He was a well
known genealogist. Recently, after
much research, he completed an his
torical account of Henry Hudson, the
explorer.
He was a member of the Federal
Bar Association, the Federal Club and
the Maryland Historical Association.
He was librarian of the Washington
Lodge of the Theosophical Society in
America, of which he previously had
been president. Formerly, he also
was president for 10 years of the Na
tional Theosophical Temple As
eociatlon.
A native of Jay County, Ind., Mr.
Hudson was graduated in law from
Missouri State University. He was a
member of the Missouri Bar and the
District Bar. He came to Washing
ton in 1907 with the late Senator
Francis G. Newlands of Nevada. Later,
he served as cleric of several minor
committees and in March, 1913, was
made clerk of the Senate Committee
on Interstate Commerce. While clerk
of the latter committee he aided in
assembling information for the Fed
eral Trade Commission act, which
was approved by Congress in 1914.
Mr. Hudson resided at Brookmont,
Md. He is survived by his widow,
Mrs. Lillian S. Hudson; a son, Holland
Hudson of Cincinnati, and a daugh
ter, Mrs. Robert Wittwer, Madison,
Wis.
Funeral services will be held at 4
p.m. tomorrow in Lee’s chapel, Fourth
street and Massachusetts avenue
northeast. Burial will be private.
Strikes
(Continued From First Page.)
time was needed to study it. He add
ed he would advise her when he had
received some "intelligent reaction to
the proposal.”
About the same time. General Mo
tors posted on all plant bulletin
boards a statement signed by Sloan
saying the corporation would nego
tiate with the auto workers’ union as
soon as sit-down strikers evacuated
the plants.
Sloan denied Miss Perkins’ accusa
tion that the corporation had evaded
"moral responsibilities" in the strike
crisis.
“You know this Is not true,” he
added. “So why all these charges?
Simply because we refuse to negotiate
with a group that holds our plants
for ransom without regard to law or
justice. * * *"
Chevrolet plants in Michigan and
Indiana, meantime, received 40,000
workers who had been idle some days
because the strike had tied up key
plants. There was no trouble. Homer
Martin, union president, said it was
all right for union members to go
back to work in plant* where strikes
had not been called.
MURPHY TURN'S DOWN WORKERS
Befuaes to Pledge Protection to and
From Plants.
DETROIT. January 28 CP).—Gov.
Prank Murphy reiterated at Lansing
today the State’s intention to prevent
bloodshed or violence in connection
with General Motors strikes, but told
a delegation from the Flint alliance
it was impossible to answer their de
mand that he "guarantee all workers
full protection in going to and com
ing from work.”
S. A. Rasbach of Flint, a Buick
Worker, headed the group, which an
alliance mass meeting at Flint Tues
day instructed to demand a "yes” or
•’no" answer from the executive. The
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alliance was organized to express anti
strike sentiment.
“You know I helped to arrange
peaceful negotiations between Gen
eral Motors and the strikers," Murphy
told Rasbach. “Unfortunately, those
negotiations were disturbed, in part
by the Flint Alliance. If that had not
happened, you might all have been at
work now. It is your duty to use
forbearance and care.”
“I demand a direct answer In the
name of the 8.000 workers who sent
us here,” retorted Rasbach.
“You’ll go away without one,” an
swered the Governor.
“We want bread and butter and the
right to work guaranteed by the
State,” Rasbach said.
The Governor pointed out that since
arrival of National Guardsmen at
Flint following riots outside a striker
held Fisher Body Co. plant there had
been no rioting nor bloodshed in
Flint. Murphy added that Federal
and State government authorities were
continuing efforts toward peace con
ciliation between the corporation and
the United Automobile Workers of
America.
He advised Rasbach not to attempt
to inflame workers on his return to
Flint.
Three union organisers were taken
to a Flint hospital today as the result
of what a deputy sheriff termed the
“deliberate” wrecking of the taxicab
in which they were fleeing from hos
tile crowds at Bay City and Saginaw.
One, W. J. Hynes, president of a
United Mine Workers’ district at
Uniontown, Pa., later was released
after treatment for scalp lacerations.
They were members or a group of
five union organizers who set out from
Flint yesterday to carry on member
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ship campaigns among General Motor*
employes in Bay City and Saginaw.
One, John Mayo, of Pittsburgh, dis
appeared during a clash with a hos»
tile crowd at Saginaw during which
police took the union men to police
headquarters for safe keeping.
Mayo reached union headquarters
at Detroit today, explaining he stepped
into a drug store when a man at
tempted to strike him. then went by
taxicab to Lansing and returned to
Detroit from there. Robert Travis,
U. A. W. A. organizer at Flint, had
expressed fears for Mayo’s safety.
organizer: two bodyguards and oth
ers. Telephonic reports received
here said that non-union men met
them at Muncle, Ind., and advized
the into leave the city, but that the
order was disregarded.
The same advices said that union
men were congregating at Alexandria,
Ind., 10 miles from Anderson.
Hall testified in Washington yester
day before the La Follette Civil
Liberties Committee concerning the
disturbance at Aaderson.
The General Motors Corp., whose
operations have beeen reduced severely
by strikes called by the U. A. W. A.,
ordered 5,900 employes back to work
in Fisher body plants in Michigan to
day. Forty thousand Chevrolet work
ers were recalled in Indiana and Mich
igan yesterday.
other union men to a Saginaw hotel
Boyd went to his home. The crowd
followed to the hotel.
While police and deputies kept the
crowd back Federoff, Hymes, O'Rourke
and Dltzel entered a taxicab and, ac
companied by police cars, started to
Flint. Instead of going to the front
door with the others, Mayo dashed
out a back door of the hotel.
"Mayo was an old-time union or
ganizer and knew the ropes," Travis
said. “If he got away safely he
would have phoned union headquar
ters. His body probably will be found
In the Saginaw River."
At Detroit, the U. A. W. A. with
drew its pickets from the office en
trance to the Cadillac Motor Car Co.
plant, where police clashed Monday
morning with strikers attempting to
prevent office workers from entering
the plant. Walter Reuther, U. A. W.
A. organizer, said the union had de
cided in an all-night meeting to de
sist from picketing the administra
tion building.
Picketing of the employment office
and principal factory gates was con
tinued, however. Reuther said the
union was determined that factory
workers should not enter the plant
while the strike is in progress.
Ed Hall, vice president of the U. A.
W. A., left last night for Anderson,
Ind., where anti-union forces seized
the union headquarters Monday. With
him were Maurice Sugar, Detroit at
torney; Gilbert Clark, U. A. W. A.
Japanese to Flay in Siam.
The Japan-Slam Cultural Society
will send a company of dancers and
musicians from Tolcio to Bangkok,
where the artists will appear In the
Siam National Theater.
w———i
Several carloads of men took tne
two organizers to the outskirts of Sag
inaw, where police rescued them. The
union men were taken to police head
quarters and kept In protective cus
tody.
Still at the Bay City hotel, Boyd,
Ditsel. Hymes and O'Rourke asked
for police protection. Frank Ander
son, Bay City police superintendent,
took them to Saginaw, where they re
joined their companions in the office
of Police Chief Fred H. Genske. A
crowd assembled outside the police sta
tion, and officers guarded the en
trances.
When the police conducted the
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PATRIOTIC DRIVE OPENED
The Washington Daughters of the
American Revolution have opened a
program of patriotic education to com
bat subversive propaganda in prepara
tion for National Defense weelc, Feb
ruary 12 to 22, it was announced today.
Oood citizenship medals are to be
given by the National Defense Com
mittee in contests which place em
phasis on honor, courage, service and
I iea<ier*hlP *n y*>uth.
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1100 Twelfth St. N.W.
Corner of 12th and "t“
Circles Daily, 2:30 St 7:30 P.M.
Grace Gray DeLens. Beader
Personal Interviews for spiritual help
and auidance may be arransed by a
visit to the Council House or Telephone
Metropolitan 523*. Consultation SI.
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