Morning Press News 
26 July 1938 
MISCELLANEOUS 
7/as hlngto n: 
Republican Senator Vandenberg of Michigan predicted today that 
President Roosevelt would be beaten in an effort to win a 3rd 
term. Vandenberg* s prediction was made in a letter written 
to a Michigan f r i end . Said Vandenberg, ”1 expect President 
Roosevelt to try for a 3rd term but I dont expect him to succeed 
He nay be stopped in his own democratic convention where the 
more literal Jeffersonians will cling to tlieir party founder’ s 
horror of any such imperial tenure,” Vandenberg pointed out 
that prominent new deal senators had voted for a resolution 
condemning a third term for the 
to 
President Coolidge back 
in 1929. Said Vandenberg, ”1 do not really see whore he can 
find his '’Charlie McCarthy” with personal power enough to stand 
ary show of perpetuating the dynasty, so, as .jovial precedent 
breaker, I expect him to try himself”. 
Washington : 
The National Steel Labor Relations Board decided late today to 
bar the reirton Steel Company's lawyer, Clyde Armstrong, from 
participating in further hearings of unfair labor practice 
charges against the company. The board upheld the action of 
its ex. miner, Edward Smith, who had excluded the lawyer from 
the hearings on the grounds of defiant and contemptous action. 
Mexico City: 
Additional troops. were ordered today to join the soldiery in 
Central Mexico where bandits are harrying the outlying ranches 
and towns of Jalisco state. 
* 
Outlaws raided the village of Juchitlan in their last foray, 
killing three towns folk and kidnaping three young school girls 
The National as ociation of Mexican Schoolteachers has demanded 
that the government arm every school house with 50 rifles and 
5,000 rounds of ammunition. 
Yesterday, 12 girls from a government community farm in Jalisco 
State shot their way to freedom after their capture by fifty 
bandits. The girls killed four men and stole the outlaw’s 
horses in making the escape. Army leaders believed that a 
strong force of soldiery in the state will help curb the 
wholesale maraudings of bandits. 
San Prancisco : 
One hundred CIO warehousemen went on strike today at the plants 
of six stationery supply companies in San Prancisco. The new 
strikers joined 250 warehouse employees already on strike against 
fourteen comnanies. 
The companies are members of the San Prancisco distributor’s 
association. The association has demanded that all contract 
agreements with the warehouse unions in the wholesale industry 
should terminate on January 15th. The strikers demanded that 
the contracts run to April 10th. APL printing union members 
refused to pass the CIO picket lines. 
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