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Show Problem of Relief in Cleveland Solved, But Bricker-New Deal Fight Goes On . 4 a third Urm ballyhoo." Earlier the governor, who refused re-fused pleas from several Ohio cities for a special session of the legislature, legis-lature, observed "all blasts against us" have come from new dealers. He referred to Ickes, President Roosevelt and Mayor Florella La-Cuardla La-Cuardla of New York. This city's 65,000 needy, on short rations for 26 days, will be restored re-stored to "full relief Friday as a result of council's authorization of $1,050,000 in tax delinquency notes and Increased W P A activity. WASHINGTON. Dec. 12 tffV The Republican national committee commit-tee announced today Governor John W. Brlcker of Ohio would "discuss the Ohio relief situation" before the Ohio State society of New York Saturday evening. The committee said "the Roose- CLEVELAND. Dec. 12 UP Cleveland's 1939 relief trouble apparently ap-parently were solved today by city-federal action, but the Ohio situation remained In the national spotlight as Secretary of the Interior In-terior Ickes and Governor John W. Brlcker clashed again over the state's attitude. Ickes said in a speech at Newark. New-ark. N. J- that Governor Brlcker "deliberately chose to risk starvation starva-tion rather than spoil his own selfish self-ish plan for a budget balancing record rec-ord in his own state." The governor replied by accusing accus-ing new dealers of "playing politics poli-tics with human misery." 'There has been no starvation In Cleveland, no neglect of relief In Ohio," Governor Brlcker said. ". . . Ickes is simply endeavoring to smear the good name of Ohio for velt administration has undertaken to make capital" out of the relief controversy between the city of Cleveland and the state. It expressed ex-pressed belief Brlcker would "reply "re-ply to the new dealers who have been criticising him." |