Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 34, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1922 — Page 5
JUNE 20,1922.
BONUS TARIFF PROGRAM LINED UP IN SENATE Party Leaders Agree to Follow Wishes of President as to Order of Business. (Position is clarified Special to Indiana Daily Times and Philadelphia Public Ledger. WASHINGTON, June 20.—1n deciding in conference not to displace the tariff bill for consideration of the soldiers' bonus bill. Itepublieans in the Senate sustained the wishes of President Hardin? and clarified the position of Senator McCumber, chairman of the Finance Committee, whose political future hinges on the primary election In North Dakota a week from nest Wednesday. i There were thirty-nine Republicans attending the conference which first rejected a resolution favoring consideration j cf the soldiers' bonus bill before the passage of the tariff bill by a vote of 20 to 9. then adopted another resolution In support of Mr. Harding's program. The second resolution adopted by a vote of 27 to 11, was presented by Mr. McCumber as a substitute for a motion by Senator Curtis of Kansas. It provided that: ADOPT SECOND RESOLUTION. “As soon as the vote is taken on the 1 of the tariff bill the soldiers' ' jLmpensatlon bill shall be immediately tAken up and made the uniflnished busi- ' ptAs and Its consideration proceeded with to xbe exclusion of any other business , Jj when temporarily laid aside for ms, wrs of Immediate exigency and continued the unfinished business unit it is : finally disposed of.’’ The resolution also specified that “there : shall be no final adjournment of this \ Congress or any recess’’ until both the tariff bill and the bonus bill shall have | been passed. sooner was the agreement reached I . Democratic supporters of the sol- j bonus, aided and abetted by a Bmail group of sympathetic Republicans,; prepared to wreck the program as soon as the naval approprition bill, now before the Senate, has been passed. There were several Democrats among them —, Senators Walsh, Massachusetts. and Ashurst, Arizona, who said they then ■would, move to make the bonus legislation the business before the Senate. LAFOLLETTE TO MOVE FOR BOM'S. They were hoping tha tany partisan aspect which might be attached to such action would be avoided through Senator LsFollette, Wisconsin, who was prepared to move for immediate consideration of the bolus bill. Mr. LaFoilette said there was no “understanding’’ that he should make such a motion and any action on his part depended on the circumstances. With the conclusion of consideration on the naval bill these Senators were prepared to put Republicans on record as opposed to taking up the bonus bill at this time. They did not expect any change could be made in the program. They calculated, however, that out in North Dakota and in other States where Republican supporters of the bonus are facing primary elections that a vote against displacing the tariff bill, would be regarded by the “soldier vote’’ as a vote against the bonus. In the conference, the dispute over procedure was said to have been made a question of President Harding's leadership by one of bis personal friends, Senator Edge, New Jersey. The Senator was reported to have told the conference that the Republican party's greatest asset at this time was Mr. Harding and to aban<Lr his leadership would be to court poWuOBSF, HARDING PLAN OF PROCEDURE. Without regard to the understanding that the President would veto the McCumber soldiers’ bonus bill, the Republicans proceeded to indorse his position on procedure. Those who voted for the first resolution to displace the tariff bill were McCumber, North Dakota: Lenroot, Wisconsin; Kellogg. Minnesota; Capper, Kansas: Jones, Washington; Townsend, Michigan: Nicholson. Colorado; Norbeck, South Dakota, and Sutherland, West Virginia. After that resolution was defeated the Senators voting against the second resolution not to displace the tariff bill were Edge, New Jersey; Dillingham, Vermont; Embarrassing Hairs Can be Quickly Removed (Beauty Culture) Hairs can be easily banished from the under-arms, neck and face by this quick, painless method: Mix into a stiff paste some powdered delatone and water, spread on hairy surface and la 2 or 3 minutes rub off, wash the skin and it will be free from hair or blemish. Excepting in very stubborn growths, one application is sufficient. To avoid disappointment, buy the delatone lu an original package and mix fresh.—Advertisement. L EXCURSION VIA INDIANAPOLIS TO CINCINNATI, 0. Round Trip Tickets $2.75 Sunday, June 25th BASEBALL PITTSBURGH AS. CINCINNATI. Special train leaves Indianapolis Station 7:00 a. m.. Central Standard Time, returning leaves Cincinnati Union Station 7:00 p. m.. Central Standard Time. Tickets and full information at Ticket Office, Phone Circle 5300 or Union Station. * M
?S“ and $2.75 DAYTON, OHGO $2.75 A. Via TERRE HAUTE. IXDIAXAP- ’ OLIS 4 EASTERN TRACTION CO. -*■■■>> Sunday, June 25th Leave Indianapolis 7:30 A M. Returning:, leave Dayton at 7:00 P. M. Round Trip. !2JSl date '_ Round Trip. $6.00 TOLEDO, OHIO $6.00 ' cLovE f iTt\ X v R F FO R^ L SD. Saturday, June 24th Leave Indianapolis SOO A M., or 11:30 P. M. Return limit, leaving Toledo at 5:20 P. M.. June 26th. SFECLYL LOW ROUND TRIP TOURIST RATES—IS Days’ Return Limit —EVERT SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. T. H., I. A E. Traction Co.—T.. St. L. A W. (Cioverloaf) R. R.—C. A B. Transit Cos. —D. A C. Navigation Cos. —Canada Steamship Lines to the following points: Uuuaio $15.22 Toronto $19.57 Niagara f alls $16.22 Detroit $ll.OO Cedar Point or Cleveland $12.85 Toledo $9.00 Put-in-Bay $10.50 Call Traffic Department, MAin 2737, for full information regarding the above and other slimmer tours. Office, 208 Terminal Ruilding.
Ernest, Kentucky; Brandegee, Connecticut; Phipps, Coiorado; Nelson, Minnesota, Fernald, Maine; Wadsworth, New York; Calder, New York; Newberry, Michigan, and Warren, Wyoming. Mr. Lenroot was said to hrjve told the j conference that unless the tariff bill was j passed by Aug. 15, he would support a ! motion to displace that measure for con-j sideration of the bonus bill. Itn that | reservation he was understood to have i the support of Mr. McCumber. Their ; hopes were that such an understanding 1 would place Democrats fllibusting against the tariff bill, in the position of delaying J consideration of the bonus legislation, j Following the conference some Demo- , crats sent telegrams to absentees urging \ them to be present following passage of I the naval bill. Among the twenty-one J Republicans not attending the conference, a group of about nine were expected to support the wrecking crew of the minority. The preamble of the resolution adopted by the conference pointed out that in the conference of April 18 Republicans agreed to pass a soldiers bonus bill in this session of Congress. It said reports that the measure reported from the ! Finance Committee on June 8, and now , on the calendar would be abandoned at \ this session were “without any foundation whatever.” BROAD RIPPLE NOW PART OF INDIANAPOLIS (Continued From Fage One.) from the center of the city are without such improvements. , “There Is no section of the city that ; does not get water, gas and lights when the times is ripe,” replied the cngiuer. TAXES NOW ARE HIGHER. ; Councilman Ira L. Bramblett, a cham- , pion of annexation, pointed out that ; Broad Ripple’s tax rate now Is 4 cents j higher than that of the city, the town i residents benefiting thereby in coming ! into Indianapolis. Before the hospital bond Issue ordi- ! nance was passed. Councilman Lloyd I>. | Claycombe offered and had passed an 1 amendment reducing the interest rate ! from 5 to 4% per cent. Dr. E. E. Hodgln, president of the 1 board of public health, said authorization PRESTONE SUPER-SIZE CORD Dealers’ prices direct to consumers In city only. Regular Direct Size. Price. Sale Price. 30x3 % $ 18.00 910.75 32x3% 25.50 13.50 32x4 32.40 18.75 33x4 33.40 19.50 34x4 34.25 2 0.00 CORD Regular Direct Size. Price. Sale Price. ! 30x3% $20.75 9 5.56 32x3% 29.35 19.57 31x4 33.80 22.53 32x4 37.25 2-4.83 33x4 35.40 25.60 34x4 39.40 26.2 7 32x4% 48.20 32.16 34x4% 50.50 33.69 35x4% 52.00 -34.67 35x5 62.75 41.84 OUR OWN CITY STORES 213 Mass. Ave. 111 S. Illirois St 44 W. Ohio St. 20 W. North St. PARKER TIRE & RUBBER CO. ! Factory Indianapolis Drexel 8800.
of the issue practically saves the hospital from demorillzation. The board has been trying to get this action since February. Student nurses can not be induced toi live in the present quarters. Hence their number has been depleted until next month there will be approximately fifty graduate nurses on the pay roll at sl,**oo a year salary each. In another year, under present conditions the total nurses’ pay roll would have been SIOO,OOO a year, which would have almost necessitated closing up the institution, it was said. Student nurses are paid only an average of $l2O a year, their uniforms, board and lodging. NEW NURSES HOME BRIGHTENS PROSPECTS. With the new nurses home in prospect. Dr. Hodgin said, the student staff can be recruited to full strength and the institution put in the running with the best in the country. Patient capacity will be slightly increased by remodeling of some wings. The new buildings are to be erected in the extreme northeast corner of the hospital grounds. Plans already are drawn. No time will be lost In letting a contract. Dr. Hodgin said. The State fire marshall has ordered one of the present buildings torn down and the time limit for its razing is almost up. ANTI-PARK-DANCING IS RESULT OF SQUABBLE. The anti-park-daneing ordinance is said to be an outgrowth of a squabble Mrs. Martin L. Relffel, head of a south side women's organization has been having with the board of park commissioners over who shall run Garfield park. Mrs. Relffel did not want dancing to be permitted In the new Garfield shelter house, it Is said. The park board thought dancing would be proper, it is understood. President Charles A. Bookwaiter is said to have told Mrs. Relffel he thought a woman of her experience and intelligence would have learned by now she was not running the park board
DID you read "The Inside Story of Henry Ford’s Jew-Mania?" A few days after this article by Norman Hapgcod came out, the June number of Hearst’s International was practically cleaned off the newsstands. Now ccmes the second installment—"On the Trail of the Sleuths' 1 —even more startling. Somebody argued that the Jews led the Roman Catholics to attack the Union Club —one enter prising Russian wrote to propose that ‘‘the Pogroms should start late in the FalU” The brother ot Josephus Daniels, the ex-secretary of Navy, was the lawyer who acted for Mr Ford—somebody forged an astonishingly lifelike Protocol quoting him, among others, as saying some most astounding things Read about this wild jumble of Tsarists. Ford Jew-investigators, Roman Catholics. Masons, Pogroms, Protocols, Sinn Fein. Ku Klux Klan—and see if YOU car guess which documents are. forgeries—and see if YOU can tell where the Truth begins or ends*
“The Traia that Nobody could Stop” really deierves to be listed among the best short stories. But it is actually an advertisement—another*4 pages of the great SERIAL advertisement of 26,000 A. D. S. druggists now running in Hearer’s International. Business men and advertisers everywhere are fotlowing this with much interest. If your newsdealer hasn't your July copy, send us his name and address and we will be glad to see you get a copy with our compliments.
INDIANA DAILY TIMES
MEMORIAL TO GALBRAITH
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Here is a memorial erected to the, memory of Frederick W. Galbraith, Jr., national commander of the American Le- ' gion. The tablet, set In a boulder, marks the st near Indiana avenue and White River where the commander was killed in an automobile accident.
or any other board any more than any other citizen. Mrs. Relffel was at the council meeting. So was the ordinance proving a fine of SIOO for any one who “gives, holds, promotes, advertises, aids, alets or allows dancing in any public park, whether admission is charged or not.” Councilmen Otto Ray, Buchanan, Bernd and King insisted they were introducing
Upton Sinclair’s Sensational New Novel They Call Me Carpenter! WHAT would Christ do if he should return to Earth today?] This is the question men and women—sincere or sneering —have been asking each other for two thousand years. Reverent-! ly, yet fearlessly, Upton Sinclair sets out to answer that No novel of our time has caused a greater sensation than Upton' Sinclair’s The Jungle”—a novel of the Chicago stockyards. But that will pale into insignificance compared with the story of “Mr. Carpenter” and His adventures in our world of Jazz, Flappers, French Fashions and High Finance. It all begins with the stained glass window of St Bartholomew’s Church—in Hearst’s International for July.
Great July Issue ( New Size ) Now On Sale IJearst’s International 11A LIBERAL EDUCATION 11* WEST FORTIETH STREET NEW YORK
The tablet bears the American Legion ' emblem and the Inscription, "Dedicated to the memory of Frederick W. Galbraith, Jr., national commander of the American Legion, who was killeld on this , spot in active service of the American Legion, June 9, 1921.”
| the bill on their own volition and Mrs. ; Relffel had nothing to do with it. The south side councilmen wanted the rules suspended on the dance ordinance. Councilman Claycombe blocked them by 1 voting “no,” explaining he thought since ; the ordinance applied to all parks, other i i sections of the city should be heard from. I Councilman King said south side people feared the morals of Garfield Park
would be undermined by dancing in the shelter house. A crowd of twenty-five from Chicago were going to dance Sunday whether the matron would let them or not, he said. He foresaw such troubles constantly. SAYS MAYOR CHANGES MIND. Claycombe inquired if the ordinance would not prevent folk dancing by playground children. “We’re not going to have folk dancing, anyway, the mayor says,” replied King. “Sometimes the mayor changes his mind,” said Claycombe. “Very frequently,” remarked King. King called out the ordinance authorizing a bond issue for $200,000 with which to buy the quarter block across Alabama street, which has slumbered for many weeks, but when ‘.t was discovered it provided for a higher interest rate than that prevailing and dates for the bonds and interest payments are several weeks past it was decided to wait until the next meeting to amend It and take action. For once, President Bernd agreed with Mayor Shank. Bernd made some sarcastic remarks because a young woman, whom he did not name, in the park department, draws salary as a recreation worker and as a school teacher. Mayor Shank has talked long and often about the same thing. The young woman was considered highly valuable in recreation work by the Jewett administration. Buchanan picked up the hammer and delivered a few raps because the administration bought four automobiles made in Wisconsin for $123 each more than cars made in Indianapolis would have cost,” This did not help the unemployment situation here, be said. King chimed In with a request the board of health help find a way lo stop pollution of Bean Creek and Pleasant Run. His constituents werq running after him night and day about It, he declared. Mr. Hodgin promised to send an in-
The Fagan By John Russell e A beautiful girl, the brown skinned halfcaste of the South Seas; a vendetta that lasted eighteen years—make a story you won't want 4 to miss. Besides “The Pagan” there are six other stones —stories like “Lapidowitz Dines Out” or the “Sinfulness of Skippy” that will make you laugh and stories like “Wandering Daughters” or “The Hidden Trail” that will make you cry Seven of these sparkling short stories besides three great novels —Upton Sinclair, Gouverneur Morris, Sir Gilbert Parker. The fiction alone in this July number of Hearst’s INTERNATIONAL is worth twice the thirty-five cents you pay for the magazine.
spector out right away. “This board of health is for this council for anything you want that’s half way reasonable,” said the (lector. It was Ray’s turn. He kicked because he tried a week or more to get some city official to keep the street cleaning department from dumping sweepings on the yards of residents at Villa avenue and Pleasant Run. Refuse blew on people's porches a quarter of an inch chick, be sa'd. But finally he ran on to the mayor’s chauffeur “and cussed about It to him.” The chauffeur told Mrs. Shank and she went out to see the condition. “She got so mad about it she sent about a dozen wagons out this evening, so I guess that's fixed up.” ELLIOTT PROMISES TO CLEAN CREEKS. Then City Engineer Elliott, also a sanitary commissioner, said the commission hopes to have Bean Creek and Pleasant Run clear and sweet by the middle of August. The Citizens Gas Company and American Creosote Company, chief polluters of Pleasant Run, have submitted plans for plants to handle their own trade wastes, now dumped in the sterr.m. These will be in operation by the middle of July, Elliott thought. There has been more trouble with the Webber Milk Company, which dumps into Bean Creek, he said. This concern has been threatened with court action if it does not get Its plans in for approval before July 1, according to Elliott All but Ray voted "aye” in passing over Mayor Shank’s veto the ordinance prohibiting establishment of public markets within 500 feet of residences. The ordinance is deslgend to prevent the Tlbts-Bose Realty Company from establishing a market at Thirtieth and Delaware streets. An ordinance giving policemen and firemen fifteen Instead of seven days’ vacation, was introduced and referred to a committee.
CAN YOU ANSWER 12 QUESTIONS! (l—What doea Edison think Is the chief futur® o t the Radio? I—Who pm the portrait of the Bank President In the stained glass window of St Barihc omcw'i? 'i —Wtu: ts a Protocol? f - 4—la Hate a more potent force than Lot e? 5 Who wrote 'Mr. Prohack*? Who WTc.e‘‘Kikr? 6 What shape is the Universe? tl~ I" what two S-atrs are the Senatorial election* most important this fall? : B—Can8 — Can a BAD Woman make a Good Wife? 9—How did Trotzlcy get his military education? 10 —What are ycr Glands for? ( 11—There are 843,000 Protestants m the sfx border counties of Ireland—and how many Ron, Catholics? 12—How many million dollars a day are we now lending Europe? AH these questions and many more are answered for you by men like Upton Sinclair, Qouvemeur Morris, No.-man H apgood, Owen Johnson, Sir Qilbert Parker, in Hearst’s INTERNATIONAL for July. "Have FUN while you -tad; but KNOW something when you get through ” is our motto. Who’s to BLAME in Ireland l Fralier Hunt gives truths of desperate situation Man’s Most Spectacular Invention - Radio i Thomas A. Edison talks about the Miracle of the Day Prohibition has Made GOOD! Startling facts and figures by Dr. Woods Hutchinson They Lie about Me in America! Deasie Beatty sends a Message from Leon Trotzky Does Her Vote affect Our Dinner? Walt Mason raises a question in“ Whiskers for Women*
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