Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 27, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1924 — Page 7

TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 1924

PLANK OF G.O.P. PROGRESSIVES !S 10 BE REJECTED Coolidge Administration Is Scored in Statement of Principles, By PAUL R MALLON’. Vnited Press Staff Correspondent CLEVELAND, Ohio, June 10.— The progressive plank to be presented to the Republican convention for consideration by the Republican platform committee was made public today. It will be rejected by the resolutions committee, and serving as it does as a statement of principles from Senate; La Follette and his followers, will be the milestone marking the definite break in Republican ranks which will be followed by launching of independent candidacy of La Follette. Administration Denounced The plank includes denunciation of the Coolidge Administration so that it’s complete rejection is a foregone conclusion. It will serve only as a matter of record unless the members of the Wisconsin delegation are able to find a way of reading it from the floor, thus bringing it into the formal convention pro ceedings. “The great issue before the American people today is the rontrol of Government \nd industry by private monopoly,” the Wisconsin platform begins. “The tyrannical power which the American people denied to a king, they will not longer endure the monopoly system. The people know monopoly has its representatives in the halls of Congress. on the Federal bench and the executive departments; that these servile agents barter away the nation’s natural resources, nullify the acts of Congress by judicial vote and administrative favor, invade the people's rights by unlawful arrests and unconstitutional searches and seizures, direct our foreign policy in the interests of predatory wealth and make wars and conscript the sons of the common people to fight them. Federal Courts Scored “The usurpation in recent years by Federal Courts of the power to nullify laws duly enacted by the legislative branch of the Government is a plain violation of the constitution.” The plank then takes up: Agriculture the gravest emergency now exists, cites the conditions in fifteen wheat States resulting in 25 per cent of the farmers of these States being 0SE1IZ” FOR SORT TIRED, ACHING FEET Good-bye, sore feet, burning feet, swollen feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired feet. Good-bye, corns, callouses, bunions and raw spots. No more shoe tightness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in agony. “Tiz” is magical, acts right off. “Tiz” draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up the feet. Use “Tiz” and forget your foot misery. Ah: how comfortable your feet feel. A few cents buy a box of “Tiz” now at any drug or department store. Don't suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet that never swell, never hurt, never get tired. A year’s foot comfort guaranteed or money refunded.—Advertisement.

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G. O. P. ‘Question Girl'

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ANSWER QUESTIONS AND SMILE. THAT’S THE JOB OF MARY B. LEACH OF WEST VIRGINIA, ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE REPUBLICAN Convention in Cleveland.

bankrupt since 1920, and declares: “Almost unlimited prosperity for the great corporations and ruin and bankruptcy for agriculture is the direct and logical result of the policies and legislation which deflated the farmer while extending unlimited credit to the great corpora tions.” House Cleaning Promised Oil Leases —Pledges complete house cleaning of the Department of Justice, Department of Interior and • executive departments and pledges I recovery of the naval oil reserves which were leased to Sinclair and; Doheny by former Secretary Fall. • Advocates complete revision of the | waterpower act and all legislation I applying to leases of public domains , Railroads—Pledges revision of the j Esch-Cummins act so as to place; railroad valuations upon actual in\estment with a declaration favoring public ownership. Economy Pledged Taxation —Pledges for rigid economy. especially as regards the Army and Navy, with a declaration favoring a high surtax. A denunciation of the Mellon plan as a device to relieve millionaires at the expense of other taxpayers. Tariff —Declares in favor of drastic reduction in the present high rates of the Fordney-McUumber bill 1-a.bor —Favors abolition of the system of adjudicating labor disputes by means of injunction. Waterways—Declares for Ureat Lakes-to-the-sea proposal. Referendum—Favors direct presi-

HONESTY IS ASKED IN G. O. P. PLATFORM Shoemaker, Friend of President, Would Test Planks by Same Standard as He Tests Boots.

By JAMES LUCEY Shofmakfr friend of President Coolidje C r—— LEVELAXD, June 10.—Shoes and political platforms are j - . not made on the same work j bench. But the test of a good shoe is the test of a good platform and that test is honesty. It is easy to make a good shoe if you are honest about it. It should be easy to make a good platform if it is to be an honest one. If the platform makers will take the good advice of President Coolidge there would not be all this doubt about the Republican party's platform. I haven’t studied much about the world court plan, but I know’ this much, that Senator Lodge from our State isn't the bright man he was once. He is getting old and I w’ould mildly accuse him of suffering from a little selfishness, a little jealousy. And I believe that his world court plan is not hornjjso much of his idea about internatiAal relations, but of his attitude toward President Coolidge. Calls Them Wannakers Now take the Japanese question. The warmakers in Washington have acted hastily, as warmakers are wont to act, and now we ought to prepare for trouble. Instead of listening to President Coolidge's advice, Congress has unreasonably offended the Japanese. Why shouldn't ihe country have waited a little while and settled the problem in a friendly fashion? The Republican party w’ould do itself well to try to smooth this matter over. Opposes Bonus It is very true that I had a boy who was taken from college to get DONT TRY TO RAISE your family without it. For stomach aches and pains; sudden cramps, severe intestinal colic and indiscretions of eating and drinking, changes in water, diet or take CHAMBERLAIN’S COLIC and DIARRHOEA REMEDY Never fail to have it on hand.

dential elections and the movement for referendum. Foreign Relations—Demands revision of the treaty of Versailles "in accordance with terms of the ar mistice." WIFE DECLARES SPOUSE DRUGGED Woman Calls Police When Hubby Is Robbed, Relieving her husband. Lewis Wells. 35 N. Wurman Ave., had been drugged and robbed, Mrs. Lewis called police. Mrs. Wells said her husband came home minus S2OO, a gold watch and a pair of shell-rimmed glasses, hoot total was valued at S3OO. Burton Hhiels Company, 23S S Meridian St., report $22 taken by burglars. E. D. Kohlhepp, manager of the F. J. Horuff Company store at 2630 Northwestern Ave., reports a brick hurled through a window and shoes valued at S2O taken. Baby Drowns By Times Special NEW ALBANY Ind., June 10 The 2-year-old son of George D. Williams was drowned here in a pit which the father was digging.

into a soldier’s uniform, and that 1 had two sons-in-law who saw action overseas, but even so, I feel that President Coolidge's stand on the bonus was the right stand. Let the nation take care of those who are suffering ill results, but those who are with good health —what do they want? I am afraid that the bonus money will do more harm than good, and anyhow, 1 do not like the spirit of the whole thing, for instead of being; a recognition of patriotism and service rendered it came to be nothing but a weapon in the hands of politicians who want to be re-elected. This country loves honesty, if ever there was a country that did. Look to President Coolidge and the tre mendous following that he has won, which is nothing more or less than an admiration for honesty. Let the Republican convention be honest and it will be repaid in an avalanche of votes. The best place to show Its honesty is In its platform. /Copyright, 1924, Nea Service, Inc.)

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PURDLE SENIORS GIVEN DIMAS; HEAR WOOLLEN' More Than Two Score Local j Students Graduate at j State School. B;t Vnited Press LAFAYETTE, Ind.. June 10.—Degrees were conferred on 525 graduates of Purdue University at the fiftieth annual commencement exercises held here today. The bachelor degree was conferred on 486 graduating seniors and acl- I vanned degrees on thirty-nine oth-1 ers. The science class was the | largest with 100 representatives, agriculture was second, with 02, and j mechanical engineering was third with 01. Other degrees were as follows: Electrical engineering, 70; civil engineering. 63; chemical engineering, 30; pharmacy, 34. President E. C. Elliott presented the diplomas. In addition, ninety-nine of the seniors were commissioned as sec ond lieutenants of artillery in the Army and were assigned to the reserve corps. This is the largest j number ever commissioned in artillery at one time from any American educational institution with the exception of the United States Military Academy at West Point. For the first time in the history of Purdue the alumni were officially represented with one person from each class, except the first three classes, of which there are no living j members W. K. Eldridgo of Indianapolis, a graduate of 1877. was the oldest alumnus to march in the facultymentor procession from Agricultural Hall to Memorial Gymnasium, where the exercises were held. Evans Woollen Speaker. Evans Woollen, president of the Fletcher Savings and Trust Com i pany of Indianapolis, deljveied the > commencement, address. His sub- • Jeet was "Three Rent* dies for the World of Today." .... tou are going out into a trou- ! bled world,” he told the menders of the graduating class. "In it j th.-re is much discontent and there ! are many heartaches “It is a world which thinking 1 people survey with anxiety—-but a . world withal in which there are opportunities for usefulness greater i than ever Wore if only you bring j to it that which In trouble it needs "I would suggest to you three things its sorely needs: In the presence of bourbons and radicals, of racial hates and wrap, i g!>->i theology, of misunderstanding I among the sons of men. It needs to!- t eranee that will get the other man's J viewpoint. “We need generous-minded ness to ! meet the intolerance of the bourbon j whose whole philosophy of life is in ! rhe phrase of ‘law and order,' as; tin- maintenance of the statu quo.! as well as to combat that other intolera ire of the radicals whose whole philosophy of life is in the de- j struetion of the status quo. “In the presence of class legisla- | tion that takes from one and gives to another, of paternalism tha* j then tens our institutions and cor- I rupts our society, it needs .lorn | wherein each ‘with none to make j afraid, may ‘accomplish his own j mn nhood.' “In the presence of fads and fob: lies, of vulgarity and waste, of ert | feebling and luxury, of bankruptcy in things of the spirit more than in things of the market, it needs fru gality that will count the cost as if payment were made In minted life.” Indianapolis Graduates Diplomas were presented to the following Indianapolis Btinlenia Elizabeth Jeari- < tto Crooks. Harriet Jos- phin.- Finohout, Dorothy Allen Dailey Margaret M-Tlict-ndsre, H.irohJ Fred Miller. Paul Ivan Newman. Helen Julia Schuller, bachelor of science. Harry August Baldauf. William Edward Benson, Joseph Emery Mendr!!, Henry Charles Woghnrst, Orlando Vanderbilt Winks, bacelor of science in agriculture. Hobart Warfel lit hr. Harry Gaston Contrhlen Jr.. Keynnld Otis Crossiaml Forest Kammond Denney. GeofTrey Morgan Harry. Harold Itecse Haught. Milton Cas per Kling Richard Chipman Lennox Howard William Nlemeyer, Cf-'l i Creighton Reeder. Clark Marcellus Richardson. Paul Hamar Stanley, bachelor of science in mechanical engineering William Henry Behrens. Herbert Rntnsma. Edward Randolph Dye William Henry Junffelaus, Ralph William Riser Henry Bell Steer. Donald Hodges Walker, bachelor of science in civil engineering-. Oris Blake Cunningham, Samuel Schley Lentz. Edward Paul Talbott, Russel George Tilton. Maurice Stephen Watson, bachelor of science in electrical engineering. John Roster and Andrew Tomlin bachelor of science in chemical engineering. Percy Joseph Seal), graduate in phar maey; William Burnett Barnes, mechanical engineer: Paul David Miesenhelder. civil engineer, and Harry Frank Markus, electrical engineer. BOTTLES SMASH GLASS Man Charged With Shooting Within City Limits. William Jones, colored, 956 Hosbrook St., is charged with shooting within the city limits, carrying concealed weapons and malicious destruction of property on complaint of Mrs. Bertha Franklin, 1506 Laurel St. A milk bottle thrown Into a front room smashed a window. | Jones denied firing any shots.

ADVICE TO JUNE GRADUATES Individual Opportunity Farmer's Chance HEAD OF AMERICAN FARM BUREAU DECLARES THERE IS ROOM FOR YOUNG AGRICULT CRIST.

By O. E. BRADFUTE, President of the American Farm Bureau. , m THINK agriculture, while it does not hold forth much promise for making millionaires, does offer greater opportunity as a life-long profession for the making of sound, substantial success than any other field. Agriculture is fundamental business. It lias always and will al- ( ways exist. There is no chance of something new taking its place. As population increases agriculture will tend to become more and more profitable. Agriculture is one of the few vocations which offer the boy and girl an opportunity to build his own individual business—to be his own boss, as it were. A young man or girl wishing to become a farmer, if endowed with sufficient capital, would buy a farm. Lacking that much capita] they would follow the more usual route of renting a farm with the ultimate goal of purchasing and owning that farm. To those without capital sufficient to properly stock a rented farm, there is in agriculture, as in any profession, an entrance. The entrance would be made as a farm laborer. Farming is no longer an occupation that the boy can go into with muscles alone and make money, and a good home. The farmer of today must be a farmer front the shoulder up as well as from the shoulder down. The boy or girl hoping for real success must have an agricultural college education or its equivalent. Physical energy and willingness for hard physical labor over long periods of time and a natural love for farming are the two principal personal qualifications essential. At the end of the first five years the young farn er should be in position to start buying his farm. He should be established with sufficient working machinery and experience.

Sidelights ‘LITTLE BOB’ ACTIVE BURTON IS MYSTERY JIM SHAKES HANDS HE LOOKS THE PART

By FRANK J. TAYLOR Times Staff Correspondent LEVELAND, <)h Jtm 10 - If! Shadows of Robert M La i I Follette play about the- G O. P. convention. Many a discussion begins w:‘h “Now, if La Follette runs.” The liveliest shadow is ''Little Bob" La Follette. Little hub is son and aide of “Battling Bob." Little Bob is a- liip off the oid block. He is probably 30 years old —may use a year or two more—but he parks around with him .sixty years of his dad's political sagacity. Little Bob has been coming to Republican conventions , v r since kneepants days. He can remember back to 1 '.'o4. when "Fighting Bob" was thrown out of the G. O. P. convention with iiis delegation. Little Bob was sitting on the p,atforrn. eating peanuts, while it. all happened. Little Bob is short, stocky, like his dad, and has penetrating light blue eyes. Old Bob did not come to Cleveland. “Little Bob” and the Wisconsin delegation are managing his thunder. After publication of that batch of La Follettc's resolutions yesterday, reporters beat a trail to little Bob's quarters in a small hotel on a side street. Scouts for the G. o. P. tried to dig out of little Bob's mind his idea as to big Boll's next move. Little Bob knows how to spar with the best of them. He told them nothing until one G. O. P. scout came out in the open and asked. "Are you La Follettos figuring on bolting the convention.” Little Rob smiled and said: “No, sir. We’re good, loyal Republicans and always Have been. We wouldn't

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O. E. BRADFUTE The average farm cash income : in the United States today is |2,- ! 00<>. The beginner on a rented f.arm would pay part of this for labor and part for rent. His cash income would probably be around $1,200 a year, and in addition he •yvould have his home and food. With moderate success within twenty-five years the farmer will have established himself on his own farm and have it improved to such a degree that it will have doubled in value. With unusual success he will have bought adjoining farms. There is no increasing demand for workers in agriculture but the field is not overcrowded. I would recommend agriculture as a profession for those who feel the irresistible longing for individual opportunity to build their own life. NEXT: Manufacturing.

do anything to hurt the party. We want to help it." • * * The mystery man of the convention is one M. L. Burton. There are a lot of Burtons around this affair, and .t is hard to keep them straight. This is the Michigan Burton. He is president of Ann Arbor. He is the one chosen to make the flowery speech that will place Calvin Coolfib es name before the convention. This Burton Is rated “a spellbinder,” and ever since the delegates began to gather the word has been going around that Burton’s speech would so stir the convention that he would sweep the convention for the vice presidency. That legend has grown to be quite a myth and dozens of delegates believe it is all settled for Burton. Yet nobody seems to know much about Burton. He has red hair, and he has been president of three different colleges. ' The rest about him is mystery. His occupation seems to be his main obstacle. Mention him to the oldstyled, hard-boiled delegates and they alw.iys exclaim: "What, another college professor." This Michigan Rurton should have been a Democrat. That party has no tariff wall to keep educators out of politics. • * • The biggest and greatest gladhander of them all is Jim Watson of j Indiana. Conventions and bosses | may change, but Jim’s glad-handing goes on forever. Big six footer that he is, Watson hitches his long legs i on the population center of the lobby - "f the biggest hotel, and stays there. | Hour after hour folks drill by. sliak- ' ing hands, chatting, laughing when Jim roars at any little old joke. Jim has a courtier’s bow for the women, a wallop on the shoulder for the men. a pat on the head for the kids. Jim looks and fits she part he plays—big, heavy, jovial face, rakish Panama hat, robust body, fat black cigar. Watson draws conversation out of folks. There used to be a dozen Jim Watsons in every hotel lobby at every national convention. This time there is only one. The species is dying out. Slick, smooth bosses, who don't like to shake hands with the multitude, are replacing them.

REDUCE HGOSIER DELEGATION 10 REGULATION SIZE ‘Big Fourteen 1 Cut in Two — Seven Delegates-at-Large to Have Vote Apiece, Bn Times Special CLEVELAND, Ohio, June 10.—Although relegated into ranks of alternate deelgates in reorganization of the Indiana delegation. Senator James E. Watson was Monday named as the Hoosier representative on the resolutions committee of the Republican national convention. Amid utmost secrecy, with t ven the alternate delegates excluded, the Hoosier “Big Fourteen” lopped off half their membership and will go into convention with one full vote each. Radges Refused The cut in the delegation roster came after announcement that badges and seats for only seven Indiana delegates would be issued and rules forbade one delegate to holding another in his lap. After all the row and powwow over selection of the Indiana delegation at the State convention three weeks ago. in which attempt was made to appease ail factions, these delegates will vote for Indiana in the convention; Governor Emmet Rranch, ex-Sena-tor Albert J. Beveridge, State Chairman Clyde A. Walb. Ewing Emison, Vincennes, Indiana Coolidge manager; Oscar F’oellinger, Ft. Wayne publisher; Henry VV. Marshall, Lafayette publisher, and Mrs. Anne Studebaker Carlisle, South Bend, choice of Ed Jackson, G. O. P. nominee for Governor of Indiana. Others Alternates The other seven of the “big fourteen" become alternate delegates. They are Senator Watson, Postmaster General New, George B Lockwood, secretary of the national committee James P. Goodrich, ex Governor; Mrs. Florence Riddick Hoys, Plymouth; Lawrence Cart wright. Portland, vice chairman of the State committee, who holds proxy of ex-Governor Winfield T Durbin, who refused to attend the convention with only half a vote. What becomes of the regularly selected alternate delegates or whether they will got into the convention remains a mystery. At the organization session the pre-arranged slate went through without a hitch, and if any trouble arose between the Watson-New faction, it was not allowed to become public. Slate Named The Hoosier slate named is as follows: Joseph B. Kealing. Indianapolis, national committeeman: James E. Watson, member resolutions committee; Albert J. Beveridge, rules committee; Ralph S. Todd, Bluffton, credentials committee; Mrs. Grace Copeland, Vevay, permanent organization committee; Postmaster AMUSEMENTS

fAPITOL * THEATRf > p HOj£cieCL t ,aq39 l|

NOV/ PLAYING I Anne Nichol’s Comedy |

mu IRISH ROII

I The P*ay That Puts ••U” in Humor Mats., Wed., Sat. and Sun.

ENGLISH’S BERKELL PLAYERS “COME OUT OF THE KITCHEN” | Mat., Wed., Thuis., Sat. pRIfFQ- Afternoon, 2 Sc, 33e, 50c, Plus I irniLJ, 25c. 50c, 68c. 90c. Tax Phone f I rcle 3373. Next Meet.—“ Thank I.”

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MLLE. ANN CODEE Parisian Comedienne Exceptional CARL FISHER “Sweet Sixteen” WITH Bl'BY HOWARD WIRE & WALKER | 5 PETLEYf£ Something New I /VlrduPs Comedy RACINE & RAY Moments of Harmony and Chatter PHOTO FEATURE “Thundergate” A Thrilling Romance of a Masquerading American FEAT! KINO OWEN MOORE

ALL THE TIME—I TO 11 P. M. m W T H H E E RE CEOWDS CLIFF NAZZARQ & CO. “A DANCING DREAM” BROWN /l ELSHE COMEDY T* CLARK MARSTON & MANLEY Famous Record BOOTH & NINA Maker Asii.ted b>- MARGARET AND Nelson I_±Z GADDE Charley Paley and Partner Sennett Comedy, ‘The Cal’s Meow* SERIAL, “THE TELEPHONE GIRL" Dancing in the Lyric Ball Room Afternoon and Evening.

General New, convention vice president; Governor Branch, committee to notify President of nomination; W. H. McCurdy, Evansville, committee to notify Vice President. Anticipating action of the convention giving women a place on the national committee, Kealing announced he would name Miss Dorothy Cunningham, Martinsville, as national committeewoman from Indiana. Miss Cunningham is now serving as an honorary national committeewoman without a vote. SPEEDY JUSTICE BED SLATER Man, Charged With Beating Baby to Death, Gets Life, j By Vnited Press SHOALS, Ind., June 10.—Joseph i Blair, farmer, was en route to prison today. He had been tried for murder and sentenced to life imprisonment here and spirited away from town before the citizens of this place knew the trial had been called. Blair was tried secretly by a jury Monday for the brutal beating to death of his 4-year-old daughter. Authorities conducted the trial quietly, fearing a mob would try to lynch the man if it knew he was in town. Blair pleaded guilty when the case was called. Because the little girl did not close * a chicken house door when he told | her Blair seized a club, and beat her skull to a pulp, it was charged. Gone, but Not Forgotten Automobiles reported stolen belong to; Claude W. Comer. 1503 Hoyt Ave., Hudson, from Senate Ave. and Pearl St. Edward L. Etter. 1810 S. Talbot St., Chevrolet, from Ohio and Delaware Sts. Francis M. Perry. 15 N, Lyons Ave., Chevrolet, from Pennsylvania and New York Sts. Ear! E. Crane. 2262 S. Pennsylvania St., Overland, from Tenth and Scioto Sts. Albert Brill. Chicago. 111., Nash, from Market St. and Capitol Ave. BACK HOME AGAIN An automobile reported found by police belongs to: Homer H. Cochran. 3254 Ruckle St., Hudson, found in northwest section of city.

MOTION PICTURES

NOW SHOWING Mar*. Roberts Rinehart'?* THE BREAKING POINT Nita Naldi-Patsy Ruth Miller Matt Moor•*-Geo. Faucett Stan Laurel Comedy lister Huff at the Organ Playing Victor Herbert Melodies Gahe Waters and Southland Orchestra

APOLLO HAL ROACH PRESENTS ‘‘THE KING OF WILD HORSES” OUR GANG COMEDY "COMMENCEMENT DAY" Virgil Moore’s Apollo Orchestra

vm A stirring story of Parisian B life with || BARBARA La MARR i and CONWAY TEARLi; | Overture VICTOR HERBERT Selections BAH \LEISIKOFf Conducting ■ ® Comedy—News—Scenic

I TONIGHT, MATS., TOMORROW 8:15 Thurs. & Sat., 2:15 TONIGHT, American Legion Night THE Ml RAT PLAYERS IN ‘HIS HOUSE IN ORDER’ PINERO'S GREATEST DRAMA New York Cast Fine Dancing in the Lobby IT’S FREE Nights 25c, 50c, SI.OO Mats.. 25c, 50c. Downtown Office Merchants Heat & Light Cos. Next Week—“ Charley's Aunt/*

FLAPPERS See Grandma Put One Over in THE CLINGING UIRIV Matinee E H k Wed- and Sat. The Musical Comedy Presented by the ABORN PLAYERS KEITH’S Cv F i x E T K THE O’BRIEN GIRL

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