Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 290, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 March 1927 — Page 14

PAGE 14

MOVEMENT UNDER WAY TO SUPPORT (MIDGE IN 1928 Progress Being Made Quietly —Leaders Confident of Victory. fit United Press _ WASHINGTON, March 11.—The movement to secure renominaton of President Coolidge next year is growing with each passing day in Washington—and its development is so gradual and encompassing that it has reached a perfection unequalled by many highly organized campaigns. Although President (Coolidge himself has little to say> about the movement, there was hardly a day when reference was not made to it in the Senate or th£ House or when a Republican leader failed to issue .a statement encouraging its development. Senator O. E. Weller (Rep., Mary land), who was defeated in his last November race for re-election, recently issued a statement giving the foundation upon which the campaign is based and it may be accepted, vith similar statements of other Republicans, as an indication upon 'hat ground Mr. Coolidge will stand Predicts Victory ‘‘l am for President Coolidge again n 1928,” said Weller, “and now preet that he will be renominated and ->-elected. ‘‘What are the conditions in the untry after six years under the

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Wins First Prize in Expo Contest

’..mold llodgin, 131 L N. Dearborn it., John Herron Art Institute student, who won the first prize; in the Home Complete Exposition loster contest, sponsored by tbe Indianapolis Real Estate Board.

.dministrations of Presidents Hard ing and President Coolidge? History furnishes no parallel to our prosper ity and riches. Never has there been wealth such as ours- Our factories are running to their capacity. Labor is fully employed, with the highest wages ever paid/ The prlfees necessities have been steadily Avered. We own 85 per cent of all he automobiles in the world. We ave doubled our deposits in savings inks and in building and loan assoations. Our national wealth has en increased nearly $20,000,000,000. e have the largest exports and the oatest domestic trade of any nan. Coolidge Economy How have the economy pledges ,f President Coolidge been carried >ut? Our national debt has been reluced more than $5,000,000,000. The .unning expenses of the government have been decreased $2,000,000,000 per year. Federal taxes have been cut $2,500,000,000. Four million people have been relieved from income taxation. Seven million persons have had their income taxes lowered. The mrplus in the treasury has been ,-reatly increased. Federal taxation las been x-educed on an average of 54 to $27 per person.” ‘‘Democrats and other opponenttof the President natui-ally do not agree ot all this, but they accept h as the basis of the next Coolidg campaign.” * MEN EAT MOST CANDY CHICAGO. Mai-ch 11.—Man eats more candy than women, according to Harry R. Wilson of St. Louis, in an address here before the Annual Convention of the Midland Confectioners’ Association.

10 CAN DEFEAT AL? DEMOCRATS ASK ONEANOTHER Puzzled Whether to Choose Wet or Dry Opponent. Bit United Press WASHINGTON, March 11.—There is a certain group of dry Democrats here in Washington who, like William G. McAdoo, are aroused over j the fact that the leaders of the I party appear to be monopolizing the I publicity. They want a mam to put ! against Governor A1 Smith of New • York and Senator James A. Reed, lof Missouri —a man who can wage as vigorous a fight as either Smith ! or Reed, but who will wage it in behalf of prohibition instead of ' against it. | “Well, there Is Governor Donahey of Ohio,” they say when they discuss the question in private conversation. I "Then there is Senator Walsh of 1 Montana, Senator Joseph Robinson, the Democratic floor leader of the Senate, and many others. Fighting Man "What we want is a fighting man. Who will it be?” The members of this group have been informed by friends of McAdoo that he personally does not believe he could carry on the dry fight within the party as well as someone else, although he strongly favors development of some figure to put up a real battle against the wet leaders. He foresees In the trend of political events a possibility that the wets may stage a coup at the next '■'emocratic national convention, his

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

friends say, and he wants to prevent such an eventuality. Wet Vs. Wetr Senator Heflin, Democrat, (Alabama), speaks some of the sentiments of some of the anti-Smith drys of the South and he has come out for Donahey. Other Southern members are inclined to the strategy of aligning Reed against Smith, a wet against a wet, not without the hope that a dry might slip in during a deadlock which might ensue. This strategy includes tho supposition that the most feasible way to beat Smith is with another wet candidate. But those who want a militant dry candidate to fight both Reed and Smith are beating the brush for one and it is not considered unlikely that one will be brought forward soon.

STUDENTS MUST REPAHOR AID Russian Government Issues New Decree. Bit United Press MOSCOW, March 11.—Under a new decree, students who have been lavishly assisted from public funds in pursuit of their studies will henceforth have to repay the benefits in service. Trades unions and public treasuries have been used since th& revolution to help students attend universities mostly for specialized training in engineering, medicine, industrial management and agriculture. Students have also been favored in room rents, many paying only 5 cents a month for lodgings. Now it has been decreed that students receiving public benefits must work at assigned tasks after graduation, and they will be sent to locali-

ties where the need for trained directors is great, but to which capable pet sons do not normally choose to go. Mongolia, Siberia, some islands of the White Sea, the Astrakhan step-

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pea and the land near the Finnish border are districts to which agricultural and medical students will be sent to serve one year for each year’s help they received as students.

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TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL BRING RNEULTS.

MARCH 11,1927