Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 143, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1928 — Page 1

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HOOVER HOME TO CAST HIS VQTEJESDAY California Gives Noisy Welcome to Nominee on Way West. PLANS QUIET TUESDAY Final Speech to Be Made \ Over Radio Network | Tonight.

j) BY THOMAS L. STOKES United Press Staff Correspondent ABOARD HERBERT HOOVER’S SPECIAL TRAIN EN ROUTE TO PALO ALTO, Nov. 5. Herbert Hoover came home to California today to be among his friends in the scenes of his young manhood while the nation decides at thousands of ballot boxes whether he is to be the next President of the United States. He will learn at his home on the campus of Stanford University whether the colorful career that began there when both the college and himself were young and that has rounded itself out in all parts of the world will com 6 to its climax in the White House. Noisily, with gay abandon, California began her welcome early this morning, soon after the train had crossed the state line, crowds gathered to welcome Hoover home at stops along the way. The stops were not so numerous as the train is literally rushing to Palo Alto in order that the Republican candidate may arrive on time. It is making a run that is second best to any ever made from St. Louie and that other was an emergency run. The train is seven hours ahead of the regular scheduled time from St. Louis. Plans Quiet Tuesday The candidate expects to spend Tuesday quietly while the nation is voting. He will receive election returns Tuesday night over a special United Press wire which has been installed in his home. Sunday was interrupted by stops but a few times as the train crossed the wild waste lands and speeded between the Stark mountains of Utah and Nevada, country familiar to the candidate and his wife from the mining engineer days. At the infrequent stops, crowds which gathered about the back platform showed their friendliness. The largest crowd was at Salt Lake City. Hoover expressed his pleasure at the receptions along the way, but declined to discuss politics because it was the Sabbath. Parades at Salt Lake City and Ogden were canceled. At 6:45 p. m. (Pacific Coast Time) the Republican will speak from the microphone his last message before the election a brief nation-wide appeal over the radio for voters to go to the polls. It will be a nonpartisan address. Tuesday morning early he will go to the Stanford union, on the campus to cast his vote for himself for President. '

YOO-HUM! ANOTHER GOOD PLOT FOILED Marathoners Outsmarted by Dance Promoters. The marathon dance has been saved to posterity. A dark plot to end the educational spectacle was uncovered and frustrated. The conspirators, none other than the eight remaining “hoofers,” planned, it seems, to split the remaining prize money between them and evacuate the floor at the same time. The promoters, however, through their intricate secret service system, learned of the plot and halted it in short order. By the simple expedient of declaring the last couple through the gates of the Riverside dance, pavilion would receive the SI,OOO first prize, the conspiracy was foiled. Couples 28, 18, 13 and 8 still were trudging around the floor as the dance went into its 795th hour at noon today. Basic rates for out-of-town telephone calls are low. To CHICAGO and return, only $1.05. —Adv.

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Here is the way the top part of the voting machine will look to Marion county voters Tuesday. If you want to vote a straight ticket, pull the Republican, Democratic or other party lever at the left and you are through. If you want to scratch, pull, until the bell rings, the lever of the

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The Indianapolis Times Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday, warmer tonight.

VOLUME 40—NUMBER 143

Suicide in Jail

j /a * HIHHIHr .y JM

Robert Butvila*. who has been rooming at 107 North New Jersey street, identified today as the automobile thief who killed himself at city prison early Thursday. (Story On Page 2)

HIGH JURY TO EYE MILK HIKE Prosecutor May Call City Dairy Officials in Probe. Investigation of the raise today in milk prices, by Indianapolis dealers, was started by Deputy Prosecutor William H. Sheaffer and the county grand jury. The purpose of the probe is to determine if local milk companies have gathered together in a trust agreement to bring about the increased price to the consumer. It was indicated from reliable sources that officials of several milk companies will be brought before the grancf jury to give, in detail, the cause for the Increase. William H. Settle, president of the Indiana Farm Bureau, who recently made a survey of the Indianapolis milk supply district and stated that milk producers were faced with more hardships and were receiving less than other districts for their milk, probably will be asked to bring information he obtained to the county jury. Farmers and other persons supplying milk to Indianapolis retailers probably will be summoned to tell whether or not they raised the wholesale price to the dealers. In a statement issued by the milk companies to customers it was stated that the price boost will go into effect Nov. 5. The order calls for an increase of 1 cent on each quart of milk and similar increases on other milk products. YEGGS’ LOOT IS SSOO Crack Safe in Office of Keller Coal Company. Expert cracksmen opened the safe in the J. G. Keller Coal Company offices at Twenty-First street and Sherman drive over the week-end, and obtained SSOO, it was learned this morning. The yeggs broke a lock from the rear door and worked the safe’s combination. Hourly Temperatures 6 a. m.... 39 11 a. m.... 49 7 a. m.... 39 10 a. m.... 45 8 a. m.... 4fl 12 (n00n)..53 9 a. m.... 42 1 p. m.... 54

HORSE THIEF SLEUTHS TO RALLY NEGROES TO LESLIE

In a last effort to win back to Harry G. Leslie support of Indianapolis Negroes, arrangements were made to send twenty-five horsethief detetcives into the colored wards late this afternoon or this evening with propaganda intended to show segregation of Negroes at the Democratic national convention at Houston. The horsethief detectives, were to report to a room in the K. of P. building and get big yellow poster.*, bearing a picture purporting to show Negroes fenced off from white persons at the Houston convention. The picture, persons who were at the convention say, actually shows the steel fence which was used to keep all persons, white or colored

IT’S YOUR IMPERATIVE DUTY TO VOTE TUESDAY; HERE’S HOW MACHINES OPERATE

PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS

AL APPEALS TO FARMERS OVER RADIO Asks Why G. 0. P. Has Not Remedied Condition in Last Seven Years. OUTLINES PROPOSALS Charges Carried Directly to Hoover in Speech by Democratic Nominee. By T'nitrit Press NEW YORK, Nov. 5.—A final appeal to the farmers was made by Governor Alfred E. Smith in a short radio speech today. At 10 p. m. he will devote an hour on the radio to an appeal to all voters. The Democratic presidential nominee outlined proposals he had indorsed for handling the agricultural problems and argued that his Republican opponent, Herbert Hoover, and the Republican party had offered no solution. The crux of the farm problem, he said, is the disposal of surplus crops, a principle which, he contended, was not recognized by the Republican candidate or platform. Carrying his charges directly to Hoover, Smith said: “The Republicans have been In power for seven and a half years. Hoover said last Friday night that they had ‘been alive to the situation of agriculture.’ “I know you will agree with me that they did nothing about it; that the promises they made have never been kept and that* the situation is worse today than when the Republicans came into office. Predicts Own Election The Governor closed his address with a prediction that the farmers of the country Tuesday will elect him President. “The industrial east Joins with the agricultural west in its desire for the restoration of democratic government,” he said. *T believe that Tuesday will bring a great Democratic victory’,” he said, "and I assure you that that victory in turn will bring a solution of the agricultural problem that will restore prosperity to the farm and promote the welfare of the entire country.” “You can no more control and stabilize commodities prices by a corporation that has not power to lift the surplus clear out of the domestic market than you can fight a fist ficht with a man ten miles away,” he said. State Socialism? “I agree with Governor Lowden and Senator Norris there can be no satisfactory solution of the farm problem unless that solution is based upon the principle of an effective control of the sale of exportable surplus with the cost Imposed upon the commodity benefitted.” Smith ridiculed the idea that Hoover’s proposed extra session of congress could do any good. He said Hoover was opposed to the fundamental principle of farm relief and that, if elected, the Republican candidate would not sign a bill embodying a principle which he declared to be “state socialism.” Smith contended that it was upon Hoover’s advice that President Coolidge vetoed the “only farm relief measure which thus far has been proposed.”

from getting into the reserved section unless they had tickets. The bottom of the poster bears the legend “Vote for Leslie.” Meanwhile the Ku-Klux Klan was preparing to distribute its slates as usual the night before election. Headquarters for the slate distribution was at 7 North Alabama street, Room 11. Ward captains were to get their supplies of slate at 7:30 tonight and were to be responsible for having enough klansmen enlisted to put the slates on front porches during the dark hours. W. P. Kersay, exalted cyclops of Indianapolis klan 179, was issuing orders by mail. ’The klan slate has been distinguished for several years by being fastened in a clothes pin.

party for a majority of whose candidates you wish to vote. This throws down all keys of that party’s candidates. Then shove up the candidates of your party for whom you do not want to vote Mid shove down their opponents In other parties for whom you do desir/to vote.

INDIANAPOLIS, MONDAY, NOV. 5, 1928

Presidential Contest Drama Grips Nation, Ready to Cast Record Vote at Polls Tuesday

Exciting Race for Highest U. S. Post Overshadows Other Fights. BY RAYMOND CLAPPER United Frees Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Nov. s.—By another nightfall the American people will have chosen the man who is to rule their destinies for the next four years. The fates of Herbert Hoover and Alfred E. Smith probably already have been decided in the minds of the voters. It only remains for the votes to be cast and counted. Tuesday wUI see the greatest outpouring of American voters in history. Election officials will be heavily taxed in most places. The count may be late in coming In from many localities for this reason. although It may be that the results will be known before midnight Tuesday. Between 35,000,000 and 40,000,000 votes are expected to be cast, as against the 29,000,000 in 1924, the previous record. Elect New Congress This election not only will decide who Is to be President and VicePresident, but an entirely new house of representatives at Washington is to be elected. i One-third of the seats in the United States senate must be filled. Thirty-four states will elect Governors. Many states will choose new legislatures and state and county officials. The drama of tha presidential race, one of the most exciting in many years, overshadows everything else. The choice for the highest office —as befits the tradition of a democratic nation—lies between two men who started at the bottom of the ladder and rose By sheer superiority. Each has constructed a campaign typical of his past career. Except for a radio speech by Hoover tonight from his home in Palo Alto, Cal., and two by Smith from studios here, they have rested their case with the voters. Hoover Campaign Restrained What will happen is uncertain because of the intense bitterness which has been stirred by factors which never before have entered prominently into a presidential campaign, religion and the prohibition question. In spite of the intensity of the fight around these two questions, Hoover has conducted the most restrained campaign any Republican presidential candidate ever staged. He has made just seven set addresses, including his acceptance speech. Smith, on the contrary, has swept about the country on three major campaign trips carrying him as far west as Montana and down into Oklahoma. Hoover has discussed general topics for the most part, practically ignoring Smith except to charge recently that his program on prohibition, water power and farm relief constituted state socialism. This, the most specific attack by Hoover, brought instant counterfire from Smith and it was the nearest they came to a real forensic encounter. Rounding Up the Votes Hoover then lapsed back into his more aloof style of campaign. He was questioned by the press only at long intervals. His campaign was really waged by Charles E. Hughes and Senator Borah. They conducted the real debate with Smith and hard blows have been exchanged. Hoover has conducted his campaign on the assumption that the country Is satisfied with conditions under President Coolidge and wants to continue that plan. He has promised an extra session to deal with farm relief but, otherwise, his basic appeal has been that he will keep things as they are under Coolidge. From the White House came the President’s enthusiastic Indorsement of Hoover, belated but timed to throw the whole force of Coolidge’s popularity—and It probably is higher now than ever before

STATE OFFICES

Election Facts

By United Brest WHO-From 40,000,000 to 45,000,000 persons have registered in the United States, and from 35,000,000 are expected to vote. WHEN—Tomorrow, in most instances from 6 a. m. to 6 p. m. WHAT-A President, a VicePresident, thirty-seven United States senators, 435 United States representatives, thirty-four Governors and innumerable state officers. WHERE—In the forty-eight states of the Union and its territories. Where the candidates will vote: HERBERT HOOVER-At the Stanford Union!on the campus of Leland Stanford university at Palo Alto, Cal. GOVERNOR SMITH- At a stationery store near the Biltmore hotel In New York City. SENATOR JOSEPH ROBINSON —At a drug store in his home district at Little Rock, Ark. SENATOR CHARLES CURTIS —At Polk school, Topeka, Kan. in his administration behind Hoover. Smith has recognized from the beginning this would be Hoover’s strategy and he sought to meet It by making the Democratic party essentially a high tariff party, and ppointing John J. Raskob, then a leader In General Motors and high in the business world, as Democratic national chairman and campign manager. Smith’s whole strategy has been to round up the wet votes and in addition inspire confidence among a sufficient nmber of Repblicans to compensate for the natural Democratic shortage of votes in the country. Religious Tssue Strong Religious prejudice ha played a tremendous part despite the admonition of both candidates that it must not be brought into the cam* paign. , Democrats have accused the Republicans of fostering anti-Catholic prejudice and Republicans have replied the Democrats exploited the role of martyrdom as much as possible and sought to obtain support for the Democratic ticket. Smith at Baltimore recently declared he would rather go down to defeat than be elected by the votes of the Anti-Saloon League and the Ku-Klux Klan, which he charged were behind Hoover. Prohibition is the most active issue discussed by the candidates and they clash here more directly than on any other question. Hoover has declared against repeal of the eighteenth amendment. Smith is for modification of it. Hoover called prohibition a "noble experiment which must be worked out constructively.” Debate on Prohibition Smith declared the act was a failure and a change was necessary. Smith proposes that each state be allowed to decide its own prohibition policy and that states which desire be permitted to adopt the Canadian system of state sale of liquor under severe restrictions. On farm relief there is divergence, with Hoover opposing the McNaryHaugen bill and favoring stabilization corporations and greater tariff protection, with Smith offering to appoint a commission to study a plan and indorse the fundamental principle of the McNary-Haugen bill. On water power Hoover fundamentally is for private ownership and operation. Smith favors government ownership and control. Governor Smith has reversed the historic policy of the Democratic party on the tariff and has obtained pledge from 90 per cent of the Democratic candidates for Congress to support his position. Smith is opposed to tariff revision wholesale and only item by item as scientific investigation suggests. He would not permit any change in the tariff which would take 1 cent from the pockets of any workman or disturb business, he has said in many speeches. Republicans have charged Smith

Remember, if the little lever above a man’s name is down, you have voted for him. When you vote for state representative or state senator* you may vote for the number of each to be elected without bothering as to whether you happen to vote Tor a Democrat and a Republican whose

Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice, Indianapolis

Bitterness Over Religious and Prohibition Issues Big Factor. favors letting down restrictions on immigration but he denies this and insists he stands with Hoover In favor of restriction. The battle has been waged furiously with hundreds of stump speakers. It probably has been the most expensive in the nation!* history and the officially reported costs probably will run to $12,000,000 besides thousands of dollars spent which will never be accounted for. Radio has come into a dominating position in the mechanics of the campaign with each party spending thousands of dollars to buy time on the air. This has forced candidates to change tactics. It requires anew speech each time for the whole nation listens In. Incidentally the peculiarities of radio make Hoover, one of the worst speakers in politics, a perfect speaker before the miscrophone. Smith, one of the greatest of popular speakers, is less effective. With so many novel factors in the campaign, the tremendous number of new voters, the religious and prohibition issues which never have been tested In a national election, the uncertainty as to how the voters in mass have reacted to the impressions of the candidates received direct over the radio make this election extremely difficult to Judge. Handicaps for A1 No human being knows what will happen in states like Massachuetts and Missouri. Among many political experts it Is considered the following three points will react against Smith: 1. The United States is - normally Republican by 5,000,00 votes or more. 2. The nation is dry—or was theoretically'so ten years ago when every state Connecticut and Rhode Island ratified the federal prohibition amendment. 3. The nation has a protestant tradition, never has elected a Roman Catholic as President and has a Catholic population only in the proportion of about one to five. Furthermore, the record of the Tweed ring and other Tammany figures has been stresesd In many sections as an argument against Smith, who is a Tammany man. On the other hand, Democrats have countered w.ch the argument that the “oil scandals” react against a Republican administration. After an 11.000-mlle trip as political correspondent of the United Press, which took this correspondent into every section of the United States, the situation may be stated conservatively as follows: Hoover Certain of 250 Votes Hoover is fairly certain of 250 electoral votes with sixteen more needed to win. Smith is fairly certain of 159 electoral votes—the solid south and New York—with 107 more needed to win. The remaining 122 doubtful electoral votes are listed as follows Arizona, 3; Kentucky, 13; Maryland 8; Massachusetts, 18; Missouri. 18, Montana 4; Nebraska, 8; Nevada, 3; New Jersey, 14; New Mexico, 3 Rhode Island, 5; Tennessee, 12; Wisconsin, 13. States which appear fairly certain to go for Hoover are: Calif or nla, 13; Colorado, 6; Connecticut, 7, Delaware, 3; Idaho, 4; Illinois, 29: Indiana, 15; lowa, 13; Kansas, 10; Maine 6; Michigan, 15; Minnesota 12; New Hampshire, 4; North Dakota,s : Ohio, 24; Oklahoma, 10, Oregon, 5; Pennsylvania, 38; Soutu Dakota, 5; Utah, 4; Vermont, 4; Washington, 7; West Virginia, 8; Wyoming 3—total 250. States which appear fairly certaii to go for Smith are: Alabama, 12, Arkansas, 9; Florida, 6; Georgia, 14, Louisiana, V 10; Mississippi, 10; New York, 45; North Carolina, 12; South Carolina, 9; Texas, 20; Virginia, 12total 159. PUT ON VOTE BOARD Governor Names Official to Represent Him. Governor Ed Jackson today appointed Thomas Barr, assistant state banking commissioner, to represent him on the vote canvassing board, which receives the officiaj check from all counties on the state and national tickets.

HONEST VOTE SAFEGUARDS HOLD STATE INTEREST AS CANDIDATES CLOSE ORATORY

Taggart Will Quit Hospital to Vote for A l

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Thomas Taggart

Against the advice of physicians, Thomas Taggart, veteran Demo - cratic leader who has been sick at the Methodist hospital for more than a month, is determined to vote Tuesday. Fearing that the exertion of going to the polls, even if he were taken on a stretcher, would be injurious, his doctorc advised Taggart to mUs his vote. But Taggart insisted and the physicians feared that the refusal to let him make an effort to vole would have an equally injurious effect. Taggart was to be moved to his home at 1331 North Delaware street, this afternoon, so he would be nearer to his voting place, 1421 North Alabama street. Unless the moving makes his condition more serious he will be permitted to vote, it is believed. Governor A1 Smith visited Taggart at the Methodist hospital when he made a brief stop here two weeks ago. . CRUSHEDBY CARS Conductor Killed at Barns Early Today. Aubrey Kirk, 62 North Sheridan avenue, was killed early today when he was crushed between two street cars at the West Washington Street car barns. Kirk, a conductor had gone to the barns to get his car. Theron Miller, 3624 Northwestern avenue, a car shifter, and Chris Thennepohl, 1337 Barth avenue, a motorman, heard the cars grinding. The discovered Kirk wedged between them. They told police they believed one of the cars had been left in reverse and backed into Kirk when he put on the trolley. Kirk died a few minutes after he was placed in the ambulance. SUICTdAUNJURIES FATAL Man Found on Wife’s Grave on Oct. 14, Dies. Edward Singlton, 72, of 3602 Robson street, died early today at the city hospital from injuries received in a suicidal attempt. Oct. 14. Singleton, despondent over the death of his wife, lay oh her grave at Crown Hill cemetery and sighed his throat and wrists. Taylor Carney, 504 West drive, Woodruff Place, found Singleton several hours later and took him to the hospital. GRAND JURY INDICTS SIX Names of Persons Involved Not Made Public. Six indictments were returned by the county grand jury today. The names of those indicted were not made public.

COUNTY OFFICES

name is in the same column. The machine will be set so this does not destroy your vote. To vote for two men in the same column for any other offices, however, would throw out your vote. For Instance, to pull down the lever of both the Republican arid Democratic candidates for sheriff would spoil your vote, ____________

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Outside Marion County 3 Cents

TWO CENTS

Heavy Balloting Forecast Over State; Interest at Fever Heat. - H.-J CLOSE RACES PREDICTED Candidates to Make Last Speeches Tonight; Burns Sleuths on Guard. Voters in Indiana’s 3,567 precincts will travel to the polls Tuesday to register their choice for President, United States senator, Governor, congressmen, legislative, state find county officers. Except for scattered speeches throughout the state tonight, campaign oratory has given way to the completion of election day plans, particularly the setting up of safeguards around polling places to insure an honest election. Four years ago, 1,272,390 Hoosier votes were cast for five presidential nominees: Coolidge, 702,042; Davis, 492,295; La Follette, 71,700; Workers party, 987, and Prohibition, 4,416. With favorable weather a vote of 1,400,000 or more in Indiana is expected Tuesday by political leaders of both major parties. Expect 170,000 in County Marion county, with 269 precincts, cast 160,880 votes for F.fsident in 1924. Coolidge receiver 95,135 and Davis 59,498. Leroy J, Keach, Marion county Democratic chairman, and George V. Coffin, Seventh district Republican chairman, anticipate the county vote will amount to 170,000 or more this year. Dividing major interest are the presidential and gubernatorial contests. Republican organization leaders predict a majority of 150,000 or more for Herbert Hoover, vhile Democratic officials contend that Governor Alfred E. Smith has benefited by a swing in sentiment in the last few weeks and Is In posiiior. to throw Indiana into the Demc cratic column. That the governorship race between Frank C. Dailey, Democrat, and Harry G. Leslie, Republican, Is close Is the frank admission of leaders In both parties. Dailey has claimed repeatedly to have wen over the support of 100,000 Republicans to insure his election, while Leslie, tying his candidacy to the tail of the Hoover kite, declares his opponent has made no material inroads in G. O. P. ranks. Last Speeches Tonight Leslie has not estimated the majority he expects* to receive, but has asserted Hoover will carry Indiana by 225,000 or more. The governorship candidates were to make their final oratorical es • forts today and tonight, Leslie at Crawfordsville this afternoon and tonight, Dailey at Washington, Ind., this afternoon and tonight at Loogootee. Meanwhile, Democratic state, county and precinct organizations are co-operating to Insure a fair count of the ballots when the polls close at 6 p. m. Tuesday. Sherman Burns, of the Burns Detective agency, came to Indianapolis from Chicago Sunday to direct a force of operatives assigned throughout the state to guard against election frauds, Russell Ryan, head of the Democratic state committee's legal department, announced. Approximately 150 men will be enlisted In this work, Ryan said. Warning that any attempts to Influence the election by illegal means will be prosecuted under the corrupt practices act was issued by Albert Ward, United States district attorney. Poles Open at 6 Polls will open at 6 a. m. and close at 6 p. m. Unless recourse Is taken to paper ballots, tabulation of the vote In Marion county will be fairly rapid, for the voting machines present the totals for all candidates instantly when opened by officials. Should it be necessary, however, to supplement machine voting by (Turn to Page 12) Dress Better on Credit! H. & R. Clothing Cos., 29 E. Ohio St.—Advertisement.