Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 162, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 November 1928 — Page 7

|0V;27, 1928.

BUY MEN HEAD INDIANA LEGION GOMMITTEEES Three Selected Chairmen; Membership Boost Is Organization Aim. Three Indianapolis men are chairmen of state committees of the American Legiut* announced today t>y Fred A. treking, Bluffton, Indiana commander. They are Bowman Elder, chairman of the finance committee; Stuart A. Bishop, head of the board of publication of the Hoosier Legionnaire, and Dr. George W. Bowman, chairman committee on location of general veterans' hospital. Several other Indianapolis are committee members. The committees, which take office Jan. 1, are charged with carrying out the program looking toward an Indiana membership of 35,000 before the Louisville national convention next fall, as a tribute to National Commander V. McNutt, who is retiring as Indiana commander. Paid Membership Soars Wiecking announced that paid membership in Indiana today is three times the figure of the same date last year. Wiecking’s committees; State Rehabilitation Chairman—L. V. Hauk, Morristown. State Child Welfare Chairman—Tom MeConnell, Fowler. Sub-Committee on Knighstown Home— Charles Theders, ConnersviUe. chairman; Horace Parker, Richmond; Dr. Joseph L. Allen, Greenfield; Arthur Lemmon, Grcensburg, and J. R. rracy, Anderson. State Americanism Committee —Clay Philips, Terre Haute, chairman; M. William Malczewski, Gary; Clarence Martin, Indianapolis; Herman Holtman, Evansville, and Oswald Ryan, Anderson. Headed by Kokomo Man State Legislative Committee—Forrest A. Harness, of Kokomo, chairman; John W. Scott. Gary; Carl Gray, Petersburg; Raymond Springer, ConnersviUe; Harry Muller, Ft. Wayne; Ora Davis, Terre Haute; Joseph Crioe, Kokomo; Elmer W. Sherwood, Bloomfield; Frank M. McHale, Logansport, and Lloyd D. Claycombe, Indianapolis. State Distinguished Guest Committee— E. Arthur Ball. Munch', chairman: Perrv Faulkner, Shelbyville; Paul V. McNutt, Bloomington l /* C. A. Jackson. Newcastle: Brig. Gen. L. R. Cingnilliat, Culver; C. B. McCullough, Indianapolis: Phil Bash, Huntington; Dr. C. R. Bird, Greensburg; Ernest Elder. Lawrenceburg, and Henry Walker. Evansville. State Finance Committee —Bowman Elder, Indianapolis, chaiman; Robert F. Daggett, Indianapolis; Paul Haimbaugh, Muncie; B. K. Cash, Logansport, and Joseph Zimmerman, Evansville. State Louisville Convention Committee— Hoyt H. Hartman, Bluffton; Ralph K. Sines, Logansport; Kleber W. Hadley, Indianapolis, and Howard H. Humphrey, Vevay. Indianapolis Man Chairman Committee on location of a General Veterans’ hospital—Dr. George W. Bowman, Indianapolis, chairman. Board of Publication, Hoosier Legionnaire—Stuart A. Bishop, Indianapolis, one vear; Dr. C. R. Wagner, Warsaw, two years, and Earl W. Merry, Dunkirk, three years. State Speakers' Bureau—Pleas E. Green’ee. Shelbyville, chairman; Frank A. White, Bloomington,.viec-president; Claude Gregg. Vincennes, and John W. Wheeler, Crown Point. POSTPONE CLASS RITES Work of Carillon Class Is Set for Dec. 6, by City Valley. Work of the first section of the Carillon class of the Scottish Rite in the Valley of Indianapolis which was to have been held Wednesday night has been postponed to Dec. 6, it was aru.ounced today. The twenty-ninth degree has been communicated and the remaining degrees will be given when the work is scheduled for the second section of the Carillon class. The two sections will total about four hundred fifty members. The final rites will be followed by the semiannual convocation banquet.

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NEW CURB FOR MOVIEHOUGHT Reform Group Will Ask Congress Help. B,u Times Special WASHINGTON, Nov. 27.—Legislation for federal supervision of the motion picture industry will be advocated in the coming congress by the motion picture council of the International Reform federation. The council is now in session here. One of the leaders is Canon W. S. Chase of Brooklyn, who has been active in various reform efforts. Representative Grant M. Hudson of Michigan will sponsor legislation for the creation of a federal motion picture council of six members, to be named by the secretary of the interior. The commission would abolish block booking, which Hudson contends forces exhibitors to take unwholesome pictures, and would have power to set up a “neutral distributing agency.” The commission would eliminate pictures considered undesirable. Efforts of Will H. Hays “to elevate and reform the movies” have been a “sorry failure,” Hudson believes, because the industry prefers not to be reformed. "It is only putting it mildly when one asserts that the industry, is flooding the country with unwholesome and often indecent films,” Hudson said.

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QUICK SENATE 0. K. SEEN FOR KELLOGG PACT Virtually No Opposition to Anti-War Treaty Is Expected. BY KENNETH G. CRAWFORD United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON. Nov. 27.—Senate ratification of the Kellogg antiwar treaty virtually will be unopposed, a canvass of returning senators indicated today. Republicans, Democrats and independents alike approve the pact. Chairman Borah of the foreign relations committee, who will have charge of the treaty both in committee and on the floor of the Senate, said he was confident no serious opposition would develop. May Not Hold Hearings He has not yet decided whether hearings will be necessary in view of the almost unanimous sentiment in favor of ratification. The only requests for a hearing 'so far received, he said, have come from organizations and individuals favoring the treaty. Senator Swanson (Dem., Va.), ranking minority member of the committee, announced his intention of supporting the treaty which he characterized as a “magnificent gesture.” Any considerable opposition to the treaty naturally would be led by Swanson and his support, in itself, would seem to indicate certainty of ratification. All to Back Treaty Senator Norris (Rep., Neb.) leader of the western independents, said he, too, would support the treaty when it comes before the senate, adding that he is anxious for early action to make the pact effective. He said he is entirely out of sym-

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

In the Talkies

Texas Guinan, New York night club queen and author of “Give the Little Girl a Hand,” has just made a "picture” for Warner Brothers. It’s a, talkie called “Queen of the Night Clubs.” This is anew picture of Texas Guinan. pathy with the reported effort to delay consideration of the treaty until the navy cruiser authorization bill is passed. “If the treaty is ratified," Norris said, “it will become an argument against the big navy bill, and logically so. I shall oppose any effort to pass the cruiser bill first.”

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‘BRITISH WAR’ SAPS CHICAGO'S SCHOOL FUNDS $12,000,000 Deficit Faced in Operation for Next Three Months. By Unit cl Press CHICAGO, Nov. 27.—Chicago’s schools face a $12,000,000 deficit in operating expenses for the next three months and there is an implication that Mayor William Hale Thompson’s “war on the British” is partly to blame. Tax funds for 1928 are nearly exhausted and next year’s levy will not be available until Feb. 15 or later. Teachers’ salaries, funds for lighting and heating buildings, and civil service pay rolls come due each month with no money in sight to pay them. That the financial dilemma Is due, at least in part, to Mayor Thompson's fight to “rid the school text books of British popaganda,” was implied in a statement by Ek mer T. Stevens, chairman of the mayor’s advisory committee. President H. Wallace Caldwell said he was making every effort to keep the schools open despite the deficit. A half million children would be affected by the closing of Chicago schools While Stevens refused to discuss

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