Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 297, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 May 1929 — Page 12

PAGE 12

LESLIE FILLS STATE UTILITY BOARD POSTS John McCardle Renamed: Jerc West Succeeds Harvey Harmon. Reappointment of Com inis.i oner John W M<‘Cardie Rep.' IndianB|>ol;.' and apjtouit ment of Jerc Wfjt Dcm.i Craw fordsville, to Micerrri Harvey Harmon <Dem.i Princeton .as a member of the public service commission has been announced by Governor Harry G. Leslie. Term of both McCardle and Harmon expired Wednesday The appointment are lor a four-year term. McCardle i expected to succeed Frank L. Singleton ißrp.i Martinsville. a 1 commission chairman, a pniic had held before Singleton! w.c chosen by the commissioners. 1i ie latter called an election! n.< c;,i .. Wed tie: da>. but the com- : nu ion* r. refined to elec! until the 1 nev appointinent.s were made. tomini lone: Hov 11 Ellis 'Rep.) j 1 ndianat-ohs. and Calvin F Mein- I o h 'l> m Worthington, wif! sup- j port McCardle for chairman on the ! •pound ’ i..! it : Hie wish of Gov- i rrnor Leslie McCardle a short, time ago handled the ousting of j (,n pin ' "I 'he r< pimnsion affiliatiri with ,ie Marion county Coflm I organization at the wish of the j He " ft: t appointrrl to tiie \ < imm -aui by Governor .lames P. i Goodrich. .May 1. 1917. and has been reappointed whenever his irrtn ; r piicd n (a, - ,rrnor 1 Warren T. McCray and Kd Jackson He is well liked b' Hie various utility groups, particularly (hr Instill A ehairniMii hr will hatc the rrn lunineiit 1 the proposed 570.000,000 in Mill utility merger case which v.i brum handled by Hannon West retired as judge of the I Montgomery nn mi court on Jan. 1. I this year H< had been on the! bench there since 1397. Ruti h lifeboat crews saved 572 h\r.s m 1928.

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. haped both back and front. L'licre will be flowing folds on the ides and back, but no trimmings, although it was said there might be a little design of tennis rackets worked into the decoration of the train. Mr Harriet Walker of San Francisco, a friend of Miss Wills, will wear a dress of virtually the came design when she is presented a 1 court, the same night. The color will be different, a pale green, vtis. Wills will arrive in London Sunday.

Steel Setters on Strike b’.u l imi t Slu r in! HAMMOND, Ind., May 3.—Union si eel setters oi Lake county are on strike today following refusal of employers to gn nt a wage increase from $1.50 to 51.65 an hour.

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Jean Patou of Pans Is Creating Court Frock for Helen Wills. f;V PRIM ESS ALI FAZIL I nitrd Pre&* >lafT C orrrspondrnt PARIS. May 3.—Helen Wills, who has won an international reputation for coolness in hotly contested tennis matches, >s fairly living in a whirl of excitement this week. The‘famous California tennis ; tar may be ‘‘little poker face” *o Wimbledon courts, but she admits a thrill at the thought of her coming presentation at court at Buckingham palace, May 9. Even tennis, at the start of her invasion of European courts, has been pushed into die background temporarily to permit Miss Wills to pay almost daily visits to the establishment of Jean Patou, who is designing her court gown. Miss Wills is “more excited” than it she was going to play a championship match, she told the United Press correspondent Detween trips to the dressmaker’s and the tennis court, where she is practicing on a reduced schedule this week. Jean Patou is creating a gown of Eggshell colored satin bordering on ivory for Miss Wills. It is very simple in design. byt necessarily has a long train. The neck will be “V-

Two Attend Art Meeting Bn Timet S.perinl MARION, Ind., May 3. Two Marion art instructors. Misses Mary Riley and Ruth Crooks, are attending the Mid-Western Arts Association meeting at Cleveland, O.

THE INDIANA POL IS TIMES

REPEAL OF DRY LAWS FAVORED BY BOSTON BAR Legality of Lawyers’ Vote May Be Tested by State Supreme Court. I!)i I nili •! J’n. st BOSTON, Ma” 3.—An appeal to the Massachusetts supreme court may be taken to test the legality of a referendum in which the Boston Bar Association went on record as favoring the repeal ol the eighteenth amendment. By a vote of 345 to 307, the association favored repeal of the amendment, the Volstead act, and all orders and regulations for tin enforcement thereof. It was further decided that the subject of prohibition should be remitted to the sole-regulation ol the various states. The eighteenth amendment was held by the majority vote to be inconsistent with the spirit and purpose of the constitution, and in derogation of the liberties of the citizens and rights of the states as guaranteed by the first ten amendments to the constitution. Ralph Waldo Gloag, who opposed the poll, said today that if some other members of the association would join him, he would seek ■a supreme court decision as to whether the organization had a right to conduct such a canvas. Ten members of the association resigned because of their disapproval of the referndum. VALLEY THAWING OUT Bn United Press RATON N. M.. May 3.—Merino Valley is “thawing- out” after a period of the severest wintry weather in its history. In twenty-nine nights the thermometer registered an average of 38 degrees below zero, and on eighteen nights the mercury dropped to 46 below', according to residents of the valley, the coldest spot in New Mexico.

Bourbon Prince and Ex-Stage Star Will Wed

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Mrs. Mabel Gilman Corey Divorced Wife of Former j U. S. Steel Head to Marry June 1. Bn I niled I’rrst PARIS. May 3.—Mis. Mabel Gilman Corey, Broadway musical comedy star of more than two decades ago, will become a Bourbon princess, the wife of Prince Luis Ferdinand De Bourbon, on June 1, an announcement published here today said. The w edding will be held either in Paris or at some place in Italy not yet selected. Mrs. Corey’s marriage to Don luis first was rumored in 1923 shortly after her divorce from William E. Corey, former head of the United States Steel corporation.

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EX-TREASURER STATES HE HAD JOCK HOLDING Statement by Glass Stirs Interest in Secretary Mellon's Case. BY PALI. R. MALI.ON I'nited Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, May 4.—The offstage congressional debate over whether the stock holdings of Andrew T. Mellon, secretary of the treasury, are a bar to office, was whetted today with a statement from Senator Carter Glass, Virginia Democrat, and treasury secretary under President Woodrow Wilson, who said he had stock holdings and thought nearly every other secretary in history owned stock while in office. Glass’ statement came while the judiciary committee was holding its sixth day session, arguing over the pending Norris report which holds Mellon is ineligible to continue in his cabinet post because of IPs vast stock interests in the Aluminum Company of America, and other corporations. Glass said he knew his two pre-

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decessors William G. McAdoo and David F. Houston were stock owners. Alexander Hamilton, first secretary of treasury, is krujwn to have owned dock in a New York bank, and Secretary Manning in the Cleveland administration had large stock holdings. “Os course I owned stock.” Glass said. "Why I was the largest individual stockholder in an industry in my state, but I did give up my bank stock, which wasn't hard to do because I had so little.” The issue is whether Mellon's

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Mock holdings constitute an interest in trade and commerce, violating the old statute that a treasury secretary must not be interested directly or indirectly in rithrifc The particular point now being discussed is whether the committee should call Mellon to clear up his testimony given in a civil suit in 1925. indicating ho was in direct touch with policies of the Aluminum company.

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