Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 88, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1929 — Page 2
PAGE 2
COUNCILMEN TO BE CANDIDATES AT NOU POLL To Run for Commissioners in City Manager Election. BY EI)WIN V. O’NEEL At least three city councilmen will be candidates for commissioners in the city manager election Nov. 5, according to present indications. Albert F. Meurer. east side councilman, and Paul Rathert, south side grocer, are known to be considering the race. Robert E. Springsteen, former postmaster and council president pro tern., has been boosted as a likely candidate and it is understood petitions are being circulated. Meurer and Rathert were elected by the old council to fill unexpired terms of the city fathers who resigned following their, indictment on bribery charges. Meurer is assured of strong support from the east side residents and American Legion members. Springsteen was a member of the council which was elected in 1925. Springsteen is a Democrat and Meurer and Rathert are Republicans. Plan Political Come-Back It is reported that Boynton J. Moore and Walter Dorsett, members of the old council, who were indicted in the bribery scandal, have petitions in circulation and plan to stage a political come-back. Ballard West, editor of the South Side Citizen, who is friendly to Mayor L. Ert Slack and Police Chief Claude M. Worley, is said to be seeking a south side candidate who will support Slack for city manager. West said he is “not affiliated with any faction’’ but felt friendly to the Slack administraiton because of the special attention shown the south side residents by the works and safety boards. The names of Robert F. Miller, Slack safety board member, and Robert Sloan, south side civic leader, were indorsed last week by the South Side Citizen. Sloan asked that his name be withdrawn. Miller said a group of south side friends had circulated his petition but he had not decided to toss his hat in the ring this fall. “If they put me in I'll vote for Slack for manager. What is the use trading horses when you have a good one?’’ Miller said. PetHions Are Started John E. King, former Repblican councilman. federal prohibition agent and representative in the 1929 legislature, plans to start a petition. He is employed by the Indianapolis Fower and Light Company. Friends of Otto Ray, city license inspector, are obtaining signatures on a petition. Ray, a Democrat, served on the council during the Shank regime. Dr. F. P. Reid, 2206 South Meridian street, who is serving as police surgeon under Police Chief Claude M. Worley, said he will become a candidate if the law is held constitutional. “I’m waiting to see the outcome of the suit testing the 1 'gality of the law,” Dr. Reid said. Herman F. RikhofT. chief of police under the last Shank administration, has a petition with several thousand names ready for filing. Rikhoff has spent many weeks working on plans for his campaign. Others mentioned as possible candidates are: John Benedict, lawyer and member of the 1929 legislature: Don Roberts, assistant city attorney in the Duvall administration; Leo Dorn, druggist, and Ed Buckner, restaurant owner who sought election from the first councilmanic district in 1925. No petitions have been filed with City Clerk William A. Boyce Jr. GET RID OF YOUR CORNS Just a minute of your time and “END-O-CORN” Presto! Corns disappear. No pain. No more suffering. Walk with ease. Don’t fool with those so-called “corn cures” any longer. They are dangerous. Get END-O-CORN at the following druggists TODAY or if they are not near you write to END-O-CORN LABORATORIES. 4 Garfield Blvd., Chicago, who will see that you receive a jar promptly. Hook's. Haag's. Watnwn'i —Advertisement.
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28 Civil War Veterans Will Eat and Chat
Colonel Oran Perry
No Speeches or Program Arranged for 69th Regiment Reunion. “No speeches; no program; just a good dinner, and then we’ll smoke and talk as long as you like,” Colonel Oran Perry said today as he planned the reunion of a dozen of the twenty-eight survivors of the Sixty-ninth Indiana regiment of the Civil war. The dinner will be held in the Richmond-Leland hotel, Richmond, Ind., Aug. 30. Colonel Perry is superintendent of the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument and president of the regimental reunion organization. He is the only living officer of the regiment. Less than half of the living members of his old regiment will attend the dinner, Colonel Perry announced. expressing the wish the entire band could be reunited to swap stories of the days of '6l. The remainder are scattered so widely they can not reach Richmond, he said. “I’m going to attend some more of these reunions,” the veteran colonel predicted. “I’m not beginning to get old yet.” He passed his ninety-first milestone in February. RECEIVER APPOINTED Credit Managers to Handle Lumber Firm’s Affairs. Superior Judge Byron K. Elliott has appointed Justad C. Klippel, credit manager of the Van Camp Hardware and Iron Company, receiver for the Allcorrr Lumber Company of Lawrence. Receivership action against the lumber company was filed several days ago when it was declared that Frank W. Young, president, owed the hardware concern 86,477.62. ; Judgment in that amount is asked.
V This modish liish-lieeled pomp r "- roiiios in imatlcal bine, black pal- s||l .’ Tj? I rnt. or sierra brown. '-3© 1 •+“ #i AUTUMN SVm M& \ . hie onc-huckie comfort m r ' -? e tts that mean greater foot ipper just recently arrived. 3* - f%ll 1 becomingness with the new C CpE. jt~ ' ,= M? i f-? skirt lengths are to be found V jm in all sizes and widths in v. Marott's Downstairs store at ijj|| ;’ v B , T 7 the ridiculously low prices of f The new fall styles in the popular Enna M Choca "in' popular ffl / fettick comfort shoes are lovelier than Wi leather co mbl na- Q f ever before C r P(? V S tion. gs. and ?D DOWNSTAIRS cMmott DOWNSTAIRS Shoe Shop. 18-20 East Washington Street *>. mm -
SCHOOL BUDGET CUT TO MEET LEVY OF $1,32 Commissioners Expect to Complete Revision by Monday. | The proposed Indianapolis school jcfty 1930 budget today stood at a figure requiring a $1.32 levy, after three nights spent by school commissioners in slashing departmental appropriation requests. C. C. York, business director, said the board expected to conclude its revision probably by Friday. Numerous cuts have been made in the tentative budget, he said, but many of these have been ! counteracted by increases in some j funds where an insufficient amount had been included. One such item included $123,500, i the appraisers’ figure for purchase ; of Center township school 1, in territory recently annexed by the city council. No provision had been made in the budget for acquiring this school, although the board had provided $50,000 to acquire a Washington township school recently annexed. York was unable to make any estimate of the final 1930 school levy figure, other than that it "can’t help being much higher than the $1.02 levy for this year.” “If we could get it cut to $1.20, I would be very happy,” he added. The new Chinese knew the direction finding power of the loadstone before the Europeans devised the real mariners’ compasse in 1300.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Tribe to Sue Cayuga Indians Claim State of New York Owes Them Millions.
Bu United Brest Buffalo, n. y„ Aug. 22.— a claim which may total millions of dollars and which is based on an Indian treaty of 1795, will be presented against the state of New York shortly by the Cayuga Indian tribe, it was announced today. The claim involves the leasing of the sites of the towns of Seneca Falls and Waterloo, N. Y„ from the tribe and the payments, of SI,BOO yearly, date back to 1811. This means a total of 118 payments are demanded which total $212,400 compound interest on this amount would take the claims into millions of dollars. George Nash, secretary of the Cayuga tribe and Chief Clinton Rickard of the Tuskorara nation met here to draw up the claim, which will be presented to Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt within a few weeks. The basis of the claim as outlined today includes: In 1795 a treaty was drawn up between the Cayuga nation and the state of New York, whereby a strip of the Cayuga reservationnow included in the cities of Seneca Falls and Waterloo—was leased to the state. . The state agreed to pay the tribe SI,BOO on the first day of each June. The payments were made from 1795 to 1811. In 1811 the Cayuga tribe started on a hunting expedition in Canada. They became stranded there when the war of 1812 was declared.
CHINESE CLAIM ACTION AGAINST REDSJUSTIFIED Minister Presents Note to Kellogg Pact Signers at Washington. Bu United Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 22.—After a final attempt to convince the United States and other Kellogg treaty signatories that China was justified in expelling Russian officials of the Chinese Eastern railway, July 10, Minister Chao-Chu Wu left Washington today for Geneva, where he will attend the League of Nations assembly. En route to Geneva. Wu plans to
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stop briefly at London to explain the Chinese side of the Manchurian controversy to Foreign Minister Arthur Henderson. He intends also to stop part of one day at The Hague on his way to Switzerland. He is to sail for Southampton on the steamer Bremen shortly after midnight tonight. In a note delivered to Secretary Henry L. Stimson and the Washington envoys of all Kellogg pact signatories, the Nanking government asserted it had not seized the Chinese Eastern railway when it expelled certain Russian officials of the road on July 10. The note was designed to impress upon the United States and all other countries whose nationals have investments in China the Nanking government’s intention to respect foreign property rights within its borders. It reiterates, however, China’s unwillingness to reinstate the expelled Russian officials prior to settlement by negotiation of all issues involved in the dispute.
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FOUR HURT WHEN CAR OVERTURNS Negro Faces Charges After Woman Is Injured. Harold Jones, Negro, today faced charges of reckless driving, assault and battery and failure to have an operator’s license following an automobile accident Wednesday night in which Mrs. Willie May Kemp. Negro, 1525 Northwestern avenue, suffered three broken ribs. Four were injured Wednesday when an automobile overturned in a ditch on the Michigan road near Zionsville. They were: Fred White, 37, of 1034 Berwyn street; Mrs. Caroline White, 33: their daughter, Helen, 10, and Mrs^
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