Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 151, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 November 1929 — Page 20

PAGE 20

LAST RITES FOR MRS. JACKSON TO BETUESDAY Heart Disease Causes Death of Wife of Peoples Bank Official. Last rites for Mrs. Leona C Jackson, 39, wife of Raymond D. Jackson, manager of the bond department of the Peoples State bank, who died Saturday at the Methodist hospital, will be held at the family home, 1541 Park avenue. Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Heart disease resulted in her death after several months' illness. Mrs. Jackson was a member of the Central Avenue Methodist church. Survivors besides the widower are the mother, Mrs. Mary Black; two daughters, Josephine and Lucille Jackson, and a sister. Miss LaKue Black, all of Indianapolis. Contractor Is Dead Funeral services form Luther V. Ploughe. 41, contractor and home builder in the Bellaire addition, who died Sunday at the Methodist hospital, will be conducted at the Bellaire church at 10 30 a. m. Tuesday by the Rev. W. B. Grimes, pa-tor. Mr. Ploughe had been a resident of Indianapolis eight years at 4902 Sangster avenue, having come from Sheridan. He built and sold eighty homes in Bellaire. He formerly lived at Celina. 0.. was a member of the Bellaire M. E. church and the Red Men’s lodge of Pickard, Ind. He is survived by the widow. Mrs. Verna Ploughe; two sons, Nola and Raymond; three daughters. Norma, Dorothy and Violet Ploughe, all of Indianapolis; his mother, Mrs. Nancy Jackson of Sheridan; a brother, Herschel Ploughe of Indianapolis, and a sister, Mrs. Carrie Samuels of Tipton.

Bury City Girl Funeral services for Miss Helen Jacobs, 23, of 3359 Washington boulevard, who died Saturday after a long Illness, were held today at the home. Burial was in the Indianapolis Hebrew cemetery. Miss Jacobs, the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Harry A. Jacobs, was a graduate of Shortridge high school. She attended Butler university and was an active member of the Indianapolis Hebrew congregation. Funeral Wednesday Funeral services for Emery C. Smith, 51, of 108 East St. Clair street, who died Sunday at his home, will be held at the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary, at 2 p. m. Wednesday. Burial w r ill be in Crown Hill. Mr. Smith, who was manager of White’s restaurant and president of the Indianapolis Stewards’ Club, had lived in Indianapolis about twenty-five years. He was of English birth. He was manager of the Denison hotel dining room for several years. He was a member of the Indianapolis Hotel and Restaurant Association and the National Hotel and Restaurant Association. Beside the widow, Mrs. Maude Hooper Smith, a son. Frank Smith of Detroit, two brothers and two sisters, survive him.

LOGASISPORT WOMAN IS WAR MOTHERS’ HEAD Officers Arp Installed at State Convention in City. New officers of the Indiana chapter of American War Mothers, installed at the state convention here Saturday, are headed by Mrs. C. S. Gibson, Logansport, president. Other officers are Mrs. W. S. Norris, Frankfort, first vice-president; Mrs. C. B. O'Donnell, Vincennes, second vice-president; Mrs. Grace Lawler. Lafayette, third vice-presi-dent: Mrs. A. C. Silvcrberg, Muncie, fourth vice-president; Mrs. W. L. McCord. Montezuma, recording secretary; Mrs. Melville Moon, Indianapolis, treasurer; Mrs. Addie Winslow Fairmount, chaplain; Mrs. W. N. Gatin. Greensburg. custodian of records, and Mrs. Alice M. French, historian and president emeritus.

HAD STOMACH PAINS AND RHEUMATISM Elderly Woman Restored to Health After Years of Cramps and Bloating. Readers ■who have endured stomach torture, back-ache or rheumatism. will be glad to know how Mrs. Annie Rosenberger, 910 So. Court St. Rockford. 111., conquered her trouble, in spite of her 74 years of age. She says: “For nine years. I suffered a living death. I could eat very little, and even that caused cramps and gas pains. I had awful dizzy spells, and fell several times. Four years ago. rheumatism attacked my shoulders, arms, and legs. For three years, I couldn’t move my arms without help. I w - as in constant pain, nervous, sleepless, weak and run-down. I had often read about Viuna, and at last I gave it a trial. Right away I felt better, and today I am a different woman. My appetite is good and I have no distress whatever after meals. The rheumatic pains have almost faded awav, and I can use my arms again. I am rid of the dizziness, sleeping fine and gaining weight. I spent over a thousand dollars frying to regain my health, but nothing I did or took gave me any real relief until I found Viuna.” Thousands of hopeless sufferers from kidney trouble, back-ache, stomach trouble and rheumatism, have been restored to perfect health by this wonder medicine. Why shouldn't it do as much for you? Try one bottle of Viuna under positive guaranty. $1 at druggists or mailed postpaid 6y Iceland Medicine Cos., Indianapolis, Ind. VIUNA Tic Wonder Medicine

In the welter of charges and counter charges, insinuations, and the hurt tries of those whose past rises up to plague them, one fact remains clear and outstanding—the brief campaign of the working people of Indianapolis, represented by the Workers’ Nonpartisan Political Action League, Inc., to acquaint the voters with the TRUTH concerning the attitude of the Republican candidate for mayor toward those who toil has been a success. Those engaged in this movement are not actuated bv any selfish motive, have no purpose or desire to dictate to the people, have no connection whatever with and HAVE RECEIVED NO SUPPORT, FINANCIAL OR OTHERWISE, from any political party or candidate for office. They are moved solely by a desire to procure decent government through a square deal for ALL the people of Indianapolis.

REGINALD H. SULLIVAN Democratic Candidate for Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan, the Democratic candidate for mayor, is a native of Indianapolis, is fiftythree years old and has been practicing law in the city for the last thirty years. Ilis father, Thomas L. Sullivan, was twice mayor of the city. • Mr. Sullivan is a graduate 'of Wabash College and the Indiana Law School. lie served one term in the Indiana state Senate and also as city controller. He was county chairman in the campaign of 1912 and was Seventh district Democratic chairman in 1924. At the outbreak of the world war and at the age of forty-one, Mr. Sullivan enlisted in the first officers’ training camn at Ft. Beniamin Harrison, where, after service of nearly three months, he was injured and honorably discharged. Later he was active in war work and was chairman of the precinct organization at the time the War Chest campaign was begun. Mr. Sullivan is a member of and vestryman in St. Paul’s Protestant Episcopal Church, is a member of the Masonic Lodge, the Scottish Rite and the Mystic Shrine. He has never been married. Sullivan’s Legislative Record Reginald H. Sullivan was a member of the Indiana State Senate in the sessions of 1911 and 1913 —sessions by w'hich more constructive and progressive legislation was enacted than during any similar period since the Civil War. More than two score measures designed to promote clean politics, bring about better industrial conditions and to improve the condition of the poor were supported by Mr. Sullivan and enacted into law at three sesions of the Legislature of which he was a member. Among the many constructive enactments supported by Mr. Sullivan may be mentioned: The model Indiana Corrupt Practice act, guarding elections from fraud; the Indiana Child Labor law (this in the face of one of the strongest lobbies ever met by a piece of humanitarian legislation! ; the Housing law. preventing crowded tenements, which has since been followed by other states and regarded as a model; the Voters’ Registration law, designed to prevent election frauds, and which was repealed by the 1927 session of the Legislature; Inheritance Tax law; Dangerous Occupations law, Employers’ Liability law, Weekly Wage Payment law. Teachers’ Pensions law. Bank Examiners’ law. Playground law. Minimum Wage law, Public Franchise Publicity law. Industrial School law, law protecting track elevation funds, providing for hospital for criminal insane, establishment of county tuberculosis hospitals, detention home for insane pending commitment, removing legal disabilities of women, uniform textbook law, law providing for better care of orphans and neglected children, law providing for more healthful school buildings, and many others of similar character. \ It can truthfully be said that while in the Senate Mr. Sullivan faithfully and effectively represented the People.

Composed Entirely Workers* Nonpartisan Political Action Inc* Engush Hotel t (PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMFVTI

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

The Workers’ Nonpartisan Political Action League, Inc., assumes to speak for labor in this campaign by authority of the more than 100 organizations of tradesmen and professional workers who are affiliated with and supporting this body—organizations representing 25,000 workers earning and spending more than fifty million dollars a year in our community. This movement is the spontaneous outgrowth of the. present political situation in Indianapolis, and it is in no way whatever concerned with any labor organizing program. Why We Oppose Glossbrenner Throughout this brief campaign, this league has uttered no attack on Mr. Glossbrenner’s personal character. Every piece of literature sponsored by this body has consisted chiefly of quotations from his own utterances and from his personal publication, “The Shield.” It is on this evidence from his own pen that we ask the judgment of the citizenry of Indianapolis. We believe the fair-minded voter must agree with us that Mr. Glossbrenner’s opinions and settled conviction on social and industrial problems and relations render him unfit to serve ALL the people as the chief executive of our city. \ . We consider Mr. Glossbrenner disqualified to serve impartially by reason of the fact that for a period of twenty-five years he has been the acknowledged and accredited foe of the working men and women, not only in his home city, but his reputation as such has spread throughout the nation. We distrust him and fear his election not only because of the influence responsible for his candidacy, but because his training, interests and activities in the industrial field have developed in him the attitude of a feudal baron, believing in serfdom for the toilers, rather than the more enlightened attitude of such modern industrialists as Henry Ford, Thomas E. Mitten, Owen D. Young, and scores of other leaders. In this matter we find him not only out of line with the great industrial leaders, but out of sympathy with expressions of the Republican party in its national and state platforms, and opposed in opinion to such great leaders of his party as President Hoover, Chief Justice Taft, Secretary James J. Davis, Calvin Coolidge and hundreds of others.

minus-rnl nr nnnn rrci IMP We approve, believe in and commend to all rittht-thinkins WISHub tnA Ur uUUU rEXLINb people the policy enunciated by Mr. Sullivan when he said: “Indianapolis needs an era of good feeling among its citizens. Group arrayed against group, class against class, and section against section is not conducive to the city s welfare. , # “If elected, / will be mayor of all the people and will endeavor to administer the city s affairs in such a manner that all of ovtr people will have confidence in the city’s chief executive.

President Hoover recently said, in analyzing reasons for national prosperity, “There has been a tendency of wages to increase, and the output per worker in many industries again shows an increase, all of which shows a healthy condition.” On this expression Arthur Brisbane, in a copyrighted editorial in The Indianapolis Sunday Star, commented as follows: i “Many foolishly believe that prosperity can be built on low wages and cheap production, President Hoover knows better. The basis of prosperity is high wages that make it possible for workers to purchase not merely life’s necessities, but the most important luxuries, automobiles, radios, bathtubs, electric washing machines.” In our opinion Mr. Glossbrenner is in emphatic disagreement with this theory. We believe it not in the public interest to have a man at the head of our city government who would array the classes against the masses; who by voice and pen has opposed “child labor” laws and other humanitarian legislation; who distrusts compulsory free education to the extent that only last September he advocated sending the children of the poor to work rather than to school, as a relief to the taxpayers; who favors working the teachers double time by inaugurating a two-shift system in the schools; who attributes the “present crime wave” in part to child labor laws; who, as chairman of a Chamber of Commerce committee, advocated substitution of women for men janitors in the schools as an economy measure; who is opposed to direct primaries and to home rule for cities in the matter of the city manager form of government, and who for twenty-five years has been nationally known as a leader among those militant organizations always found opposing the aspirations of those who work. Why We Favor Sullivan The supporting members of this body seek no advantage for themselves. Success in this endeavor will be reward enough for us. No candidate or group of candidates opposing Mr. Glossbrenner has any “understanding” with this league or its officers or members, and no such has made us any promises of any nature whatever. Solely because we approve his platform utterances and have faith in his fairness, _ capacity and good sense, and because we believe he is better qualified to serve ALL our people as mayor, we favor the election of Reginald H. Sullivan.

.NOV. '4, 1920