Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 175, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1929 — Page 12

PAGE 12

HOUSE LEADERS STAY IN SADDLE WITHOUT SHIFT Longworth, Snell, Tilson Will Continue to Be Big Three. BY RUTH FINNEY. WASHINGTON, Dec. 2—Though the Seventy-first congress begins with several of its most important posts in the senate held by new leaders, the organization of the house will be in the same hands which have controlled it for the last four years. House committees, to be organized this week, will retain the same chairmen practically without exception, and there will be little shift in membership. While the senate will devote much of its attention in the opening days to filling the important committee posts left vacant by the deaths of Senators Warren and Burton and the resignation of Senator Edge, similar organization in the house will be a routine matter. The three most powerful figures in the house. Speaker Longworth, Floor Leader Tilson, and Chairman Snell of the rules committee, still in control, insure continuance of the machine-like smoothness which has characterized house legislation in the immediate past. Eligibility Is Fought However, the house, like the senate, must turn its attention first upon convening today to eligibility of its members. While the senate is discussing the Vare case, house committees will hear five election contests never yet acted upon, though the members whose seats are challenged have been serving in congress since last April, when the special session convened. Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen’s seat is being contested by W. G. Lawson, Florida Republican, who charges that Mrs. Owen lost her citizenship when she married a British army officer some years ago. Mrs. Owen claims her citizenship was regained before her candidacy. Ludlow Seat Contested Representative Augustus McCloskey, Texas Democrat, must defend his seat against Harry M. Wurzbach, Republican, who was until this year a member of the house. In Maryland, John Philip Hill, formerly a member of the house, is contesting the election of Vincent L. Palmisano, Democrat. Jacob L. Milligan, Missouri Democrat, is defending his right to membership against H. F. Lawrence. Louis Ludlow, Democrat, Indiana, is challenged by Ralph E. Updike, former Republican congressman. Rings are seldom worn on the thumb today, but during the fifteenth and sixteenth century, the thumb was the popular ring finger.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

DEC. 2. 1929