Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 310, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1930 — Page 4
PAGE 4
PARTY SLATES TAKE FORM AS VOTESPILE UP Several Nominations Are in Doubt With About 40 Precincts Missing. With less than forty precincts in Marion county yet to report primary returns unofficially early today, both Republican and Democratic county slates were forming themselves definitely. However, several nominations in each party were in doubt as candidates held leads of only a few votes over their nearest opponents. Republican candidates who appeared certain of nomination were. Superior Judges—James M. Leathers, room one; Linn D. Hay, room three; William S. McMaster, room four, and Joseph L. Milner, room five. _ _ . Probate Judge—Mahlon E. Bash. Criminal Court Judge Walter Pritchard. Prosecutor —Judson L. Stark. State Senator —Linton A. Cox. Clerk —Jesse J. P. McClure. Auditor —Frank Cones. Sheriff— George L. Winkler. Councilman-at-Large Gavin L. Payne. Surveyor—Paul R. Brown. Commissioner (First district) John E. Shearer. Commissioner (Third district) C. O. Sutton. Assessor —James W- Elder. Republicans with leads ins"'’' lent to assure nomination were: State Representative Thaddeus R. Baker. John L. Benedict, Herbert W. Foltz, William Henry Harrison, Booth T. Jameson, George A. LeTnckr, James H. Lowry, Milton N. McCord, Louis R. Markun. Frank J. Noll Jr. and Will C. Wetter. Treasurer —Frank Cones. Recorder —R. Walter Jarvis. Coroner—Charles H. Kcever. Democrats apparently certain of nomination were; Superior Judges—John W. Kern, room one; Joseph R. Williams, room two. William A. Pickens, room three. Clarence E. Weir, room four, and Russell J. Ryan, room five. Probate Judge—Smiley N. Chambers. , „ Criminal Court Judge—Frank P. Baker. Juvenile Judge—John F. Geckler. Prosecutor —Herbert E. Wilson. State Senator —Edgar A. Perkins. Clerk—Glenn B. Ralston. Sheriff—Charles Sumner. Auditor—Charles A. Grossart. Assessor —Herbert J. Weaver. Surveyor—Bruce Short. Recorder—lra P. Haymaker. Democrats with leads not sufficient to insure election: State Representtaive Walter Myers, Albert F. Walsman, Henry C. Cox, John F. White, E. Curtis White, Gerritt M. Bates, Russell J. Dean. Jacob Weiss, William B. Connor, Fred S. Galloway and Clyde Karrer. Coroner —Fred W. Vehling. Commissioner, First District-r-Thomas H. Ellis. Commissioner, Third District— Don V. Vorhies. County Councilman - at - Large Frank S. Fishback.
MICROPHONE SIZE OF QUARTER EMPLOYED Voice of Phone Chief Magnified by Instrument in Talk. A ro.mature microphone, the size of a quarter, in the pocket of Sergius P. Grace, assistant vicepresident of the Bell telephone laboratories, New York, transmitted his voice to amplifiers at B. F. Keith’s tneater Wednesday afternoon and night while he lectured on sound transmission. His demonstrations were sponsored by the Indianapolis-Lafayette section of the American Institute of Electrical En?iners and by the Indiana Tele- j phone Association. Tne new device picks up vibratio is of the chest and acoustic vibrations from the air He displayed a high-powered,! double-enood vacum tube, anew in- | vention, which has its center por- i tion cooled by water, with a radia- ; tor much like that of an automobile, to be used for short wave radio telephony across the Atlantic ocean. BARNHART RENAMED AS TELEPHONE HEAD State Association Chooses Officers at Annual Banquet. Harry A. Barnhart of Rochester was re-elected president of the Indiana Telephone Association at the convention which closed with a banquet at the Claypool Wednesday light. Other officers re-elected were: R. V. Achate, first vice-pres-ident: Sam Tomlinson, second vicepresident, and W. H. Beck, secre-tary-treasurer. Directors elected were: J. I. Cheney. Winchester; T. E. Hanwav. Monticello; Max F. Hosea, Indianapolis: Walter Uhl. Logansport, and J. C. Carroll, Indianapolis. Wililam Herschell addressed the closing banquet. FILMS” RECORD HISTORY B" T'mitrrl rrrxi WASHINGTON. May 8— Important events in the nation's life will be preserved in moving pictures for posterity by a committee to be named by President Hoover and the motion picture industry. President Will Hays of the motion picture producers and distributors announced this falan on Wednesday night before a meeting of motion picture engineers here. GOOD-BYE ITCHING SKIN Soothing, healing and tremendously efficient, invisible Zemo brings cool relief to Itching Skin. Even where skin is raw and peeling, thousands have found that Zemo quickly restores comfort. It hglps smooth away blemishes and clear up Pimples, Rash and other annoying itching skin and scalp irritations. Keep clean, antiseptic Zemo always on hand. Use it freely. It is safe, pleasant. 35c. 60c and SI.OO. Sold everywhere.—Advertisement.
8A Graduates of School 10
Leroy Thomas, Samuel Martinez, Norman Spaulding, Charles McGanhey, Clifford Swallow and Francis Coonce.
Marvaerite Johnson, Mary Frances King, Evelyn s-v*h. Vida Clarkson, Mary Brainard, Dorothy Eudally and Evelyn Fausey.
Merrill Rockefeller, Ted Lehmann, Kenneth Smart, Ferdinand Naum, Robert Stringer, Ruben Windisch.
Evelyn Landrus, Marjorie Gray, Emogene Woodruff, Mary Gossett, Dorothy Keys, Mary Krick.
.Tern Mohjneaux, Eugena Martz, Harriet Lineback, William Sutton, Robert Stephens, Paul Thomas.
01..( i t Duke, Orpah Black, Evelyn Lear, Mildred Swan. Mary Brannon, Dorothy White, June BeCkenbaugh, Mamie Hash.
HEARING ON AUTHOR’S PLEA TO BE MAY 13 High Court to Rule on Prohibition Writ Asked by Bcdford-Jones. Court hearing on making permanent a temporary writ of prohibition granted Henry Bedford-Jones, novelist, by the Indiana supreme court Wednesday afternoon against Municipal Judge Paul C. Wetter, will be held May 13. The writ stops action of Judge Wetter to grant extradition of the
Hundreds of Thousands in U. S. A. Demand New Kind of Salts
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writer of adventure stories to Vanderburgh county where citation for contempt of court is pending against him in superior court. The action grows out of his refusal to bring a -hild by a former wife into cot rt. Bcdford-Jones failed to appear at a municipal court hearing on the extradition several weeks ago and his attorney was granted until May 9 to bring him into court under threat of forfeiting of SI,OOO bond signed by Howard C. Marmon in case the defendant failed to appear. Bedford-Jones has returned to California, where he now resides
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
with his second wife, widow of the millionaire Evansville bottle cap maker, Alfred Bernardin.
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MAHATMA HAS DEVOTED LIFE TO JJNDERDOO Gandhi Gave Up Lucrative Law Practice to Fight for Countrymen. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripps-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, May B—lt is a man very like Christ who has brought Britain the direst peril her rule in India ever has faced. Born a high-cast Hindu, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, called Mahatma, or “the holy one,” by his disciples—imprisoned spirit of the present dangerous revolt, has devoted his life to righting the wrongs of the lowly. Educated for the law in England, the popular leader gave up a lucrative practive in Bombay to fight the battles of his countrymen, who had emigrated to South Africa, where they were not particularly welcome. Ridiculed, made the object of countless indignities, arrested, put in jail and often physically attacked during his stay there, he nevertheless exposed his life time and again to soothe the sufferings of the British during the Boer war and the Natal revolt. Though he himself would not harm a hair of a man’s head, he formed and commanded a Red Cross unit in the war and led a stretcher party in Natal. And when the dreaded plague broke out, he organized a hospital for victims and among them daily risked death in its most horrible form. His method of freeing India from
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British rule Is thoroughly consistent witih his past. He is asking the 320,000.000 people of his country not to fight for their independence but merely to fold their arms and refuse to co-operate with their overlords. He pointed out that the government’s tax on salt was so high that poor men had to work three days or more each year to pay that tax alone. And salt the poor had to have. Land, drink and drug revenues also taxed the poor man hardest, and, he observed, whereas in England the premier was paid approximately $2,000 a month, in India the people were taxed to pay the viceroy SB,OOO a month.
Ia | SWEET PEAS, 50c Wgj BLOGMING ROSE PLANTS $2, $2.50 S4, $5 and $7.50 CARNATIONS, 52, $2.50 and $3 per dozen Riley 7535
CHURCH JIMDS MEET Chicago Director Is Speaker at Annual Session. Modern churches need a wide and adequate knowledge of the forces that determine the human experience in a great city, declared Dr. Ernest Graham Guthrie, Chicago Congregational Missionary and Extension Society director, Wednesday night at the annual meeting of the Indianapolis Church Federation. “The great cities have become so vast that now we can hardly hear
.MAY 8, 1930
the cries of individual souls. The need of the church is to personalize the city." Dr. Guthrie declared. More than 300 attended the dinner and business session at Meridian Heights Presbyterian church. Marshall D. Lupton was -e----elected president, and Thoma C. Dav. Earl R. Conder and Dr. f A Fifter, district superintendent of the Methodist Episcopal ch .g were named vice-presidents. Virgil H. Lockwood, James M. Swan, the Rev. W. A. Shullent ,er of Central Christian church ind Henry M. Dowling were el.. ted executive committee members. An annual report was read by Dr. Ernest N. Evans, executive secretary.
