Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 141, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 October 1930 — Page 16
PAGE 16
HOOVER SILENT ON CAMPAIGN IN PENNSYLVANIA Ho White House Comment on Pinchofs Claim of Support. BY RAYMOND CLAPPER t'nited Pre* Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Oct. 22.-Efforts arc being made to draw President Hoover against his wishes into the election campaign now nearing its climax. Thus far, in face of strong pressure, he has fought off all appeals from Republican candidates peeking White House help. He visited four states in his recent speaking tour, but indulged in no boosting of Republican candidates. He avoided even having his photograph taken with them, or In any other way conducting himself so that he might be capitalized by party candidates. So far as he is concerned, President Hoover is trying to avoid being made an issue in this campaign. As war-time food administrator, Mr. Hoover joined Woodrow Wilson in appealing for election of a Democratic congress in 1918, and he saw the country answer by returning Republicans to power. No White House Comment President Hoover has been drawn into the intense Pennsylvania governorship contest within the last twenty-four hours. Gifford Pinchot, Republican candidate for Governor, is quoted as having said he received word his election was hoped for by President Hoover. Secretary of Labor Davis. Republican candidate for senator in Pennsylvania. has denied this. He says that Mr. Hoover has not eyen indorsed him, a member of the Cabinet, and that the President, as the head of the nation, can not indorse political candidates. The White House refuses to comment. Pinchot, though Republican candidate, is opposed by almost the entire Philadelphia party organization and numerous other influential Republicans of the state, including W. W. Atterbury, head of the nnsylvania railroad, who reslgneu as Republican national commit seman because he could not supix Pinchot. Pinchot President Possibility Defecting Republicans are supporting John Hemphill, Democratic candidate for Governor. Pinchot stands with President Hoover against repeal of the eighteenth amendment. Hemphill is fov repeal of the amendment, the Vc - stead act and the state enforcement act. However, on economic issues Pinchot and Mr. Hoover are of opposing schools. Utility regulation is a leading issue in Pennsylvania, with Pinchot advocating stricter control by an elected fair rate board. Hemphill favors the present more liberal appointive public service commission. Another factor is that many Republican insurgents look to Pinchot, if he wins, as a successor to the late Senator Robert M. LaFollette, as a national leader of the proresting minority in the Republican party. Many believe he would seek the presidential nomination against Mr. Hoover. safe’refrigeration ORDINANCE DRAFTED CP" Board Receives Proposal to Regulate Multiple Units. Proposed ordinance regulating installation and control of multiple refrigerators, to eliminate hazards, has been presented the safety board by William F. Hurd, building*inspector. The proposal calls for inspection and tests of all refrigeration plants of two or more divisions working from a central unit and recommends each unit line be incased in metal conduits: that lines have safety valves, and that pressure tests of the lines be conducted before the plant is permitted to operate. It is not expected action will be taken soon on the proposed ordinance. due to the city’s lack of funds to hire an inspector to enforce the code.
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Drive to Charity Goal
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Jubilant but unrelenting was the attitude of Community Fund leaders today as they forged toward the $865,000 goal needed for the thirty-five member agencies for the next year. In the top photo, left, is Jake Slutzky, firm chairman of H. P. Wasson Company, whose employes gave $1,338.09 this year as against $713.59 a year ago; center, Howard T. Griffith, Udell works president and chairman of
PHOTOS TRAP SUN'S ECLIPSE Forty-One Perfect Pictures Taken by Scientists. Bp United Press NIAUFOU ISLAND, Oct. 22.—A group of noted scientists were jubilant today over their reward for weeks of labor and patient waiting on “Tin Can” island —forty-one seemingly perfect pictures of the sun’s total eclipse. Men of science from all parts of the world gathered here on the island to take pictures of the celestial phenomenon, which, they hope, will lead to new discoveries concerning the sun’s substance. The weather was regarded as unsuitable for the snapping of photographs, but at the last moment it cleared, leaving a perfect medium for observation of the eclipse. The giant cameras, placed in the most advantageous places, clicked rapidly as the moon’s body passed between the sun and the earth. Duration of the total eclipse was 93 Ye seconds. Natives of the island were divided in their awe between the phenomenon and the operation of the white man’s apparatusimpressed by the scientists frantic desire for clear weather, they had offered long prayers for a blight day, and took all credit for the resulting condition.
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the industrial district in employes’ division, reporting the industrial district in two days showed $44,497.13, or 79.5 per cent of its $56,000 quota; right, George Vcnnegut, firm chairman of Vonnegut Hardware Company, whose employes gave $1,076, an average of $4.64, and an increase over last year. Lower photo: T. R. Murphy, firm chairman of the Continental Baking Company, whose employes contributed $383, as against S3OB last year, and, right, W. R. Kemper, Furnas Ice Cream Company firm chairman, whose employes boosted last year’s contribution of SIOO to $256 this year. RAZING PROVIDES JOBS Work of Clearing Clark Memorial Site Started at Vincennes. B.u Times Special VINCENNES, Ind., Oct. 22. Wrecking of buildings on the George Rogers Clark memorial grounds is under way, and according to D. Frank Culbertson of the memorial commission, an effort will be made to use as many men as possible to alleviate unemployment. It Is planned to have a double force, using each on alternate weeks. The first structure to be wrecked is the the old Lyric theater. Several residences wall be razed later. From twelve to fifteen men are being employed, and will have work for about three months, it is estimated. REHEARING IS WAIVED Marion Attorney Acts in Grant, Delaware Court Case. Attorney Harry Roberts of Marrion Tuesday filed waiver with the supreme court for rehearing of the Grant-Delaware superior court case. The case was decided last week when Governor Harry G. Leslie’s “pocket veto” was overruled. Decision makes effective separation of the courts, giving each county a judge instead of having one jointly.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
LEADERS MEET TO DIAGNOSE TRADEJLLNESS American Industry Is Fully, Represented at Chicago Rally. . Bp United Press CHICAGO, Oct. 22.—Leaders of American industry met in consulta- j tion today at the bedisde ot business ! to diagnose its illness and prescribe I remedies for its improvement. “The current situation” was the theme of the consultation, which at the University of Chicago as the seventh conference of major industries. Billions of dollars of capital invested in mining, steel, chemical, rubber, textile, automobile, communication, railroad, aviation, building and construction, publishing, electrical, merchandising, theatrical, agricultural and petroleum industries were represented. Joining in the program were the heads of eighteen great universities and a group of the nation’s foremost financiers. The names of those invited to attend the conference, which was held under the auspices of the University of Chicago and the Institute of American Meat Packers, read like a blue book of big business. Among the men named in the list are: Charles M.^Schwab, Irene Du Pont, Harvey S. Firestone, Walter P. Chrysler, Easel Ford, Newcomb Carlton, the Van Sweringen Brothers, i W. S. Atterbury, Harris Hanshue, ' Samuel Insull, Owen D. Young, | Julius Rosenwald, S. S. Kresge, j Frank O. Lowden, agriculture secretary, Arthur M. Hyde, Alexander Legge, Henry L. Doherty, David Belasco, George M. Cohan, treasury secretary, Andrew Mellon, A. P. Giannini, Glenn Frank, Interior Secretary, Ray Lyman Wilbur and | Nicholas Murray Butler. Halloween to Be Observed | B,P Times Special ELWOOD, Ind., Oct. 22. A i municipal Halloween celebration ! v/ill be held the afternoon and °ve- | ning of Friday, Oct. 31, which will ; include a parade of masked per- : sons. Prizes of SIOO will be offered* j During the afternoon there will be a display of farm products, with S3OO ! in prizes offered.
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Proud Daddy Father of Cabaret Starts Many Noted Stars on Road to Fame.
Bp United Press PARIS. Oct. 22.—A. M. Nelson Fysher, the daddy of the cabaret, is proud of his child! As the originator of the first cabaret in the world, he ranks as a trailblazer in the forest of night life. Asa writer of songs he conceived the that he might sing them himself with the exact feeling he had written into them. People came to hear him. That was back in the good old days of about 1896, and on Broadway. It was the world’s first cabaret. So he opened up the “Chez Fysher” and took on talent that he co-starred with him. It was an immediate success. Practically all of the famous cabaret artists tooay have had at one time worked under his direction. Among them are Irene Bordoni, the late Rudolph Valentino and countless others. During Irene’s visit to Paris this summer she went to see her premiere benefactor and they had a good laugh over the days when he starred her to work for turn at SSO a week. Fysher has traveled all over the world. The crowned heads of Europe have been entertained at “Chez Fysher” innumerable times, and the prince of Wales was a guest no later than September at Fysher’s new cabaret on the Rue Fontaine. CONGRESSMAN DIES Arkansan Had Served in House Since 1913. Bp United Press BALTIMORE, Oct. 22. Otis Theodore Wingo. 53, who had served in the house of representatives as a Democrat from Arkansas since 1913, died Tuesday night in Johns Hopkins hospital. Wingo had been ill for several months and failed to rally from an operation for gallstones, performed Monday.
NEW EVIDENCE IN BOMB CASE BEFORE COURT Pictures Are Submitted to Prove Mooney, Billings Are Innocent. Bp United Press SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 22.—Justices of the California supreme court considered new evidence today intended to prove that Warren K. Billings and Tom Mooney were innocent of the 1916 San Francisco Preparedness day parade bombing for which they are serving life imprisonment. ' % Attorney Edwin V. McKenzie filed three pictures to confirm the authenticity of other photographs previously submitted and showing Mooney and his wife on the roof of the Eilers building here at the time the parade was inarching up Market street. The later pictures were taken a short time after the explosion occurred, killing ten persons. These pictures, McKenzie said, proved that Wade Hamilton, who submitted the pictures of the Mooneys, was, himself, upon the building. Other photographs, made on the advice of Jerome S. Richard,
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Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen bß John lo Martin. Greenwood. Chevrolet cabriolet. 743-500, from Greenwood. Clark Mull. 417 North Tibbs avenue Ford to-irin*. 77-376. from Michigan and Pennsvlvanla streets. Joseph O. Mallney. 314 East Market street. Ford truck, from Wabash and Delaware streets. , , , _ . Major Avery. 17 East Ohio street. Ford sedan. .85-534. from 17 East Ohio street.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered by police belomt to: Chevrolet roadster. Michigan 364-121. on front and Mississippi 92-591. oa rear, found at 200 East Market street. “padre of the rains,” were offered to substantiate the Hamilton pictures by the sun dial method. The pictures, made exactly a year after the blast, should, Father Richard told McKenzie, coincide as to shadows with those made the day of the explosion. Dr. Howard C. Naffziger submitted an affidavit as to the mental condition of John MacDonald, “recanting witness,” whose discovery after a natioh-wide search and subsequent return to San Francisco precipitated the recent supreme court hearing on the Billings case. Another affidavit submitted by James Hammerberg denied he ever accused Mooney of the outrage and declared he knew the suspect was on the Eilers building room at the time of the explosion. An affidavit by Lieutenant Harry Holzer of the Baltimore police department stated MacDonald was unreliable.
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.OCT. 22, 1930
LUDLOW SLAMS . AT ‘MACHINE’‘Cause for Shame,’ Democratic Congressman Says. “Paramount issue in this campaign in Marion county is the fight of the citizens against a common enemy that has caused us to hang > our heads in shame at home and"' abroad,” declared Louis Ludlow candidate for re-election as Seventh district representative at n Democratic rally Tuesday night at 5019 East Michigan street. “It is a fight against machine politics and this issue is of vastly more importance than the individual makeup of a party ticket. “It is as much the duty of the prosecutor to run down law vio-r lators as it is the duty of the city and county police,” declared Herbert Wilson, candidate for prosecutor. “I shall not be a prosecutor content to sit about and twiddle my thumbs and wait for things to happen. Militant and active in all law enforcement activities, I promise to \ assign an able lawyer as deputy . prosecutor to advise and aid the A chief of police in preparing search fl warrants.” M
