Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 165, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 November 1930 — Page 3

' (NOV. 19, 1930

EXPENSE FUNDS ARE ANNOUNCED I BY CANDIDATES Ludlow Received Campaign Gifts Totaling $1,310, Report Shows. Campaign expenses of Louis Ludlow, successful candidate for congress from the Seventh district, and Judson L. Stark, defeated Republican candidate for county prosecutor, lead the list of more than severityfive accounts filed today with Coun- > ty Clerk "-rrc O. Hutsell. County v. .uidates in the November election have until Dec. 5 to record election expenses, Hutsell announced. .?. K. Lilly Gave SSOO Donations to Ludlow’s campaign totaled $1,310, with J. K. Lilly, head of Eli Lilly & Cos., listed as giving SSOO. Other donors included the Democratic congressional committee, $250; Thomas Quinn, $220, and Mrs. Sue Caperton, SIOO. Ludlow gave $1,500 to the Democratic county committee, and $564 to the Ludlow-lor-Congress Club. Stark, who Jan. 1 will surrender his office to Herbert Wilson, Democratic prosecutor-elect, spent $1,256, a report filed by Volney Brown, his political agent, indicated. .Richard L. Lowther, whose son was ' tried by Stark on a charge of manslaughter, donated SSO. Stark gave *ssoo to the Republican county committee. Spent 20 Cents Floyd E. Williamson, successful Democratic candidate for state auditor, reported expenditures of $386, including a S6OO donation to the state central committee. Other candidates, most of whom ran for minor offices, Reported expenses ranging in amounts from $25 to S2OO. George Snider, sub-treasurer of the Republican county committee, reported donations of $1,215. Frank N. Williams, candidate for state auditor on the prohibition ticket, spent 20 cents, all for postpgc. according to his account. ‘MEN THINK: MACHINES DON’T.’ ROTARY TOLD World Not Half as Bad as it Is Painted, Editor Asserts. “Men think. Machines don’t. That Is the answer to the man vs, machine problem facing the nation today." Such is the conclusion of Dr. Gerald Wendt, editor of Chemical Reviews. Speaking before the Rotary Club in the Claypool Tuesday, Dr. Wendt said the world wasn’t half as bad *ns certain pessimists would have one think. “The machine is our slave,” he eaid. “It becomes a menace only when man can't keep up with it. “We have been using the machine to speed up production when we should have used its higher capacity of production to provide more leisure for our workers. That’s why the five-day week now r is being fa- j ( rored.” JAIL-BREAK THWARTED All Clay County Prisoners Removed to State Institutions. By Unitrd Press BRAZIL, Ind., Nov. 19.—Sheriff Thomas Tiffee has cleared the Clay county jail of prisoners following a rumor that Albe Graves, held pending his remov.n to the state reformatory to begin serving a sentence for passing a fraudulent check, was planning an attempt to estape. Upon hearing of an alleged plan of Graves to get saws into the jail. Sheriff Tiffee took all prisoners to the reformatory and penal farm, to which they had been sentenced during the current term of circuit court. EX-COUNCILMAN DEAD John A. Puryear, Negro, 75, former city councilman, died Tuesday at his home, 714 North West street. He served in the council from the SiJcth ward during the administration of Mayors Thomas L. Sullivan and Thomas Taggart 1892 to 1897. He came to Indi. apolis fiftytwo years ago from North Carolina, his birthplace. He was a member of the firm of Puryear & Porter, house movers. A sister, brother, three nieces and a nephew survive.

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Declares Martial Law

Central figure in the political unrest evidenced by violent rioting in the city of Havana is President Gerardcf Machado of Cuba, who here is shown in h<s latest posed photo. When students, civilians and agitators resorted to mob violence in protest against his “autocratic” rule, he exercised the right recently granted him by congress and declared the capital and its environs under martial law. Meanwhile, he , is being guarded closely.

LESLIE ISSUES PROCLAMATION Thanksgiving Observance Is Urged by Governor. Annual Thanksgiving day procla- | mation, declaring Nov. 27, the date I this year, was issued today by Governor Harry G. Leslie. It reads: It Is good for people to pause from time to time and take note of the blessings of life which are theirs. We are at peace with all the world, with no known enemies on the horizon. Our food supplies are sufficient with proper distribution. There have been no serious catastrophies with attendant loss of life. Our children have opportunities for education and equal of any. Most of our state has a normal crop production. There is no serious social unrest. and we are able amicably to adjust our political differences and live in harmony with ourselves and bur neighbors. In conformity with the action of President Hoover. I. Harry G. Leslie, Governor for the State of Indiana, hereby proclaim Thursday. Nov. 27. Thanksgiving day. I urge that insofar as possible ail work shall cease and that all repair to their respecitve places of worship and other public meeting places to give thanks to Almighty God for His manifold blessings, and pray His guidance and protection for the coming year. DEPOSED HEDJAZ KING IS ILL AT CYPRUS By United Press LONDON, Nov. 19.—Hussien Ibn Ali, deposed king of the Hsdjaz and arch enemy of the Turks, was reported seriously ill at Cyprus ill advices received here today. It was reported late Tuesday the aged king had died, but authoritative quarters were informed later that Hussien is alive but critically ill. His son, King Feisul of Irar, was flying to Cyprus to be at his father's side. Contract Let for Three Bridges Henry V. Hay, Boonville, was awarded a $12,016 contract lor three bridges on state road 45, north of Haysville, in Martin county, it was announced today by the state highway commission. COLDS >, JT Quickest Relief X / (No Quinine) \ m The first dose of Laxa-Pirin I f gives blessed relief. Containa I ■ aspirin just as doctors use it— I combined with phenacetin, lax- I 1 atives, etc. Better for old and # % young. Pleasant. Safe. 25c. t cGuxarJti/um,

Gone, but Not Forgotten

I Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong f>: i Beecher Lineback. Castleton, Ind., Ford | roadster, from Castleton, Ind. I Fred Taylor. 1028 West Thirty-second I stret. Ford coupe, from Delaware and Wali nut streets. | Elmer Taylor. 12 East Minnesota street. ! Hudson coach. 773-993. from Orange and ; Alabama streets. Lillian Berher. 2926 North Illinois street. Ford coupe. 758-105. from Thirtieth and New Jersey streets. Will E. Vogler. 618 East Thirtieth street. Ford roadster. 736-489. from North and Pennsylvania streets. Meyer Kauffman. 922 East Forty-sixth street. Chevrolet truck. T 657-443. from 922 East Forty-sixth street. Charles Schneck. Seymour. Ind., Reo sedan. 247-450. from Seymour. Ind. Ford coupe. 608-392. reported by police department, stolen from Crawfordsville, Ind.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Roy Taylor. 2442 Wheeler street. Ford Tudor, found at Twenty-first street and Martindale avenue. Ford coupe. 768-782. found under elevation on South Pennsylvania street. JEWISH PROGRESS IS SUBJECT OF LECTURE Cincinnatian Gives First of Three Talks at Kirshbaum Center. I First of a series of three lectures ; on Jewish progress was given Tuesj day by Professor Jacob R. Marcus, Cincinnati, before members of the | Kirshbaum Community Center. | Detailing the progress of Jews i since the time they were political | and racial outcasts up to the present j status of politico-social equality, | Professor Marcus averred they had paid perhaps the most tremendous price in history for their accomplishments. “Because of the oppression, the Jews have had to come from behind in the development of their culture, for there was a time when they ! were not permitted to study the sciences at all,” he said. “But now I all indications show that America will become the greatest center of Jewish culture in the world.” The next of the series will be given Dec. 2.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ANTI-AMERICAN WINS UFFICE OF HAITI PRESIDENT Stenio Vincent Is Bitterly Opposed to Occupation by U. S. Troops. I By United Press PORT AU PRINCE. Haiti, Nov. 19. —Senator Stenio Vincent, first regu- | iarly elected Haitian president since I the American occupation of the isi land in 1916, and bitterly opposed ; to the presence of American forces 1 here, became president of Haiti to- ; day. He received thirty of the fifty j votes of the national assembly Tuesday in the first functioning of that body in thirteen years. Vincent has played a prominent i part in Haitian politics as senator, | cabinet minister, and delegate to The Hague. The new president succeeds Dr. j Eugene T. Roy, who became proi visional president on May 15 after the Forbes commission had investij gated conditions in Haiti. He will serve five and one-half | years of the regular six-year term, | .losing the six months served by the provisional president, j Roy succeeded President Luis i Borno, who retired last spring. He I was appointed by the recommenda- | tion of the commission sent to Haiti ; by President Hoover to sound out opinion on further American occupation. The present national assembly, known to be somewhat anti-Ameri-can, was elected during Roy’s brief term of office. / [death claims - " JOHN F. BROWN Teacher and Author, 81, to Be Buried Thursday. i Funeral services for John F. Brown, 81, teacher and author, 1406 East Vermont street, who died Tuesday, will be held at 2 p. m. Thursday at the Grinsteiner undertaking establishment, 522 East Market street. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Brown had lived in Indianapolis sixty years. After graduating from Purdue university he was an instructor in wood carving at Manual Training high school. He later retired from teaching and wrote books and magazine articles on economic subjects. Surviving him are a sister, Mrs. Frank Higgins of Cheshire, Eng- | land; a sister-in-law, Mrs. Frank | Bornholt of Indianapolis, a niece I Mrs. Frank Culver of Royal Oak, | Mich., and a nephew, Oscar Borni holt of Waukegan, 111. MERCURY SETS HIGH MARK FOR NOVEMBER Temperatures Today May Soar Past 73 Mark Registered Tuesday. With an all-time high temperature record for the date established Tuesday, thermometers at the United States weather bureau today indicated another high mark may be set this afternoon. Tuesday the mercury rose to 73 degrees. The previous record for Nov. 18, set in 1896, was 68 degrees. At 9 a. m. today the thermometer registered 63 degrees. Indian summer that settled here last week was due to give way to lower temperatures Thursday night, the weather bureau predicted this j morning. Showers tonight or Thursj day will be followed by a sharp drop in temperature.

j INDIANA T. B. TOLL CUT Death Rate Has Be?n Reduced by One-Half Since 1913. j Tuberculosis deaths in Indiana j have decreased almost half since 1913, and the death rate has shrunk from 148.3 each 100,000 then to 72.8 last year, according to Miss Anne Lutz, Lafayette, president of the Indiana Tuberculosis Association. Sale of Christmas seals each year has provided the association with funds to combat the disease. County leaders have reported that jdli unteer workers for the seals camj paign this winter are more numerous than ever, to obtain $200,000 needed in the state to finance the | 1931 health program. SLASH IN PAY 'FOR 500,000, IS EDICT IN IYALY Daring Step Is Taken by Mussolini to Force Drop in Retail Prices. By United Press ROME, Nov. 19.—A daring effort iby Premier Benito Mussolini to force a big drop in retail prices in Italy today was seen in the cabinet’s decision to reduce all salaries of government employes by 12 per cent. The salary cut, effective Dec. 10, will affect almost every family in the nation. About 500,000 persons directly will be affected by wage cuts, which will aggregate a saving of close to $50,000,000 for the state. The government eventually intends to reduce taxation and It chose to cut salaries rather than accept a tax increase to meet the budget deficit. Governmental, industrial and agricultural leaders joined the cabinet in sounding “a trumpet call for retrenchment” in Italy. The railroads, postoffices, offices of the state tobacco monopoly, all state or semi-state enterprises, and the army, navy and air force will be j involved in the salary reduction ■ program. ACCUSED AS DRUNK | Man, Held at Hospital, Charges .Slugging. Found In a dazed condition after he said he had been slugged, Arthur Buckner, 520 Myrtis street, as held in the, city hospital detention ward today on charge of drunkenness and vagrancy. Mrs .Erma Hall, operator of the rooming house on Myrtis street, told police she found Buckner lying on the floor and that a nan fled through the rear door. COUNTY FINANCES TO BE STUDIED CLOSELY | New Council to Begin Probe of Revenues and Expenditures. Study of the auditor's statement of financial status of Marion county’s government wil be opened by the new Democratic county council at a public meeting at 2 today. Armed with figures submitted by County Auditor Harry Dunn, councilmen were to begin an extensive examination of revenues ana expenditures in all phases of county government over a period of several years. Meeting privately Tuesday night, councilmen were told by Dunn that bankruptcy threatens the county purse if caution is not used in future expenditures. New councilmen pledged themselves at their first meeting Satur- | day to a thorough “housecleaning” at the spending end of government.

DOX TO .STOP HOP AT AZORES Proposed Flight on to U. S. Given Up. By United Press LIBSON, Nov. 19.—The giant Dornier flying boat Dox will not make its proposed flight from the Azores to New York, Cudell Goertz, representative of the Dornier Company in Lisbon, said today. The Dox will arrive here Thursday, Goertz said, and will remain for eight days. Two demonstration flights will be made, during which President Carmona and other prominent Portuguese are_ expected to be passengers. The flying boat will continue to the Azores and return here later, Goertz said.

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Farmer s Will Filed By Times Spc-ial ANDERSON. Ind., Nov. 19.—An estate left by Marion M. Walker, retired farmer, will be divided among his heirs as stipulated by a will ad-

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mitted to probate in circuit court The widow. Mrs. Phoeba A. Walker, is bequeathed the entire estate subject to a life estate and at her death the property will be given to three children.

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