Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 232, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 February 1931 — Page 9

rEB. 5, 1931

OLD AGE BILL 'HIDING' ROUSES NEJDL'S WRATH Senator Asks to See House Draft and Is Refused, He Declares. Republican senators today were speculating to what lengths the insurgency that reappeared late Wednesday may run before the current legislative session is ended. Twice in the senate Wednesday, rancor was undisguised. Senator James J. Nejdl voiced bitter protest to taciics which have prevented his seeing the copy of the old age pension bill, passed by the house, and now reposing in the senate's safe until Lieutenant-Gov-ernor Edgar D. Bush sees fit to asfdgn it to a committee. A similar measure, of which Nejdl is coauthor, will be a special order of business in the senate Feb. 10. Nejdl Is Wrathy Facing the senate. Nejdl declared: “A certain hoyse bill arrived here approximately a week ago. It was signed lor and should have been handed dowm and assigned to a Committee. I inquired about and located it in the safe of the senate clerk. He told me he could not let me see the bill. If that s the way you are going to deal, lets let the world know about it." 'Io Senator Robert L. Moorhead's question, Senator Nejdl said he referred to the house old age pension bill. A Rowly Also Angry A bit later, Senator Earl Rowley 'Rep,, La Porte and Starke) took Senator C. Oliver Holmes (Rep., Lake) sternly to task for not having recognized him as he tried four times to get the floor. Holmes was presiding temporarily at the time. Holmes explained it W'as because the majority floor leader, Senator Lee J. Hartzell was trying to end the debate. "I flunk it was mighty discourteous. both on the part of the chair and the senator," Rowley said with a scowl.

THE STRONG OLD I BANK OF I INDIANA For the expansion of weß* managed business or sound Bj enterprise. The Indiana National H Bank offers in addition to vast H resources the judicious counsel Cl of a strong directorate. w| DIRECTORS Roy E. Adams H Pros. J. Bl Adams w Manufacturing 00. Clarence S. Alig mi Vice Pres. Horn* Stwe Cos. PiS Fred G. Appel I .... Pres. Gregory * Appet, Tne. Sj| Henry W. Bennett Pres. Indianapolis Stove 00. Hjfl Arthur V. Brown Pres. Union Trust Cos. ffigE Eugene H. Darrach Pres. Inter-State Car 00. —- C. A. Efroymson gJ Pres. Occidental Realty Cos. HZ Henry Eitel vice President §&£§ R. Malott Fletcher H . __ _ , * . co- T nistee Maiott Estate gg All advantages accruing from “more than J. S. Holliday . Free. W. J. Holliday A Cos. . . * w ' 6 lrv S,ttu H half a century of banking experience . ; ; Cos.. Columbus, Ind. I^P Pres. John J. Madden Mf|. Cos. safety... strength ... broad facilities . .. and Gwynn F. Patterson Norman a. Perry || intelligent, friendly service . . . are available Capitalist jSftl Chairman of Board Belt alike to each and every patron of this bank, R. R. & Stockyards Cos. Kg’ ' 1 Peter C. Reilly Pres. Republic Creosottng 00. |j| I obie KnßnHßnHgnyHßin Rrai Estate and Insurance H William L Taylor j frank D. Stainaker President 1

Reception Head

Swire

Walter Greenough

Governor Harry G. Leslie will lead the parade prior to the reception Monday for Floyd Gibbons, war correspondent and radio announcer, who will speak at night at Cadle tabernacle. Officers from Ft. Harrison and staffs also will participate in the parade. Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan has , named a reception committee headed by Walter S. Greenough of the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company. Other committeemen are Ray D. Everson, James A. Stuart, Meredith .Nicholson, L. Ert Slack, Dr. Maurice B. Jarvis, Charles W. Jewett, Thomas A. Hendricks, Gideon W. Blain. A. J. Fritz, Bowman Elder, Bernard Korbly, Sidney S. Miller, Daniel I. Glossbrenner and Seymour Mazur. War Veteran Attempts Suicide John Gregory, 39, World war veteran, Martinsville, was in serious condition today, city hospital officials reported, after swallowing poison in a suicide attempt in a downtown hotel Wednesday night. His wife lives in Hammond and a brother James is in Martinsville.

'UNEMPLOYMENT CURES SUUGHT BY ROOSEVELT Three Possible Remedies Are Outlined by Governor of New York. Franklin D. Roosevelt, who recently called together governors of eeven states to discuss and study unemployment causes and relief measures, in the followiwng Interview outlines his ideas of possible remedies for nnemolovment depression. fOoDvrlght. 1931. by United Press) ALBANY, N. Y., Feb. s.—Three remedies for unemployment and its consequent distress were outlined by Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt today. The Governor based his suggestions on the findings of the recent conference, initiated by him, of the Governors of six of the principal industrial states of the northeast, which normally employ 49 per of all the country’s labor. Three Remedies Proposed The conference, which was in session three days at Albany recently, is to be resumed at the invitation of Governor Gifford Pinchot of Pennsylvania. Governor Roosevelt suggested: A study of all forms of unemployment insurance here and abroad with a view of evolving a workable, model American plan. A study of the labor laws of the principal industrial states to bring them into closer uniformity. A clearing house for employment information to guide labor to the markets where needed and away from the markets where not needed. Governor Roosevelt, regarded as an outstanding potential Democratic presidential candidate in 1932, because of re-election by the record breaking plurality of more than 725,000, continued: 111-Considered Trophecy “Only two years ago many prominent people were saying publicly that the industrial boom then in progress would continue indefinitely

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and that never again would the United States suffer economically. “So much for ill-considered prophecy, based on unsound thinking and the failure to read history. “Two significant points were brought out by the conference. “One was that the wage payments in the nation as a whole were about nine and a half billion dollars less in 1930 than in 1929—an appalling decrease in the purchasing power of the country. “The other startling fact was that in ite of all of the efforts of federal, state, city, county and other government agencies, the total volum of public works in 1930 and 1931 was no greater than in 1929.” Postal Veteran Dies DECATUR, Ind., Feb. s.—George W. Everett, 58, for twenty-seven years money order clerk in the Decatur postoffice, died suddenly of heart disease at his home. He was a former school teacher.

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FRANCE OFFERS MILITARY HONOR TO DESERT KING Overlord of Morocco Rules Empire of Half Million Subjects. BY PIERRE PIGEAIRE United Press Staff Correspondent MARRAKECH, Morocco, Feb. 5. France paid belated tribute today to the last great feudal lord, the seigneur of the Atlas mountains, El Hadj Thami Ben Mahomed Me-

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zoumd El Glaoui, pacha, of Marrakech. Representatives of the governorgeneral came from Rabat to the seigneur's "Fairybook” palace of the sands to pin the ribbon of the military medal on the white bernouse of the desert chief. The Glaoui gave France, singlehanded, the great Moroccan empire. Single-handed he defended the rich country from German seizure during the V/orld war after France had accepted his word to keep peace and had withdrawn all her batallions from Morocco. The military medal is not the only gift from France, for every year two beautiful de luxe automobiles are driven up to the palace here, and left in the courtyard as the gift of the French governor-general. The Pacha's garage would rival that of any millionaire. Overlord of the Atlas, the Glaoui rules and dispenses tribal justice

over a half million Moors. Me has life or death power over them and if he wished to turn his Moors against the French, France and Spain probably would be run out of Morocco. In his palace, which consists of a scries of palaces one inside of the other, he keeps his harem of 260, three being his official wives. The other women came from various tribes. His children are said to number more than 150, but he is raising personally only one son. The Glaoui is a golfing fan. and although he has to travel nearly one thousand miles to play, he gets in his game every year in France and has improved his nlay considerably. He is also an enthusiast at the French horse races at Vichy. Vittel and Paris. He has palaces scattered all over Morocco, the finest here at Marra-

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kech, not far from the famed Koutubia tower of emeralds. Sugar Season to Open Soon KOKOMO, Ind., Feb. s.—Owners of the few remaining sugar camps in Howard county are beginning preparations for the annual harvest. They Relieve that owing to the mild winter the season will open earlier than usual, with prospects good for maple trees to yield fair quantities of sap.

■ rurc SHOULD GO RVII L3 by 5" HOUR §mSk Miuterole *(e “counter-ir*' ■ ntant, ' is often effective after m brat application and usually draws out muscular rtrwp and pain by sih hoar.