Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 265, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 March 1931 — Page 2
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HOOVER PLANS TO SELL WEST FARM PRO6RAM 1932 Campaign May Soon Be Opened by G. 0. P. Speaking Tours. Ky Seripps-flau:nrd Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, March 17.—'The 1032 presidential controversy may Ket going in a big way within a few months if President Hoover and the Republican national committee carry out their program of sending beakers throughout the country to 'sell” the administration’s farm program to the west. Numerous progressive senators and representatives, it was learned today, will trail Hoover and missionaries will be sent out by the committee just as they did when, on behalf of Hoover, they followed A1 Smith through the agricultural areas during the 1928 campaign. In that year Senator William E. Borah (Rep., Ida.), and Senator Smith W. Brookhart (Rep., la.), arranged their speaking itinerary so that they could answer Smith’s farm speeches almost as soon as they had been made. The same barnstorming method would be adopted in the event that Hoover takes his reported twomonth trip through the west, and delivers two or three key speeches in defense of the farm board and his general agricultural program. Definite plans for a speaking tour of G. O. P. defenders have been made by Robert H. Lucas, executive director of the Republican national committee, in the creation of an agricultural advisory board. Lucas has named a committee consisting of Senator L. J. Dickinson (Rep., la.) and Senator Arthur Capper (Rep., Kan.). Under their supervision, it is planned to mobilize speakers who will tell what the farm board has done tc keep up prices, and to prevent an even more disastrous drop than has overtaken wheat, corn, cotton, cattle and hogs. They may also suggest other plans Hoover has in mind for next session. The progressives who supported Hoover three years ago, however, now charge that he has broken the pledges made to agriculture on his behalf by Borah, Brookhart, Senator Gerald P. Nyc (Rep., N. D.) and others. Both Borah and Brookhart repudiated the administration’s farm record at the progressive conference and are ready to do it again. MRS. CLAYPOOL DEAD Body to Arrive Here Friday; Burial to be at Crown Hill. Funeral rites for Mrs. Mary Catherine Morrow Claypool, 92, who died Sunday in San Diego, Cal.,’ will be held at 2:45 Friday with burial in Crown Hill cemetery. The body will arrive in Indianapolis Friday. Mrs. Claypool was the widow of Edward Fay Claypool, who founded the hotel bearing his name. TIRE DEALERS ORGANIZE Indianapolis Merchants to Meet Monthly for Discussions. Organization of the Tire Merchants’ Credit Association, local branch of the National Tire Dealers Association, was announced today following a meeting of Indianapolis dealers at the Lincoln. The group will meet monthly for discussion of dealers’ problems. John Caylor will be secretary, the only officer named by the branch. SAT DEAD TWO WEEKS Watchman Found in Chair at Home; Friend Alarmed by Absence. fly United Press NEW YORK. March 17.—Edward Shoien, 60, night watchman, sat dead in a chair at his home for tw’o weeks before he was found today when a friend, alarmed at his absence from work, called police.
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KING TO SEE HOOVER Siamese Royal Couple Will Call on President. By Untied Press WASHINGTON, March 17.—The king and queen of Slam will pay a state visit here on April 29 and will be entertained by President and Mrs. Hoover at the White House. Ths announcement by the state department today ended months of speculation as to whether the royal pair w'ould abandon their incognito status, which they will assume during the rest of their stay in the United States, for a formal call on the President. King Prajadh Ipok and his queen will be the first royal visitors Washington has had since Queen Marie of Rumania, and her entourage came here late in 1926. And, like Marie’s, their arrival here will be accompanied by all the pomp and ceremony a republican government can display. NIER RITES ARE SET Death Claims Resident of City for 28 Years. Funeral services for Isaac F. Nier will be held at the Hisey and Titus undertaking establishment, 951 North Delaw-are street at 2, Wednesday afternoon. Burial wil. be in the Indianapolis Hebrew cemetery. Mr. Nier came from Russia to the United States when he was 20 years old. For twenty-eight years he has been a resident of Indianapolis. He was a member of the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation and the Knights of Pythias. He died Monday at his home, 3715 North Meridian street, after a short illness. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Flora Nier. a son, Harry Nier of Denver. Colo., and a daughter, Mrs. Ruth Bloom of Indianapolis. RHEUMATISM AND NEURITIS GONE Konjola, Famous Medicine For The Home, Again Makes Good. Here is a real message of hope and cheer for thousands of men and women who are suffering from rheumatism and neuritis, many of whom have despaired of escape from the clutches of these painful ailments.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MYERS TO CITE HIGH COURT ON DEAD TAX BILL Speaker May Write in His Explanation, Democrats to Be Told. Citation of an Indiana supreme court decision to explain his api pending of an explanation to the t personal income tax bill, which was I vetoed by Governor Harry G. Les- ; lie, will be a part of the speech to I be delivered Thursday night by ! Speaker Walter Myers at a Floyd ■ county Democratic dinner, i Myers’ reply to Leslie's veto message in which the statement written I into the bill by the Speaker was described by the Governor as a “bedtime story” will cite the case of Evans versus Brown In the thirtieth Indiana reports. The supreme court In this case held that the Speaker or ths Lieu-tenant-Governor has three courses
So Forgetful By United Press WASHINGTON. March 17. John L. Green, a public chauffeur, has mislaid his taxicab. Green appeared at a police station looking baffled and reported that it was missing. “Stolen?” asked the police. “No, I just left it lying around somewhere, and can’t find it.”
open when there has been some irregularity in the passage of a bill. The Speaker may certify the enrolled act without comment, he may refuse to sign the act or he may write in his explanation and then certify the bill, the decision declares. Myers pursued the latter course. According to Attorney-General James M. Ogden, this explanation "mutilated the bill and thus invalidated it.” - But according to Myers’ interpretation of the supreme court decision, the Speaker was within his rights in writing in the explanation. “The court has held that a Speakers explanation written on to the bills hold precedence over even the house and senate journals and records ” Myers said today.
RAVENSWOOD TO HAVE BOAT, BUS LINES JO CITY Board Member Quits, Town Clerk Absent, but Citizens Act at Meeting. Ravenswood. under the shadow of a court injunction and torn by a political war, still is forging ahead under its own power. Although C. R. Newkirk, board member, sent in his resignation, and Grover Smith, town clerk, failed to appear, a meeting of citizens was held Monday night and plans for transit lines by land and water between Ravenswood and Broad Ripple. Charles O. Ford, unofficial mayor and chairman of the town board, announced at least one bus will be in operation twenty-four hours a day by early spring. The water route will be operated by John Jones, Broad Ripple, who will use a motor launch. Ford announced the state fire
marshal’s office la completing an Investigation of the town with a view to eliminating fire hazards. POLICEMEN FOOLED HIM While He Sought Legal Advice for Right to Shoot, They ArrestBy United Press NEW HAVEN, Conn., Feb. 17. While Kazimere LaKszewski telephoned his lawyer to inquire whether he had a right to shoot policemen who were hammering on his door, officers entered a window, overpowered him and arrested him on a charge of wife beating.
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MARCH. 17,1931
FIVE DIEJR BLAZE Flames Destroy Cottage at Private Sanitarium. By United Press JAMESTOWN. R. 1., March 17. Five persons were dead and two were under hospital treatment today after a fire which destroyed a cottage at a private santarium here Monday night. Eleven other persons at the institution, operated by Dr. William Lincoln Bates, an alienist, were unharmed.
