Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 268, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 March 1931 — Page 24

PAGE 24

TEXAS PUSHES YOUNG'S WHITE HOUSE BOOM Club Formed in Capital to Boost Financier for Presidency. By Scrippg.Howard Xcwapaper Alliance WASHINGTON, March 20. Standing erect, twirling his glasses from a black ribbon, urbane Owen D. Young some weeks ago stood before the house ways and means committee and pleaded with it to allow needy ex-service men to borrow more on their bonus certificates. Smiling, affable, courteous, he emerged from the committee -oom into a group of newspaper correspondents. In reply to questions he repeated his statements of earlier in the day that he was not a candidate for the presidency. But there now is under way in Texas an organized move to have Owen D. Young nominated. The Owen D. Young club of Texas has been formed, has opened its headquarters in Austin, and young Democrats are being told what part the General Electric board chairman played in the bonus controversy in the last congress., Young, the club believes, “has the nationwide gratitude of ex-service men.” At least, these are the reports

S Pineapple su "“ 2 n sj. h 49 Asparagus Square Can 2- 55c Coffee 5 “*• sl.oo Fresh Fruits and Choice Vegetables I NEY Taney 'Western Comb 2 Frames 55c ANGES California Navels Dor 250 too Baking Potatoes 33c APBFRUIT Targe Size Fruit Ea, id Lettuce Fresh Crisp Heads Ea. 5c NANAS Lb. 5C HONS S6O Size Dot. 19C Every Prlee A Low Price! —Ann Page in the Convenient Jar—~ PRESERVES ~ —u, 21c PURE CANE SUGAR . M Bag 2§c N. B. C. SNOW PEAKS 19c PINK SALMON ™ c io CRISCO Famous Shortening yj 22° PALMOLIVE SOAP J . -20 One Package Palmolive Beads GIVEN With Each Purchase New Low Coffee Prices! S O'CLOCK Mild and Mellow 21c RED CIRCLE Rich and Full Bodied \ 25* BOKAR The Coffee “Supreme” 29* Crystal White Sunnyfield SOAP FLOUR Balloon Free With 6 Bars 24 Pound Size Bars 19 C Bag 59* - ■ ■■ L Fine Quality Meats at Low Prices SPRING VEAL SALE CHOPS STEAKS ROASTS Loin 1 ’" Lb. 29 e Cutlets Lb. 35 c Legs .tss Lb. 24c Rib ch °'“ Lb. 25c Shoulder Lb. 15 e VEAL STEW Breast, Neck or Shanks 10c Chuck Roast Lb. 1£ Swiss Steak Lb. 2§c Boiling Beef Lb. > c Ground Beef Lb. |c c Sausage 2 L bs . 2Ce PICNICS u. T Old English Style J Boneless, Smoked and Rolled & ™

The Darrows Pose

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Clarence Darrow has broken another precedent, and finally posed for a picture with his wife. Here you see the noted Chicago attorney and agnostic with Mrs. Darrow, as they appeared in New Orleans recently. “I am only the boy who stands on the burning deck for Mr. Darrow,” she smilingly explained, when asked about her famous husband.

carried in the Texas Weekly, a Dallas publication, edited and published by Peter Molyneaux. Besides spreading the news of the organized effort to nominate Young, Editor Molyneaux himself likes the idea of naming this international figure the presidential candidate of the Democratic party. “Mr. Young,” he writes, “is one of the finest characters in the public eye today. Mr. Young is pre-emi-nently the kind of man who would

inspire confidence among the greatest number of people at a time like this.” The Young plan author is called an "economist with a heart,” and the writer sees his nomination as particularly beneficial to the Democratic party in Texas, because he classifies Young as a dry. He goes on: “Mr. Young could carry Texas and the solid south, without question. That is something to consider:”

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

RICHEST MAN TITLE HIDDEN IN SOVIETRUSSIA 'Wealthiest Citizens’ Live in Fear of Drastic Punishment. This U one of a series of articles by United Press Staff correspondent on the world’s richest men. BY EUGENE LYONS, United Press Staff Correspondent MOSCOW, March 20. Money, which in the surrounding capitalist world is a symbol of power and achievement, in the Soviet union usually signifies exactly the reverse. The most powerful and most respected social classes earn less and possess less than the groups which practically are outlaws. Private fortunes having been abolished by the Soviet system, the possession of great wealth is almost incontrovertible proof of speculation, private trading, or other activities considered anti-social. The strongest class of individuals consists of the Communists. Theoretically at least they are consecrated to a life of hard work and poverty like the Franciscan monks. They must not earn more than the “party maximum,” which is 300 rubles a month. The limit applies alike to Stalin and the lowliest member of the Communist party. The most despised class consists

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CARLOAD SALE SATURDAY Car Load Just Arrived MARSEEDLESS ORANGES LARGE AND JUICY These Are the Best in ORANGES $%*S & V2™*l -15 Tangerines, 10c £ p®z. Grapefruit Ripped D ° Zi SQc Turnips TEXAS 5Qc Basket Quality Potatoes Idaho Russets Red Triumphs $ 4 Per 60-Lb. $ sh g* Per 60-Lb. M Bushel £cA j Bushel 100-Lb. Sack $2.00 100-Lb. Sack $2.00 First Come—First Served Drir# In—Keep to the Bight—Fine Place to Stop Car While Baring HAMILL BROS. JUST SOUTH OF B. & O. Elevation

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of Nepmen, or private traders, and they are the only ones who in the past years had any opportunity to save money. Now that the Nepmen rapidly are being put (lit of business, this last class of rich will also disappear. Nevertheless; there must be thousands of persons who have managed to store up large amounts of money. Perhaps they are. former merchants who somehow succeeded in concealing and saving a stock of gold. Perhaps they are business men, who during the Nep period between 1921 and 1927 hoarded rubles. More likely they are illegal traders, speculators, who continue to build up their private piles until the GPU firing squad gets them. In any event, they are not persons who deserve ary envy. Their money is something to hide as a shameful and dangerous secret. As former merchants, they are most likely disfranchised and therefore practically outlaws. They are in danger of being arrested, their money confiscated—or, more politely, “taxed” into the state

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pockets. They certainly never boast of their wealth. The “richest man” in the Soviet Union—whoever and wherever he may be—is therefore an anonymous and pitiable figure. We can imagine- him living with his hidden wealth as if it were a horrible crime. U. S. Reception Pleases Pope By United Prett VATICAN CITY, March 20. Pope Pius XI received more messages of congratulation from the United States than from any other country after his recent worid-wide address by radio, he told 207 students of the American college in Rome, who visited him.

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‘EATING CROW’ IS TRUE DIET IN EAST PRUSSIA j Fishermen Consider Bird as Part of Regular Food Supply. By Science Serrice BERLIN, March 20.—Eating crow is to most of us the nethermost degradation of diet, but fishermen on a part of the coast of East Prussia use crows for food as a regular tiling. During their migrating season they catch them in nets, killl ing the captured birds by biting ! their skulls, reports Dr. Theodor j Ahrens, an American resident of ; Ber.in. Ornithologists take advantage of 1 this strange game-taste of the fish-

.MARCH 20,1931

ermen by persuading them to release a part of their catch with identifying bands on their legs, so that .heir migrations may be traced through later recaptures. Sometimes the fishermen make unlooked for catches in their aerial nets. Recently they took a sea eagle with a wingspread of about seven feet. The bird was turned over to scientists, who banded, photographed and released it. There is a specie of ant which carries an umbrella or petals or leaves, when it rains.

\mp\ It Costs LESS This 14 -lb. package at 20c, contains finer TEA than most. 25c cartons. Rich, flagrant, extra delicious! Ask for KO-WE-BA and get the best TEA, for less. Only Independent Grocers sell it.