Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 128, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1931 — Page 16

PAGE 16

WORKERS URGED TO BOOST GIFTS IN FUND DRIVE Success Requires Larger Contributions, Ludlow Tells Employes. The task of raising $1,000,000 for the Community Fund is immense but it's not impossible, Representative Louis Ludlow said in an address at the dinner of the Employes Community Fund Fellowship Tuesday .light at the Severin. Ludlow araised eencrosity of the Working classes in last year’s campaign and pleaded for even greater gifts this year t/j meet the increased need caused by the unemployment situation He stressed the importance of the small contribution, declaring that even a single dollar is an important contribution. "Last year 50,000 of the 70,000 contributors gave under $lO, or a total of $142,000," he pointed out. Ludlow cited figures to show extent of rebel work performed by relief agencies financed by the Community Fund this year, declaring demands on the agencies will be much greater this year. Ludlow read telegrams, offering aid in the campaign, from Walter S. Gifford, chairman of President Hoover’s unemployment relief commission, and William N. Doak, labor secretary.

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Mayor Frank Murphy Is Renominated on Poor Relief Stand. BY PAUL WEBER I'nitrd Press Staff Correspondent DETROIT. Oct. 7.—Voters of the nation's fourth city today had stamped their approval on Detroit's much-critised dole system, by polling an avalanche of votes for the j renomination of Mayor Frank : Murphy, exponent of the principle that “a government is responsible for the welfare of its poor.” 'Murphy, *who drained the city treasury to spend nearly $18,000,000 on unemployment relief, was nomj inated overwhelmingly, together with Harold H. Emmons, popular ! ex-commissioner of police. The red--1 headed mayor, under fire by two of the city’s most powerful newsI papers, led Emmons by a vote of I three to one. With 771 of the city’s 895 pre- | cincts tabulated early today, Mur- : phy hau received 101,995 votes and 1 Emmons 31,475. Howard A. Starrett, strongest of the defeated can--1 didates for the nomination, polled i 18,436. The mayor consistently has taken

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the attitude that Detroit must feed and house its 100,000 unemployed at any cost, even under the threat of civic bankruptcy. He was elected on a relief platform a year after Charles Bowles, who ordered jobless demonstrators clubbed from Cadillac Square, had been recalled by popular vote. After an unsuccessful attempt to create jobs through a municipal employment bureau, Murphy began a dole system more thorough than the nation had seen. The tremendous expense, combined with heavy tax delinquency, brought the city to the verge of financial disaster this summer. The alarmed city council, then headed by John C. Nagel—who was defeated as mayoralty nominee Tuesday—overrode the mayor and limited relief expenditures to $7,000,000 for the fiscal year.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PLAN WELCOME FOR REALTORS City Group Host to State Convention Friday. Final plans for welcoming delegates to the eighteenth annual convention of the Indiana Real Estate Asssociation in the Severin on Friday, will be made at a meeting called by William Lowe Rice, chairman, to be held after the board’s Thursday luncheon in the Washington. .Rice is director of the National Association of Real Estate Boards,

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and is vice-president of the state organization. With him on the committee are: J. J Schmid. Prcd'G. Buskirk P. A. Hnvelick. W. L. Bridges. H.T. Hottel. Albert E. Chi. P L. McCord. Fred L. Palmer, H. M. Stackhouse, Marion Stump, P- J. Viehmann. George W. Klein. J. J- Argus. H. G. Knight J. J. Reilly. R B Tuttle George Whelden. E. Kirk McKinney and Emerson W. Challle. Other local realtors who will have an active part in the convention include Scott R. Brewer, state president; H. T. Hottel, secretary-treas-urer; Frank L. Moore, executive secretary; Albert E. Uhl, president of the Indianapolis board; George W. Klein, Emerson W. Chaille and Noble C. Hilgenberg, who are on the program. Convention sessions begin with breakfast conferences at 8 a. m. and conclude with installation of officers and the president’s ball Friday night.

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TWO KILLED IN EVICTION RIOT Cleveland Police Battle •Black Belt’ Mob. By United Press CLEVELAND, Oct. 7.—Police riot squads patrolled the heart of Cleveland's "black belt” today, armed with tear gas, to prevent a renewal of the Communist outbreak which last night claimed the lives of two Negroes and resulted in the wound-

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ing of two police officers and two other Negroes. For the second time in twentyfour hours, fighting between police and unemployed broke out Tuesday. The riot started, witnesses said, when members of a police radio squad car were attacked by 300 men and women, assembled to protest the eviction of a Negro family. Patrolmen Walter Wingate and Arthur Bockhousen were rushed by the mob. The infuriated rioters, most of them Negroes, clubbed Wingate and took his gun. Lieutenant Owen McAdams, head of the radio cruiser, was wounded. Bockhousen fired as a crowd of Negroes started dragging the lieutenant through the street. John Grayford, 54. was wounded fatally.

.OCT. 7, 1931

The body of Edward Jackson, 45, was found behind a nearby house after police recruits routed the mob.

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