Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 249, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 February 1932 — Page 7

FEB. 25, 1932

MURRAY WILL SPEAK TONIGHT AT CITY RALLY Sullivan Will Introduce Alfalfa Bill, Candidate for Presidency. (Continued from Page 1) liis plea lor a return to the fundamentals and constitutional government. At, Marion he told 6,000 that the Democratic party must stand for equal distribution of wealth and oppose those who believe a few men should own all, and those who preach that no one should own anything. “We must strike out for the happy medium,” he said. Murray predicted that unless there is a change in executives next November, the number of unemployed will continue to grow. “And If it reaches 15,000,000 then T say look out—for there will be a revolution,” he continued. “Then it will be a question either Communism or despotism.” As in his later speeches, Murray took a rap at what he termed New York dictatorship of the party and Owen D. Young, head of the General Electric Corporation; Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt and A1 Smith. “They are talking about nominating the head of a great power trust in the east. If this occurs I till may be a Democrat, but I’ll be darned still about it,” he said. “Those leaders who live in New' York City can no more get a conception of the plight of the farmer and the small business man in Indiana, Oklahoma and even New York state, than Satan can conceive of the plan of salvation!” Time to Tell Truth •!.n Time* Special FT. WAYNE, Ind„ Feb. 25.—Governor William H. (Alfalfa Bill) Murray of Oklahoma will rush back to Oklahoma as soon as he makes his Indianapolis speech tonight, he announced today. "There’s a $300,000 relief fund matter at home to be attended to, and that’s to damned important to leave to any one else,” he said. He was pleased with the welcome and the effects of his address at Gary Wednesday night. “Let politics go to heck,” he shouted there. “It is time for somebody to tell the truth. He assailed the reconstruction corporation as extending aid to Wall Street speculators while “the producers are denied that credit.” Murray reiterated his plea against entangling alliances and urged a congressional ban on loans to foreign governments as a means of forcing this nation to keep out of the policies of other nations and thus out of w'ar. In discussing domestic relations Murray charged that the corporations and utilities send public relations men into cities to finance local chambers of commerce. “They move on to the Rotary clubs, the Kiwanis and others, and finally, some of the ministerial associations are caught in the net,” he said.

Breaking Out Annoyed Baby Nisit and Day. Cuticura Healed. “When baby was eight months old she had a breaking out of pimples all over her body which annoyed her very much both night and day. The pimples festered and scaled over. They itched and burned, causing her to lose much sleep, and she was very fretful. The trouble lasted about six weeks. “I tried different remedies but they failed to help her. I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and after using one box of the Ointment and three or four cakes of Cuticura Soap she was healed.” (Signed) Mrs. Ruth Moore, Oak Hill, Ohio, Aug. 5,1931. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. Talcum 25c. Sold everywhere. Sample each free. Address: “Cuticura Laboratories, Dept. H, Malden, Man.”

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Spring Is Here The Bees’ First Feast

BY DR. FRANK THONE Selenee Service Staff Writer THE soft maple trees are in a dusky, smoldering flame of j flower, through which delirious bees dance like dervishes. The bees have had a long period of enforced idleness, and it is downright providential for them that on their first days of free flight they can find such a lavish provider of nectar and pollen and oozing sweetish sap. The soft maple does not wait for its flowering until the ground thaws out. It does not need ground wafer, apparently. There seems to be enough sap stored in trunk and branches to supply the buds when the impulse to break forth is imparted to them by the first promises of springtime warmth. This independence of water supplies from the ground is evidenced by the behavior of pruned branches or felled trees, which may have been dying on the ground all winter. They will blossom at the same time as the standing trees, and almost as freely. nun BLOSSOM time is the one brief time in the whole year that the soft maple tree is worth its keep. The rest of the time it is a good deal of a shiftless nuisance. Its leaves seem to have an especial attraction, in summer, for the poison-bristled tussock moth caterpillar. Like many other citizens of dubious value, it is exceedingly prolific of offspring, littering the lawns with billions of seeds. It has a bad habit of going roti ten inside at a comparatively early ! age, and letting big limbs snap off 1 when high winds blow. And yet, when its flowers bring all the bees j flying on early warm days we are : likely to forgive it all these sins and others desides, as we are likely to be indulgent toward the town’s ne’er-do-well because he can whistle like a brown thrasher or carve pretty trinkets of white wood for the children. Next: A Well-Groomed MinstrcL

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MARION COUNTY GROUP FORMED FOR TAX FIGHT Committee of Business and Industrial Leaders Will Push Member Drive. Appointment of an executive committee launched activities in Marion county of the Indiana Association for Tax Justice. The Marion county division was formed Wednesday night at a meeting in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Today Leslie Colvin, chairman of the county division, announced the

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

following members of the executive committee: Hugh McK. London. J. I. Holcomb. A. E, Baker. George A. Kuhn. Edward D. Evans. J. S. Holliday, A. M. Glossbrenner, A. R. Baxter. Ward H. Hackleman, R. A. Shirley. Broadhurst Elsey and J. W. Esterline. Forty Indianapolis business leaders form the general committee which organized the division. A membership drive will be the first move in the campaign for immediate reduction of public expenditures to a level consistent with I the impaired ability of people to pay. Present tax rates were scored by speakers at the organization meeting. Elmer W’. Stout, president of the Fletcher American National bank, said, “Tax rates have gotten so high in some Indiana communities that people are not paying taxes, j and banks, consequently, are refus- ! ing to lend money to local governments.” Will G. Irwin, Columbus, capitalI ist and president of the state asso--1 ciation, attended the meeting.

FALSE CLAIMS CHARGED FILED AGAINSTCOUHTY Commissioners Will Scan Labor Reports Made by Highway Official. Investigation of a charge that Clem Lain, Lawrence township, an assistant county road superintendent, presented false claims for work done on roads by Roy Clair, was promised today by county commissioners. “We will investigate this thoroughly,” Tom Ellis declared. “It

looks like someone would get in I bad.” Clair filed an affidavit with the commissioners today. According to the affidavit, Lain employed him as a farm hand in April, 1931, with the understanding that on days when he worked on the farm he * would be paid sl, and for Idle days, 75 cents, with board and laundry. However, Clair charges he was employed in the highway work, for which claims were presents for 30 cents an hour for his labor and 50 cents an hour for a team of horses owned by Lain. Clair alleged the claims are false and commissioners today withheld payment of the latest one presented. Ellis charged commissioners have been “suspicious of some claims presented by Lain since last summer.” The case, he asserts, is similar to one which resulted in a prison term being imposed upon a Warren township assistant superintendent three years ago.

BANK BACKERS SUED Washington Depositors Act to Collect Liabilities. Depositors and creditors of the defunct Washington Bank and Trust Company filed suit in superior court one Wednesday to collect liability against all the bank's stockholders. The suit affects all stockholders of the defunct bank and the Washington Investors’ Corporation, a subsidiary. Henry and Blanche Roberts. restaurants owners, are plaintiffs. Par value of the bank's stock was $200,000, the suit stated, of which amount, 1,878 shares at SIOO par value are held by the investors’ corporation. Jackiel W. Joseph, attorney, is receiver for the investors’ corporation, and Brandt C. Downey is receiver for the bank.

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