Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 133, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1932 — Page 8

PAGE 8

DALE, DEFIANT, DEMANDS HELP OF PARTY BOSS Comes to Indianapolis: Will Ask Earl Peters to Oust Everett. Bat tip for possession of the mayor’s office at Muncie shifted to Indianapolis today with George R. Dale, target of ouster proceedings, to demand Earl Everett, Muncie council’s choice for the post, be deposed as Democratic chairman of Delaware county. In conference with his attorneys today, Dale said he would serve R. Earl Peters, state Democratic chairman. with a demand for Everett's ouster. Dale said the demand would be based on allegations that Everett, who is teaming with Republican members of the city council, is breaking down the Democratic party in the county. Meanwhile. Everett, at • Muncie, had resigned his post as a city councilman and served a notice on Lester Holloway, city controller, who also is being attacked for holding his post, and left another demand for office under the door of Dale's office. Everett was surrounded with his henchmen both times. At the controller’s office he asked: “Is the mayor in?" Holloway left the demand lie on a counter. Court Asher, former D. C. Stephenson henchman, sang the refrain. ‘‘Who's That Knocking at My Door?" from ‘Barnacle Bill, the Sailor,” while Everett posed for pictures as he rapped on the door of Dale's office. Everett testified against Dale in the booze case in federal court. Ousting of Dale is based on L is conviction. appeal on which now is pending. If Dale refuses to give up his office, Everett said quo warranto proceedings will he instituted. Judge I A. Guthrie of Delaware circuit court, who issued a temporary restraining order against council and then disolved it Tuesday, said the proceedings would be speeded through court. Council named a successor for Dale after declaring his office vacant because of his conviction last snring on federal liquor conspiracy charges. Dale has appealed the case. MAYOR WILL DISCUSS CURFEW ENFORCEMENT Meeting With Civir Clubs Committee Is Set for Tuesday. Meeting of Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan with a committee seeking enforcement, of the curfew' law has set for Tuesday. At a meeting of the central committee of South Side Civic Clubs at the Garfield park community house Wednesday night, Sullivan was criticised for failure to ararnge a meeting date with the committee. Press of business due to preparation of the 1933 city budget caused previous postponements of the meetings, the mayor's office explained. Two conferences with Chief Mike Morrissey were reported by W. C. Rothermel. a committeeman, in which Morrissey was quoted as stating policemen had beep ordered to enforce the law'. Other members of the committee stated that children as young as 4 were on the streets of residential and business districts at late hours.

LEISURE HOUR CLUBS’ LEADER WILL SPEAK Dwight Ritter to Explain Aim for Northwest Civic League. Dwight S. Ritter, head of a general committee in charge of organizing Leisure Hour community clubs, will explain the aims and purposes of the movement Friday night at a meeting of the Northwest Civic League at Winamac hall, Twentyninth and Clifton streets. First of the Leisure Hour clubs is scheduled to be opened soon at Udell and Clifton streets. Mothers’ chorus of School 41 will present "An Old-Fashioned Singing School" at the Friday meeting. MUNCIE~SEEKS STOP ON NEW AIR ROUTE Survey Made by T. & \\. A. to Learn if Service is Practical. Survey of renditions to determine if a stop at Muncie by T. A- W. A. planes would be practical, was ordered Wednesday by airline officials following a presentation of a petition. Muncie is practically on the direct route of the new T. & W. A. passenger line from Indianapolis to Detroit inaugurated a week ago. Stops now are made at Fort Wayne and Toledo.

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Just Fooling Her Public

■ if , *,, r iPim i

What are you making, little maid?" “Not mud pies,” she said. And Miss Mary Louise Baker, 4438 Broadway, is fooling her pub-

Hoover Faces Hard Task in Plea for Jobless Vote

President to Talk Saturday Night to Nation’s Army of Unemployed. BY LEO R. SACK Times Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Oct. 13. At Cleveland Saturday night President Hoover wall try to convince 10.000,000 unemployed workers that they should not hold him responsible for the loss of their jobs, and that their best chance for employment depends upon his re-election. The Cleveland speech, now' being written by Hoover and his associates. will be dedicated entirely to labor. It will be the second in his series of addresses to special groups affected by the depression. As in (he Des Moines farm speech, the President is expected to review his policies and to praise the Haw-ley-Smoot tariff. Republican leaders, however, feel that the President has assigned himself a man%-size job. They are not looking forward to the Cleveland speech with the same eagerness that they awaited the Des Moines address because they figure it is difficult to tell the man who has been without work for a year or more that his plight might be worse. In this connection, politicians are recalling Mr. Hoover’s Newark speech in September, 1928. when he addressed workex-s. At that time Hoover voiced many of the optimistic promises which are now plaguing him. It was at Newark that he assured every worker of a job, forecast the abolishment of the poorhouse, a chicken in every pot, and two cars in every garage if the Republicans were continued in power. The Cleveland visit has another unfavorable aspect. He spoke in Cleveland two years ago, hoping he could stem the adverse tide of the 1930 congressional elections. It was Hoover’s first personal contact with the depression, and it was, also, one of the most discour-

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lie with this bow’l in the pottery classroom at Shortridge high school. It's clay she’s rolling in the photo, not dough earthy or otherwise.

aging trips he has made from the White House.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

JIM REED HOPE TO WIN BACK 'GERMAN VOTE' Democrat Strategists Elated at G. 0. P. Attacks on His Reply to Hoover. BY WALKER STONE Timex Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Oct. 13.—Democratic strategists are laughing up their sleeves at the Republican attack on the selection of Senator Jim Reed to deliver the Democratic answer to President Herbert Hoover's De*- Moines address. By recalling that the fiery Missourian was the bitterest of Woodrow* Wilson's foes, and by criticising Governor Roosevelt for allowing Red to speak for the party, the Republicans have done just what many Democrats hoped they would. Reed's reply to Hoover at Des Moines. Monday night, under sanction of the party, marked the first appearance of the old “warhorse of Democracy” in presidential campaign harness since the World war. And Reed is the man to w'hom the Democrats this year are looking to win back the 3.500.000 voters of German stock. anti-Wilson and anti-war Democrats, who walked out of the party in 1920. The Democratic strategists, who are intent on rewinning the German vote, point out that Roosevelt I has nothing to lose by welcoming Jim Reed hack into the party councils. The Woodrow* Wilson Democrats, they say, already are almost 100 per cent for Roosevelt, w r ho was close personally to Wilson, and who symbolizes the Wilson type of liberalism. It may be significant that, although Roosevelt eulogizied Wilson in his Chicago speech of acceptance, the candidate has not since I mentioned the name of the war

time President, and has given the Republicans no chance to wave before German voters the "bloody shirt” issues of the war and the Versailles treaty. Likewise Roosevelt, unlike Cox, Davis and Smith, has not surrounded himself with so many Germandespised Wilsonites such as James W. Gerard and Henry Morgenthau. Emulating the Hoover strategy of 1928, Roosevelt’s managers have circulated a pedigree of their candidate. showing a long list of Dutch ancestors.

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OCT. 13, 1932