Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 139, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 October 1932 — Page 7
OCT. 20, 1932.
'A NIC MONGERS ARE ATTACKED BY ROOSEVELT Nominee Assails Course of G. 0. P. as Ruinous to Nation. (Continued From Pare One) seek* to establish a perfectly clearcut and generally accepted policy of the government’s relation with business. For the sake of the industrial part of the country, it wants to restore the greatest potential market in the world, the American agricultural population. It wants lo restore the railroads to a reasonable and useful prosperity. It wants to make proper use, under proper control, of our precious water power and waterways. It wants to restore sanity in the field of law enforcement and to remove from the national government the task of enforcing a regulation that never .should have been removed from the states. It wants to acquire, through a sound federal policy of federal taxation on beer, some of the countless wealth now going into the pockets of racketeers. It wants, as I said a moment ago, to protect investors, to conserve the savings of the people, to maintain the integrity and the soundness of the financial institutions that serve the people. It will preserve for l&bor its rights won through generations of hard and unremitting struggle. tt tt tt IT will provide in a sound and orderly fashion for conservation of human resources through wisely conceived relief measures. It will establish with foreign nations the only proper kind of friendship, a friendship based on reciprocal agreements for exchange of goods. It believes that is a practical basis of that international friendship that makes for the well-being of all countries. We propose an agricultural department reorganized and genuinely serviceable to the farmers. We propose a labor department interested in the problems of labor, rather than the problems of political advantage headed by someone who will not be to labor a politician and to politicians a labor leader. These are some of the issues that we have presented in a systematic and orderly fashion in this campaign. I have refused to be hurried. I have refused to be diverted from the purposes which I set out to achieve when my party placed upon me the honor and the responsibility of leadership. My campaign has proceeded on the basis of an orderly presentation of the facts and no amount of October hysteria from the other side is going to divert me from this orderly presentation of the facts. This is no time for madness and improvisation and the throwing of political brickbats over the back fence. n tt a IHAVE described these policies in the course of days and weeks of continued travel over this country. As I unfolded these policies, I observed no fear or hesitation on the part of business. I did, on the other hand, observe, as I set forth sound policies for conservation and protection and development, a quickening along the channels of trade so long sluggish with a diminished flow of their essential life blood. i As these policies were unfolded, the nation stood by and watched the unfolding drama of political contest without fear, without trepidation and without uneasiness. As these principles came to be more widely accepted by leaders of thought in agriculture, in business, in labor, in commerce, in finance, the temper of the country changed. Economic and social life was stirred with the return of hope. The public grew sharply aware that the defeat of the present administration w r as to be the emblem of a genuinely national effort to restore sound and normal currents of trade. tt tt THE people of this country should not be deceived by threats. The people of this country know too much about the length and breadth of their ows land. They know' too much geography and economics. Millions of them passed through the problems of the great war and hundreds of thousands of them served in a magnificent and loyal army, mingling with men of all nations. No. my friends, the old witchcraft will not further disturb the electorate. They know that government must grow' more national in its view
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more comprehensive in its concern for every factor in the country; more solicitous of the integrity of an interdependent and closely knit economic life. They know that this can be accomplished. They have seen the wonders that human* intelligence, when undisturbed by selfish interests, has accomplished in the past generation. * tt OUR party stands ready to assume the responsibility that is coming to it. It is strong. It is confident. Its voice and action is quiet, with the assurance of the responsibility that the election will bring. Our ranks are shaken by no panic. They are unified by the promise of giving this country anew deal. They are disciplined by the deep sense that the people are placing in them. This is a real alternative to the panic of Republican leaders. It offers anew and refreshing opportunity for building a better order, more just, more comprehensive, and more completely representative of the unflinching and unafraid spirit of the American people. This, my friends, is America at its best and this is what our campaign means. It is the assurance of progress. | PICK GREAT SACHEM Red Men Name Seabrook to High Post. Indiana great council, Improved Order of Red Men, elevated E. C. Seabrook of New r Albany to the office of great sachem at the annual session of the order in the K. of P. building Wednesday. O. W. Coxen of Elwood was named great senior sagamore and Huston J. Patterson, Indianapolis, great junior sagamore. Mrs. Lucy Cuskaden of St. Paul was to be advanced to post of great Winona at the convention of the auxiliary of the lodge, the great council of Indiana, degree of Pocahontas, today.
A COLD PASSES THRU 3 STAGES! It is Twice as Easily Stopped in the First as in the Second or Third Stages! A cold passes through three stages —the Dry Stage, the first 24 hours; the Watery Secretion Stage, from 1 to 3 days; and the Mucous Secretion Stage. Once it gets beyond the Dry Stage it is far more difficult to relieve. Therefore, treat a cold promptly. The best thing you can take is Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine, because it does the four things necessary, in the way required. It opens the bowels. Kills the germs and fever in the system. Relieves the headache and grippy feeling. Tones the entire system and fortifies against further attack. This is the relief you want—complete, thorough and decisive! Trust to nothing less. Effective as it is. Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine is absolutely safe to take. No narcotics. No bad after-effects of any kind. Relief with comfort! The whole world knows Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine as the standard cold tablet. Comes in handy, pocket size box, cellophane-wrapped. Get it at any drug store. There is nothing “just as good.’’ Grove's LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE
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FUND WORKERS' SESSIONCALLED Special Gifts Division to Meet on Monday. Workers in tfye special gifts division of the Community Fund welfare and relief mobilization will be guests of J. K. Lilly Monday night at their first meeting, Hugh McK. Landon, division chairman, announced today. The special gifts division will operate in advance of the Community Fund drive Nov. 14 to 28. James F. Carroll and J. J. Fitzgerald are vice-chairmen of the division. Other workers are: District I—Robert F. Scott and Leland V. Crawford, chairmen: Arthur R. Baxter. William J. Mooney. Hush J. Baker. James W. Carr. Walter D. Pfaff. Mortimer C. Furscott. George K. Jones. Brandt C. Downey. Arthur V. Brown. Franklin Vonnegut.. Frank Laird. John Saulter. Eli Schloss. Fermor Cannon. George Snvder. Frank Z. Sherer. Irving Lemaux. J. Flovd King. Mvron Hughel. L. L. Goodman. District 2—Neal Grider and George S. Olive, chairmen: John T. Clark. G A. E/rovmson. O. J. Smith. Henry L. Dithmer. T. R. Baker. Berkley Duck. Dwight Peterson. Rex Bovd. O. A. Wilkinson. R. H. Sherwood. Volnev M. Brown. Earl Conder. Thomas C. Howe. James F. Carroll. John E. SDiegel. Joseph Zimmerman. William R. Fogartv. Edwin J. Wuenscn, Donald Best. Hugh Niven. District 3—Donald Morris and Harold West, chairmen: H. C. Atkins. H. F. Clip-’-.inger. H. S. Morse. J. S. Watson. R-alph Bamberger, Harvey B. Hartsock. Isaac Woodard. Albert S. Pierson. .1. Frank Holme*. Fvans Woollen Jr.. C. F. Merrell. Hicholss Noyes. William H. Insley. Hugh M'-K. landon. Henry E. Ostrom. Dwight Hitter. Robert MeoGregor. J J. Fitzgerald J. Frank Cantwell. Frank S. Gates. Paul O Richey. District *—Chester Albright and A. E. Ha l 'er. chairmen; rallec o. Tee. Hom*r r.athroo. Clark S. Wheeler. G. M. Sanhorn, r litter Dieke-*on. Ch'de E Titus. C. C. Welland .T. W. Atherton. C. H. Rott.er C. L. Herrod. Le* B. Smith. Edward Zimmer. Maurice Rims. Charles PeT.tinver, •’vlian Schwab John Collets. Ralph Boozer. E A. Crane. Edward A. Kahn. RELEASED BY BANDITS British Woman and Young Man Set Free in China. By VnHed Press MUKDEN, Manchuria, Oct. 20. Mrs. Muriel Pawley and Charles Corkran, young Britons captured by Chinese bandits on Sept. 7, have been released and arrived at Panshan today.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
3,000 Charity Workers Here Will Hear Baker
Address Nov. 14 to Launch Indianapolis Community Fund Drive. Neglect of social relief work during the coming winter's unemployment crisis would invite national disaster, according to Newton D. Baker, war-time secretary, who will launch the Indianapolis Community Fund welfare and relief drive Nov. 14, with an address at Cadle tabernacle. About 3,000 volunteer workers who will solicit pledges in the drive, will hear Baker, national relief director. Keynote of the campaign will be “if you have a job, help those who need.” “Seriousness of the present crisis should not daunt us, nor should it blind us to the staggering consequences of a policy of indifference. Social work other than relief, particularly character building' must not be scrapped. This work must not be 106 t. It is more than charity. It is the bulwark against character starvation. This is at least as important as the menace of physical starvation,” he asserts. In. connection with preparation for opening the drive, Arthur R. Baxter, fund chairman, points out that relief needs here will an unprecedented peak this winter, despite the fact that expenditures this year almost doubled those of 1931. Statistics from fund Accounts show that in that period rent payments increased 76 per cent, with cost of clothing more than twice what it was in the preceding year. Corresponding increases are shown in costs of care of individual families, homeless men and women; nursing and milk supplies for children. “The program of relief and human service rendered by the Community Fund’s forty agencies saved
Indianapolis from suffering a major disaster this year. "Many cities experienced serious outbreaks of violence, with resultant loss of life and property. Due to intelligent generosity of 70,000 contributors, Indianapolis was in the main more fortunate,” Baxter said. It was pointed out that the forty agencies, working as one, co-ordi-nated efforts to meet the crisis of the last year. So-called character building agencies stepped out of that category into the relief field. As an example, the Y. M. C. A. fed and lodged free of charge 1,000 homeless men and 2,000 were given regular memberships at no cost. CAR INJURIES FATAL Motorist Dies After Crash on North Side. Injuries received when his auto skidded and overturned Sunday at Forty-second street and the Monon railroad proved fatal to William Small, 48, Negro, of 3819 College avenue, who died today at city hospital. His death raised the Marion county traffic death toll to seventy since
the first of the year. Small was pinned beneath wreckage of the auto after the front wheels locked, throwing the car into a spin at
70
the side of the street. Lymon Reed. 35, Negro, of 2078 Yandes street, a passenger with Small, escaped without injuries. Geological Map for Sale Anew large scale geographical map of Indiana has been prepared by Dr. W. N. Logan, state geologist, and now is for sale at Room 121 statehouse, it was announced by state conservation department officials today.
JUDGE. UNDER FIREJESIGNS Accused of Drunken Driving, Quits Circuit Bench. By United Press GOSHEN. Ind., Oct. 20.—The resignation of Judge L. L. Burris of Elkhart circuit court, announced while charges were being prepared against him. was en route today to Governor Harry G. Leslie. The resignation will be effective Dec. 30. Prosecutor James R. Nyce, who had said he would file charges of driving while intoxicated against Judge Burris, announced that in view of the resignation the charges would be dropped. The resignation, according to Judge Burris, assigned illness as the reason. He denied tht accusation of intoxication, and said he would leave immediately for Arizona. Governor Leslie will name a successor for Judge Burris to complete the remaining two years of his term. Judge Burris, elected in 1928. was prominent in Republican activities here for thirty years. An automobile driven by Judge
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Burris collided Sunday night with one driven by Merrill Adams of Whiting. No one was injured. BOYS CLEAN GROUNDS Young Prisoners From Reformatory Given Jobs in City. Youthful prisoners of the Indiana state reformatory at Pendleton today entered on anew task several miles from, the institution when twenty of them began cleaning the state fairground. Working under supervision of guards from the reformatory, the youths will give the ground a thorough cleaning. Officials of the institution have asked that the boys be given an opportunity to witness the boxing match next Tuesday night between Tracy Cox and Prince Saunders of Chicago. Accompanied by supervisors. the youths will attend the fight as guests of William Miller of the Pontiac A. C. The fight will be at the fairground. FALLS OFF BRIDGE; IDIES Bridegroom of Month Is Victim of Accident at Shoals, Ind. By United Press WASHINGTON. Ind., Oct. 20. Roscoe Miller, 25. a bridegroom of one month, died today from a broken back received when he fell from the rivdr bridge at Shoals Oct. 15. •
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JDDGE FREES CONVICTED MAN Notorious Character ‘Beats’ Prison Rap Again. Immunity from prison of Artie Bishop, 23. of 515 East Wabash street, police character with at least ten arrests on a variety of charges placed against him over a period of seven years, was demonstrated again today. Although his conviction in a municipal court on charges of drunkenness and driving while drunk was upheld today by Thomas E. Garvin, special criminal court judge. Bishop went free again when Garvin withheld judgment in the case. Municipal Judge William H. Sheaffer. whose sentence was appealed. fined Bishop a total of 120 and costs and imposed a thirty-day Jail sentence, which Bishop now will not be forced to serve. Bishop’s police record began in April. 1925, when he was arrested and acquitted of a charge of grand larceny. Since that time he has been arrested on numerous charges ranging from manslaughter to criminal assault. Several cases now are pending against him.
