Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 148, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1932 — Page 7
•OCT. 31, 1032
TAXI BACKFIRE STARTS LONDON JOBLESS RIOT 15,000 Battle Police When Auto Noise Is Taken tor Gunfire. BY HERBERT MOORE l'nltd Pre* SUIT Corrripondmt LONDON, Oct. 31.—At least a sc re of persons were injured Bunds y when 15,000 hungry, jobless men ai i women, engaged in a peaceful di nonstration, started rioting after a taxicab’s backfire was mistaken fc • gunfire. Among the injured was an elderly w man trampled by a police horse, In the battle which climaxed the d< nonstration in Trafalgar square. As in last Thursday’s Hyde park ri t, police charged relentlessly fv en the demonstrators got out of h: nd. Their truncheons subdued the ri' ters. The "hunger army" presented an ul Imatum to government and muni ipal authorities today, threatening serious trouble unless they are al*>wed to present their petition for reuef to the house of commons. Trip Home Is Belayed The jobless agitators threatened to remain in London indefinitely, st ge repeated demonstrations to ci ist public support, and hold their pi sent temporary lodgings by force, if necessary. The marchers spent today inve ding various boroughs and particiyp ing in mass meetings, so that ice were reinforced, and put on run alert throughout greater Londc n. Originally, the marchers were scheduled to begin their journey he meward afoot and by rail after TuesdaySince police served notice that nrne of them would be allowed to approach within a mile of parliament, their original objective, the organizers decided that the marchers should assemble on Clerkenwell green and chose thirty leaders to accompany twenty elected representatives of local trade unions in a march on commons. > Taxi Backfires, Starts Riot Organizers at headquarters of the marchers said: "If the police balk the deputation, we can’t say what will happen. It is certain that some of the / marchers will not be intimidated, since they Tiave already proved their mettle and behaved with discipline better than that of the police’’’ The cabinet held a special meeting today, presumably to discuss the unemployment situation as well as the new French arms plan. An opportunity for the unemployed to present their cause to commons without disorder was presented today when it was said on high authority that the police were unlikely to interfere if the delegates visited parliament in small numbers, particularly in small, wellbehaved groups of four or five. The Sunday meeting began with speeches, in which one orator asked for contributions of one-pound notes. After collecting all the notes ofTered, he asked for smaller contributions. He was fairly showered with copper and silver coins. Then a taxicab backfired. The crowd surged forward, started milling about, and the mounted police went into action. Block Way to Palace Several hundred young troublemakers, thinking an outbreak had occurred, surged toward the admiral arch. Its three iron gates, leading to The Mall and Buckingham palace, were clanged shut. Any atteitipt to rush the palace thus was forestalled. A guarding line of foot police was drawn in front of the gates. As several hotheads milled around, shouting, "Smash the windows of the ppftice,” they were dispersed by a charge of mounted police. One ragged, emaciated man was beaten over the head by police until he was unconscious, when he, an old man with a gray beard, was taken to a hospital, doctors said he had concussion of the brain and might not live. The unemployed masses exercised their usual system of warfare, throwing rocks, bricks, clods and whateve#Hhey could lay their hands on. at the police. Several officers were knocked their horses beneath the heroic figure of Lord Nelson. RAILROAD DETECTIVE IS * MURDERED BY GUNMEN Companion Is Critically Wounded by Three Negroes. INDIANA HARBOR, Ind., Oct, 31. —Two railroad detectives were wounded, one fatally, here Sunday in a gun battle with three Negroes at the Baltimore & Ohio railroad yards. Sergeant Joseph L- O'Brien, 33, East Chicago, died in a hospital several hours after the shooting. His companion. Lieutenant Fred Manberg, 38, Hammond, suffering bullet wounds in his face, shoulder yid arms, will recover, hospital attaches said. The Negroes fired and escaped.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles repotted to police as stolen belong to Mary Agnes Harlan, 434 South Christian street. Ford sedan, from North New Jersey and Market streets. George Lassev. 1405 Qolav street, Buick sedan. 18-054, from 523 Patterson street. Phillip J- Calto, 430 South New Jersey street. Ford roadster. Ul-160. from 12 West Wilkins street. Claude Montgomery. Zionsville, Ind Dodfce coach, 73-785, from Udell and Clifton streets. W. H. Black, 1056 East New York street. Ford roaster, from Michigan street and Holmes avenue.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to. Everett Demaree, 1550 Wade street, Chrysler coupe, found at 1220 Orange fit reel. Ah in H. Feldman. Salem Ind . Graham Paige sedan, found at North New Jersey and Walnut streets. Jesse Skirvin. 1037 East Market street. Ford roadster, found at 318 West Seventeenth street, wrecked. Alvin H. Feldman. Greensburg, Ind. Graham-Paige sedan, found at New Jarsev and Walnut streets. F. B Porter. 773 North Wallacs avenue. Graham-Paige sedan, found at Chesapeake j and Meriditm streets. XJeorge Flvnn. 86 North Randolph street, i Essex coupe, found at Senate avenue and Washington street. Frank Tames. 314 South Warman avenue. Essex coach, found at Washington and I &iftke streets.
Socialist Bank Plan Outlined in Speech by Norman Thomas; McNutt Stresses Tax Issues
By United Pret NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 31. Norman Thomas, denying that his party favored confiscation of key industries "while there is reasonable hope of orderly, peaceful socialization,” Saturday night outlined methods under which his party would operate. ‘:in the case of the banking system,” he told an audience here "we completely shall socialize the federal reserve and make all commercial banks join it. We shall forbid banks to have affiliates which market securities by selling them to the banks. "Then we shall enlarge the postal savings banks into a general banking system, with segregated commercial and thrift accounts. We should expect this publicly owned bank rapidly to win the field from privately owned, banks, but without catastrophic suddenesss and without requiring purchase or confiscation of private banks. "In the case of public utilities and trusts, we should acquire them, if necessary by condemnation, at a price not fixed by the greed of the owners. We should pay in bonds, not of the government, but of tht socialized industry—let us say the oil industry. "These bonds should be amortized in thirty years. The income ; from these bonds and the inheritance of them should be subject to the same drastic, graduated taxes we should lay on all wealth.” McNutt Talks on Taxes Stressing the tax issues. Paul V. McNutt, Democratic nominee for Governor, addressed three local meetings Saturday night. "Tre most important problem facing Indiana is taxation,” he declared in speeches at the Shelby street car barns, near Fountain Square: in Liberty hall, Dearborn and Michigan streets, and at Douglas park. "There are just two things we can do about the tax burden,” he said. "One is the strictest economy consistent with the proper transaction of the public business, the second is an equitable redistribution of the burden of taxation in accordance with the ability to pay.” He asserted the $1.50 law must be augmented by a practical method of placing tangibles on the tax duplicates. Tribute to Van Nuys Former associates of Frederick Van Nuys in the Indiana state legislature wil pay honor to the Democratic nominee for United States senator at a dinner at 6 Thursday’ in the Claypool. Approximately thirty members of the assembly in 1913 and 1915 will attend. Dr. Frank Culbertson of Vincennes, who followed Van Nuys as president pro tern in the senate, will preside. One speaker at the dinner will be Senator Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky, who has cancelled speaking engagements in his own campaign to attend the dinner. His speech will be broadcast over WFBM. Van Nuys will speak at Frankfort Friday, sharing the porgram with Josephus Daniels, secretary of navy under President Woodrow Wilson, and editor of the Raleigh (N. C.) Observer. Van Nuys will speak at 7, and Daniels’ speech will follow in a broadcast over a middlewest hookup. Following his speech, Van Nuys will continue to Lebanon, where he will speak at 8:15. Labor to Blast Watson Organized labor today prepared to strike a telling blow at the candidacy of Senator James E. Watson Tuesday, when the Anti-Watson Labor League will hold a huge labor mass meeting at Tomlinson hall. Speakers, announced by T. N. Taylor, state Federation of Labor president, will include A. F. Whitney, Brotherhood of Railroad Train?ien international president, and hairman of the twenty-one standard railroad labor executives’ association. Also on the program will be George L. Berry, international president of the Pressmen's Union, including workers in 85 per cent of I all commercial printing shops and newspaper plants. Whitney, who will arrive at 11 Tuesday and open headquarters in Room 1011 at the Lincoln, campaigned for Hbover four years ago. Berry sought the Democratic nomination for vice-president at the 1924 convention in New York, receiving 500 votes on the first ballot. A closed meeting for brotherhood members will be held at 1002 East Washington street tonight. Labor Chiefs Aid Watson Senator James E. Watson s leadership carried through the senate all constructive measures proposed by President Hoover for the nation’s recovery and rehabilitation, according to a statement Issued today by trades craft officials. The statement is signed by William L. Hutcheson, president-gen-eral of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners; Charles W. Kern, president of the Republican Wage Earners’ League of Indiana, i and also president of the Indiana
TUPEE GUESSES I _ i /S’ WE LONGEST PRsmSsßk RAILROAD TUNNEL IPgßfffiV IN THE U S. ? \ \ STATEMENT? (Answers on Conuc Page)
The Day'B Political Roundup
Democrat Vote Leads Samples at Courthouse THERE Win be a Democratic landslide in Marlon county Nov. 8, If the asmple voting machine installed in the courthouse is a criterion. • Since the machine was Installed last Thursday, with W. E. Lahrman as demonstrator, approximately 1,500 persons either have operated the machine or watched other do so. Parties with levers on the machlae are Democratic, Republican, Socialist, Prohibition, National, Farmer-Labor and Communist. Shortly before noon tbday a total of 1,088 sample votes had been cast for Democratic, Republican, Prohibition and Socialist tickets. This total was divided: Democrats, 815; Republicans, 183; Prohibition, 36, and Socialists, 34. Attendants said that Senator James E. Watson, Republican candidate for re-election, had received most of the practice scratching. State Building Trades Council, and Charles B. Sims, state president of the United Association of Journeymen Plumbers and Steamfitters. G. 0. P. Called ‘Youth Hope’ Such “progressive statesmen’ ’as Walter F. Brown, postmaster-gen-eral; Jim Garfield and Henry Allen of Kansas were cited by Judge Clarence R. Martin of the supreme i court as reasons why forward-look - ! ing young voters should adhere to ! President Hoover. The judge, seeking re-election to the high court on the Republican ticket, held out the G. O. P. as the hope of youth in an address Saturday night. Announcing himself as' a great admirer of Senator Hiram Johnson, he denounced the California Progressive for his support of Roosevelt. Drys Bar Democrats No Democratic state senatorial candidate is indorsed in Indiana Anti-Saloon League recommendations on legislative and county offices made public today by L. E. York, league superintendent. Only two Republicans received favorable mention, along with two Prohibition party candidates. Six of the eleven Republican candidates for the lower house of the legislature were indorsed and none of the Democratic candidates was acted on favorably. The league took nc action on the candidacy of Earl R. Cox, Democratic aspirant for circuit judge, but asserted Judge Harry O. Chamberlin, seeking re-election, should be re-elected. Ask Sumner Defeat Both Prosecutor Herbert E. Wilson, Democrat, and Judson L. Stark, Republican, were described as “having good records.” Defeat of Charles (Buck) Sumner, seeking re-election as sheriff, was urged. Orel Chitwood, his Republican rival, was described as "a former member o| the Indianapolis police department, with a good record.” Attitude of the league on senate candidates is: Decmocrats, none indorsed, A. Leroy Portteus, Leo X. Smith, Michel M. Mahoney and John Bright Webb; Democrats called wet or record. Jacob Weiss and E. Curtis White; Republicans, Russell B. Harrison and Linton A. Cox. indorsed; Winfield Miller, dry of record; John L. Niblack, not indorsed; Monte L. Munn no recommendation; Louis R. Markun. ' inquiry. unanswered. Herman L. Seeger and Julius T. Romaine. Prohibition candidates, of course, were indorsed. Indorse House Candidates Action on candidates for representatives: Democrats, not indorsed. Mary G. Waggener Dennis J. Colbert; called wet of record, Fred S. Galloway John F. White, Albert Walsman; inaulries unanswered, Edward P. Barry. Leo N. Gardner. Thomas A. Hendricks Bess Robbins. Charles F. Ruschaupt, Harry J. Richardson Jr. Republicans, not indorsed. C. Harvey Bradley John G. Kirkwood Phillip C Lewis, James Edwin McClure; indorsed. g”* l , °t’ Bl £ ck y e H. John L. Benedict, Robert Lee Brokenburr, Lloyd E Clavcombe, H Walker De Haven, Walter L. Shirley, Will C. Wetter; Prohibition can?iL£?. tes - Enos R - Snyder and Robert L Whiteman, were indorsed. Only Repubmrry 8 Bason. not anSWer qUerieS was On candidates for state office, the league makes no comment on Paul V. McNutt, Democratic candidate for Governor, but asserts Raymond S. Springer, Republican, has an "excellent record.” Kyle Is Praised No comment is made on M. Clifford Townsend, Democratic candidate for Lieutenant-Governor, but j the record of Joseph Kyle, Republican, is praised as “excellent for law enforcement.” Bert C. Morgan, Republican candidate for secretary of state, is given the same indorsement. Frank Mayr, Jr., Democrat incumbent, is not metnioned. No mention is made of candidates for attorney-general. In the supreme court Judge Clarence R. Martin. Republican candidate for re-election, is described as having an "outstanding record as judge.” Both candidates for the appellate bench, second division, are approved, as was Judge Elmer Q. Lockyear. Republican, seeking re-election from the first division. G. 0. P. County Schedule Republican meetings scheduled in Marion county today, tonight and this week include: „ 8 Ml—2so* Martindale avenue 1118 North W'arman avenue. 114i East Nineteenth street.* 3505 College avenue. At noon. William B. Burford Company and Indianapolis Stove Company; Tuesday noon. Peerless Foundry Company; Wednesday noon. Allison Engineering Company. P. R Mallory Company. Dean Bros. DUI- - & Cos., Indianapolis Bleaching Company and Rockwood Manufacturing Company; Thursday noon. National Mal’eable Casting Comoany Among soeabe-s at noon meetings will be John t. Niblack. William Henry Harrison and Monte Munn. Rally in Terre Haute Three Indiana Republican leaders, outstanding in national politics, trill take part in a rally at Terre Haute ] tonight. They are Senator James! E. Watson, Representative Fred Purnell, and Everett Sanders, na- ; tional chairman. Purnell will preside and Watson i and Sanders speak, with the pro-1 gram suspended during President Hoover's address in New York, so'
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
the audience may listen in over the j radio. Senator Watson will speak Tues- j day night at Anderson at a rally i sponsored by the young Republic- ! ans organization of Madison county. Watson to Be Busy Senator James E. Watson will make a dozen addresses this week until his campaign closes ( it was announced today. After addressing a group of Republican women at the Lincoln today, he motored to Terre Haute, where fie was the guest at a Vigo county luncheon. He will address a rally there tonight. Madison county will hold an allday rally in honor of Watson Tuesday. Republicans there will give a luncheon at Ahderson for Watson and he will make a camuaign address Tuesday night there. Wednesday noon, the senator will make a noon-day address at Elkhart and speak in South Bend Wednesday night. A number of St. Joseph county Republicans will honor Senator Watson at a “birthday banquet’ ’at South Benw. After the banquet Watson will speak. Friday an address at Gary is scheduled. Saturday afternoon Boone county Republicans will hear the senator at Lebanon. Bush Scores Democrats Hi) I'nitnl I‘rrns CONNERSVILLE, Ind., Oct. 31. Misrepresentation was charged against Democratic campaigners by Lieutenant-Governor Edgar D. Bush in a prepared address here today. “The Democratic party has been forced to worship at the totem pole of the Roosevelt program, accompanied by the Hearst jazz horn of' blue notes, not to mention ‘Pork Barrel’ Jack Garner, the Texas bjg shot,” Bush said. “Roosevelt has spoken repeatedly in weasel words, to hedge, to dodge, to quibble, to cloak his meaning in vague phraseology, and to misrepresent,” Bush said. Judge Martin Praised Judge Clarence R. Martin was termed an “indefatigable worker” by George H. Batchelor, secretary of the Indiana State Bar Association for twenty years, in asking re-elec-tion of the judge today. “Judge Martin has written more opinions than any other of the five judges of the court,” Batchelor pointed out. ‘.‘During the last two years the records show that he has turned out more than 40 per cent of all published opinions of the court. "He faithfully has carried ’out the pledges he made as a candidate six years ago, and has decided cases upon their merits, not on technicalities.” Women at Meeting More than two hundred women workers attended a meeting of the Hoover-Curtis county committee women’s division, today at the Lincoln. Senator James E. Watson and Miss Dorothy Cunningham, national committeewoman from Indiana, spoke. Workers were instructed by Mrs. Edward L. McKee, chairman, and Mrs. Grace Urbahns Reynolds executive secretary of the county committee. • Chamberlin Is Lauded Court record of Circuit Judge Harry O. Chamberlin in, handling cases was emphasized by Jtalph Bamberger, attorney, Saturday night at a Third ward Republican meeting, Illinois and Sixteenth streets. He declared the record of Chamberlin during twelve years on the bench entitles him to re-election. Zahnd to Speak Here John Zahnd, presidential candidate of the National party, will speak at 7:30 Wednesday night at Cadle tabernacle at a mass meeting of the party. BANDITS GET SI,OOO Imprison Four in Office, Take Cash, Checks. Two bandits who locked four persons in a room of the Buckeye Finance Company’s office at 207 East New York street, obtained SI,OOO in cash and a like amount In checks Saturday afternoon. Stopping at the window of a cage in which Miss Martha Cubel, 5820 Birchwood avenue, and Mrs. May Williams, 818 South Gerrard avenue, Speedway City, were working, one of the bandits forced them to admit him. His companion went to a room in the rear, where Acting Manager G. E. Hiatt, 2817 Robson street, and a patron, Benjamin Brown, 610 Congress avenue, were seated. He held them at bay while his companion forced the two women employes from the cage and made them prisoners in the room. NOMINEES WiLL MEET McNutt and Spriager to Join at Legion Affair Tonight. Paul V. McNutt and Raymond S. i Springer, respectively Democratic j and Republican nominees for Governor, will join tonight in leading the grand march of the Mardi Gras j of Bruce P. Robison American Legion post at Tomlinson hall. Connie and his band will play and Everett Saxton will be floor mar-i shal. The Twelfth district drum! corps will present drills. Judges to -select winners of cos-; tume prizes are Mrs. Samuel Lewis j Shank. Mrs. Kin Hubbard, Mrs. Clifton Wheeler and Miss Claire Gilbert. Woman Fails in Suicide Try After inhaling gas in a suicide attempt. Mrs. Antoinette Caminex, 2962 North New Jersey street, was revived Sunday night by firemen: Her condition was said to be fair by city hospital physicians. The | woman was Idespondent because of, illness, according to friends.
VAST TURNOVER IN WASHINGTON JOBSJORESEEN 20,000 Republicans to Go Into Unemployed Ranks If Democrats Win. By Scrippt-Hotcard Jfctcpaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—1f the Democrats win at the polls Nov. 8, some 20,000 Republicans probably will be added to the ranks of the unemployed. A corresponding number of Democrats will go on to the federal pay roll. A Democratic administration will mean a turn over in government employes such as the country has not seen since 1920, when the twelveyear reign of Republicanism began. There are 575,366 federal employes altogether and 467,000 of them, in the classified civil service, will not be affected by a political change. They can not be removed from office except for cause. Most of the remaining 108,000 are laborers holding jobs with no great appeal for even the mo6t devout party men, either because of the hard manual labor involved, or the low pay. Want Positions at Top The positions at the top, some 20,000 of them, are the ones for which there will be a scramble if there is a change in administration. Approximately 15,500 of these are first, second%and third class postmasterships, the fact which makes the postmaster-fgneral the most important political figure in the cabinet. Not all of these postoffice positions can be refilled at once, for each appointee serves a four-year term, but all the positions are vacant at some time during an administration. Anew cabinet means, of course, new under-secretaries and new assistant secretaries, as well as anew staff for each department. Most of the bureau chiefs can be replaced by the President. Numerous vacancies occur in the independent commissions every year. Ambassadorships are among the most juicy plums to be handed out by a President, and these usually go to men of sufficient means to live abroad on a scale their salaries would not permit. The party assuming office also names new governors for the Philippine islands. Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Alaska and the Canal Zone. Many to Stay in Capital At home, the appointment list includes United States attorneys and marshals, deputy marshals, collectors of customs and deputy collectors, collector of internal revenue, registers, receivers and surveyors of the general land office, surveyors, special examiners, appraisers and naval officers of the customs service, superintendent of the mints and also assayers, commissioner of immigration and naturalization, steamboat inspectors,' solicitors in the department of justice, director of the bureau of prohibition and his assitsant and attorneys for the bureau, and officials of the District of Columbia. If there is a change, some of the replaced officials now living in Washington will return to their homes, but as a rule most of them remain here, open law offices, or simply wait for the tide to turn their way. POLICE CONFRONTED WITH BOMB MYSTERY City Man Trips Over Cord Tied to Trigger of Missile. Police today are confronted with a bomb mystery following the discovery of a crudely constructed missile by Theodore Sanders, 401 Sanders street, who tripped on cord which was attached to a trigger. The cord lay. across a path leading from Sanders’ home to a garage in the rear. Sanders asserts he knows of no reason for an attempt to harm him. The bomb consists of a 16-inch length of iron pipe capped at one end and loaded with a yellow and pink substance. It contained a percussian cap and a trigger and hammer, fashioned partly with rubber bands. Failure of the bands to function when Sanders stepped on the cord, which was about eight feet long, prevented an explosion. FOREIGN MISSIONS BOARD TO CONVENE Annual Three-Day Meeting of United Brethren to open Tuesday. The United Brethren church foreign missions board will convene Tuesday at the First United Brethren church for the annual threeday meeting. Committee meetings will be held Tuesday afternoon with the main session opening at 7:30 p. m. with a worship service conducted by the Rev. G. L. Stine, University Heights church pastor. Bishop A. R. Clippinger will preside. Bishop H. H. Fout will conduct the Wednesday morning session. NABS ALLEGED BURGLAR Poolroom Owner Hurls Brick; Downs Suspected Prowler. Jack Mason, Negro, 234 West Wyoming street, knocked down by a brick which, the proprietor of a poolroom hurled in an alleged effort to prevent a burglary, is held today on a vagrancy charge. Kenneth Grant, Negro, 926 Rfcple street, yVio operates a poolroom at 735 South Capitol avenue, said he passed the place early Sunday morning after it had been closed since Saturday night and noticed that a front window was broken. Running to the rear of the place, Grant said Mason unlocked the rear door and ran. Grant nicked up two bricks. He hurled one and missed, but the other found its mark. After treatment at city hospital, police brought Mason to city prison. $2,500 Is Loss in Fire Damage of $2,500 was caused by fire early Sunday at the Cash and Carry Paper Company store, 117 North Alabama street. The blaze, of unknown origin, started in shelving in the rear of the store containing paper stock.
What Street Is This? PICTURE No. 3 THIS BLANK MAY BE USED FOR ANSWERS Name the Street Contest Editor. No. 3 The Indianapolis Times, 214-220 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis, Indiana. I consider the best name is My name is Address , * .- Town State Hold all answers until close of series.
R. H. Miller, Lumber Man, Claimed by Death
Widely Known Broker Was Associate of Former Governor Hanly. Funeral services for R. Harry Miller, 64, of 1307 North Alabama street, widely known lumber broker, who died Sunday of heart disease, will be held at Hisey and Titus undertaking establishment at 10 Tuesday morning. Services also will be held in the Peru Methodist church, followed by burial at Peru. Mr. Miller, formerly a business associate of J. Frank Hanly, former Governor of Indiana, was a member of a pioneer Indiana family which was allied closely with the growth of the state. He was born Jan. 16, 1868, in Paw Paw, Miami county, a town founded by his grandfathers, Robert Miller and Edmund J. Kidd. At the age of 18 Mr. Miller went to Peru where he was engaged in the mercantile business until 1897 when he moved to Fairmount. In the same year he married Miss Dena Haas of Tipton. His partnership with Hanly was formed at that time. Permanent residence was es-
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tablished in Indianapolis in 1907, when Hanly was elected Governor. The Rev. L. M. HUe, pastor ol the Paw Paw Methodist church, will be in charge of services here. The church was founded by Mr. Miller’s grandfathers and recently celebrated its hundredth anniversary. Surviving are the widow, two sisters, Mrs. Roy Lockridge of Converse and Mr§. Joe Stephenson of Roann, and two brothers, James and Robert Miller, both of Fitchburg, Mass. DENIES ARREST REPORT Shooting Attempt Did Not Take Place Near Barbecue, Owner Says. Scene of an alleged attempted shooting Thursday night of patrolman Philip De Barr by an autoist did not occur at the Golden Gate barbecue, 6800 East Washington street, Ray Meek, the proprietor, stated today. The Times said the arrest was made near the barbecue. Meek said the alleged shooting attempt took place four blocks north of the Golden Gate.
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DECEIT LAID TO HOOVER IN TARIFFJALKS Senator Costigan Charges President Is ‘Juggiing’ U. S. Statistics. By Uniied Prrtf WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—President Herbert Hoover is accused by Senator Edward P. Costigan, Democratic tariff expert, of lending his name and the authority of his high office “to the deception of the American people.” A former member of the tariff commisison, Costigan. in a statement issued here attacked Mr. Hoover's
state ments at Cleveland to the effect that the duties in the Dingley, McKinley and PaineAldrich tariff laws were higher than those in the Smoot- Hawley act. Costigan, declaring the Presid e n t doubtless had relied on material furnished him “by incompetent or reckless advisers,” added:
“The President in his Cleveland and Indianapolis addresses referred to percentages on what he called the whole of our imports. It is evident that Mr. Hoover's statement deliberately disregards rates of duty and used percentages based on all our imports, which necessarily included goods admitted free of duty. “By this misleading method, Mr. Hoover made the level of all customs duties seem low, whereas the actual rates are extraordinarily high. “Gross Inaccuracies” "Whether or not the President so intended,” the statement continued, "this feature of his discussion of the tariff presents a remarkable case of misrepresentation. President Hoovers’ advisers should have saved him from such gross inaccuracies.” Costigan summarized the situation in this manner: “The tariff rates were extremely high under all of the pre-war Republican tariff acts. In 1913 the Democrats reduced the rates to more reasonable levels. “In 1922, the Republicans passed the Fordney-McCumber act restoring the rates to almost prohibitive levels, at the very time when the United States was facing the problem of collecting the interest and amortization of our huge foreign loans, both governmental and private. Statistical Juggling Claimed “And then, because a few dutiable goods continued to trickle into the country, they renewed the assault on our foreign trade in 1930 by enacting the Smoot-Hawley-Grundy tariff, increasing the rates, even under Mr. Hoover’s figures, by a further 16 per cent. “All of Mr. Hoover’s statistical juggling can not explain these things away. Least of all can he do it by telling us that 66 per cent of our imports enter free.”
Costigan
