Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 224, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 January 1933 — Page 13

JAN. 27, 1033

STAMPEDE FOR HOUSE SPEAKER VOTES STARTS Five Candidates Are Pushing ‘Freshmen’ to Win Their Support. By S<rif)pt-ffmcarrl Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Jan. 27—New members of the next congress may expect to find an unusual welcoming committee meeting them at union station on their arrival here. It will not be an official body elected by the house to honor the newcomers. It will not be united in the common spirit of friendliness and good-fellowship. The only thing they will have in common will be a desire to persuade each arrival to vote right for Speaker of the next house. The committee, in short, will consist of the five Democrats seeking the place w'hich John N. Garner of Texas soon will vacate. They are

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' Majority Leader Henry T. Rainey of Illinois, Joseph W. Byrns of Tennessee, John Rankin of Mississippi, John W. McDuffie of Alabama, and John J. O Connor of New York. Naturally enough, there is i no chairman or secretary. Even before the new members arrive, they will have heard from these gentlemen. It is known that j several candidates have written I long letters to future members, presumably setting forth their qualifications for the speakership. The hospitality being heaped upon arriving freshmen is unaccustomed and unusual, for each prospectus contains offers to be of service in all respects—from helping the ; youngsters to get a good committee place to telling a good place to eat lunch when, as they will, they tire of the me ius in the house res- ! taurant. In short, the new members are being “rushed’’ just as freshmen entering small colleges are pounced upon by representatives of various fraternities even before they get off the train at the railroad station. So far as is known, it is something new in candidating. The boys are getting clever. It seems strange, though, that men of experience should resort to such tactics. Such veterans as the j five contestants must know’ that the J average individual member will

have little say as to whom he will support. Tammany Chieftain John F. Curry, for instance, will tell his score of members whom he wants in the speaker's chair. So far, Curry has made no sign, apparently wait- ! ing to see whither the gavel will i jump. Ed Crump, boss of Memphis and affectionately known as the "red snapper." because of his florid complexion and once-red hair, will have a lot to say to his delegation and maybe to several others. The "Kingfish,” sometimes known as Senator Huey P. Long, will dictate the vote of Louisiana's delegaitlon. „ So a good deal of the ‘‘rushing’ may be in vain. But it's funny the five don’t seem to know it. PRECEDENT JS PERILED Mt. Vernon to Be Open on Sunday of the Inauguration. By l nited Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 27.—An- } other precedent of long standing : will be broken due to the Roosevelt inauguration. The society which has charge of | Mount Vernon, home of George I Washington, has decided to have ! the shrine open to the public on Sunday, March 5. Heretofore, the gates always have ; been closed on the Sabbath.

. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

MAKE PLEA FOR SEALSPAYMENT Response Must Be General or Program Will Collapse, Is Warning. Renewed appeal to Marion county residents to relieve the urgent financial situation of the Marion County Tuberculosis Association by sending in payments for Christmas seals has been made by the executive committe. Almost complete abandonment of the 1933 anti-tuberculosis program will be necessary unless response to the appeal is general. Miss Mary A. Meyers, executive secretary', warned. "Due to conditions arising from the depression, large American cities already have reported increased death rates from tuberculosis. We do not want this to happen here. Only a second response by citizens can adequately finance the associaJon's work now,” Miss Meyers said. Announcement of appointment of the following standing committees

was made by Edward Harris, association president: Nutrition—John Lauck Jr., chairman: Dr. Thuman B. Rice, Mrs. Henrv H. HornMook. Mrs. Char.es S Lewis. Mrs A. C. Rasmussen. Fred A. Sims, Mrs. Alex L. Taggart. Theodore Griffith. Mrs. Rov Corwin, John S. Wright. Grier M. ShotweiL Mrs. Wm A. Brennan. Joseph Tavlor. Mrs. Cnarles H. Smith. Dr. E. O. Asher and Mrs. R. S. Records. Building and Grounds—Dr. E. M Amos, chairman; Joseph Tavlor and Lauck. Budget and Finance -Fr> and A. Sims, chairman: Michael E F'olev. Mrs. A C. Rasmussen. Lauclc and Mrs Hornbrook. Legal Matters—Grier M .Shotwell, chairman; Sims and E. Folev. Christmas Seals —Folev. chairman; Mrs. Hcrnbroolc. Mrs. Rasmussen. Mrs. E. A. Clark. Mrs. Brennan. Edgar Perkins Sr . Griffith. Shotwell and Wright. Soring Health Education—Dr. Amos, chairman; Dr. Asher, Dr. Edgar Kiser. Mrs. Frank Kimberlin. Dr. Herman G. Morgan, Dr. Henrv Hummons. Dr. James H. Stvgall, Dr. Gord noßatman. Mrs. Mortimer C. Furscott. Mrs. M. F. Ault. Dr. Charles J. Mclntvre. Dr. Rice and Dr. Wiiliam. McQueen. O nam Addresses Club ‘‘The New Year; Recovery or Revolution,” was the topic of Dr. G. Bromley Oxnam, president of De Pauw university, in an address to members of the Indianapolis Exchange Club, Friday, at the Washington.

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AIR MENACE IS SHOWNIN FILM Efficiency of War Planes Thrillingly Displayed by News Reel. Officers of the first observation squadron from Mitchell Field, N. Y., now in winter training at Chapman Field, Fla., demonstrate, in the current issue of The Indianapolis Press-Universal Newsreel, how they can "mop up” a trench with their machine-guns and practically annihilate the ground troops from a safe distance in the air. The gunnery tests, outstanding in military circles because of the high percentage of hits, are described vividly in the newsreel by Graham

McNamee, famous radio announcer and the screen's talking reporter. The targets are plates or discs, set up along the edge of a ditch to represent infantry peering over a trench. Diving at the target areas with all the speed of the 400-horse power engines in their Curtiss Falcons, the aerial machine-gunners open up a staccato fusillade with uncanny aim. wrecking the rows of plates like a bull in a china shop. McNamee reports many other important events, including the terrific storm which lashed the coast of Devon, England; the Inaugural Handicap race at the opening of Hialeah Park; the fatal flight of Lieut. Irvin A. Woodring, army testing ace. and the curious snowstorm in

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