Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 217, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 January 1934 — Page 7

JAN. 19, 1934

DELEGATES ARE ALLOTTED FOR STATE PARTIES Democratic Members Will Outnumber Republican, List Discloses. Allotment of delegates to the Democratic and Republican state conventions was completed yesterday by the state board of election commissioners. The apportionment will be used as basis for the official calls for the conventions to be Issued by the respective party committees. Dates lor state conventions of the parties have not been designated, but It is probable that both will be held in June in Indianapolis. Because of the large Democratic vote in 1932. that party will have a convention with 2.147 delegates. The Republican convention will have 1.671 delegates, according to statistics prepared by W. W. Spencer and Fred C Gause, state election commissioners. Delegates allotted to each county for the major parties are: County— Dem. Rep. Adimi 15 i Allen 97 ®7 Bartholomew 19 15 Benton ... 9 7 Blackford 10 7 geone 17 13 Carroll U 10 . CUv 20 23 Clinton 21 18 Crawford 8 5 t7 15 Decatur 13 Deklb 18 M Delaware 35 39 Dubois 14 g Elkhart 37 33 Favette 13 12 Floyd 28 18 Fountain 14 10 Franklin 12 7 Pulton 12 9 Gibson 22 15 Orant 34 27 Greene 22 16 Hamilton 15 it Hancock 15 10 Harrison 13 9 Hendricks 13 13 Henry 21 21 Howard 27 23 Huntington 22 17 Jackson 19 10 Jasper 9 7 Jav 17 12 Jefferson 13 12 Jennings 9 7 Johnson 17 11 Knox 35 16 Kosoiusko 18 18 1 8 6 Lake 115 105 Laport 37 26 Lawrence 20 20 Madison 56 47 Marlon 269 244 Marshall 18 12 Martin 8 5 Mlan.i 22 15 Monroe 22 19 Montgomery 20 16 Morgan 14 12 Newton 7 8 Noble 16 13 Ohio 3 2 Orange 12 11 Owen 7 7 Parke 12 10 Perry 13 8 Price 11 8 Porter 14 14 Posey 14 7 Pulaski 8 5 Putnam IS 11 Randolph 15 16 Ripley . 15 11 Rush 13 13 Scott 6 4 Shelby 21 13 Spencer 13 10 Starke 8 6 n 9 9 St Joseph 96 70 Sullivan 20 9 Switzerland 7 5 Tippecanoe 34 29 Tip’on 12 9 Union 6 4 Vanderburg 80 42 Vermillion 16 10 Vigo 64 45 Wabash 17 16 Warren 5 5 , Warrick 13 9 Washington H .8 1 Wayne 33 31 Weils 15 8 White H 9 Whitley H _8 Totals 2J47 fttl ! The number of delegates allotted to the Prohibition party for its state convention totals ten with fortynine for the Socialist convention. OFFICERS NAMED BY HEATING CONTRACTORS Dinner and Dance to End Meeting of State Association. C. B. Branham. Bloomington, today headed the Sheet Metal and Warm Air Heating Contractors Association of Indiana, as result of election at the annual convention In the Antlers. Other officers elected were: Charles V. Rundell, Ft. Wayne, first vice-president; Elmer Livesey, Newcastle. second vice-president; Homer Selch. Indianapolis, corporation secretary; Paul R. Jordan, executive secretary; Thomas Ewing. Huntington. treasurer; W. S. Waters. Indianapolis; C. C. Sieb. Ft. Wayne, retiring president, and R. C. Huncilman. New Albany, directors. A dinner and dance tonight closed the convention.

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Congressmen Blush as All-Star Cast Debates Birth Control

83 r nitrd Pm* WASHINGTON, Jan. 19—A Catholic priest, a Jewish rabbi and Representative John Camillus Lehr. Democrat, of Monroe. Mich., wound up their threecornered debate today on the merits of birth control. Members of the house Judiciary committee, who had to listen because they are considering a bill which would liberalize birth control laws, were glad. They were getting tired of blushing and coughing at the salty words and phrases which a stoical stenographer penned Into the record. Advertised stars of the debate were Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, the celebrated priest from Detroit; Mrs. Margaret Sanger, ace birth control advocate, and Rabbi Edward L. Israel of Baltimore, but Representative Lehr easily stole the show. mam HE announced that he had six children. He said that contraceptive devices never had been

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Advertising Message Is Called Most Important

Avoid Monotones, Warns Typography Leader in Talk Here. More than a pretty border is needed to make advertising effective, Douglas C. McMurtrie, typography director of the Ludlow Typograph Company, Chicago, told the Advertising Club yesterday in the Columbia Club. “There is no room ln typography for monotones,’’ he said. “There

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

law which would make the dissemination of birth control Information any easier. Representative Walter M. Pierce

must be an Inflection in the message.” He pointed to the modem trend in advertisements and warned against having competition to the copy. The message is what must be put over, he asserted. Only in the last five years, Mr. McMurtrie said, has typography taken a course different from the styles that had been in existence for centuries. Until about five years ago. he stated, almost every type used was a revival of some type of the past.

(Dem., Ore.), who wrote the bill under discussion, said he also had six children. So did Mrs. Thomas N. Hepburn of Hartford, Conn. One of her daughters is named Katherine. She has made a name for herself too. m m a jU ATHERINE'S mother said that six children notwithstanding, she believed in birth control. She told the committeemen she didn't think they were sympathetic enough and Indicated she was disappointed in them. Chairman Sumners banged his oversized gavel and the debate continued with the Rev. Coughlin discoursing on money and marriage. When the birth control advocates booed him, he said that he could handle them “on one radio network.” The booing came w T hen he said that what this country needs, is not birth control, but more “little mouths to eat our surpluses.”

Father coughlin said that America's “birth control philosophy” is her ruination, and that “birth control, pig control and bond control” are some of the things that are doing the nation no good. “Matrimony,” he said, “does not mean a legalized bed of prostitution, but that is w’hat this birth control law would make of it.” Rabbi Israel pleaded with the committee to aDprove the Pierce bill, "and so take the bootlegged contraceptive devices from our homes and put them in the hands of the physicians, where they belong.” $63 in Cigarets Stolen A case of cigarets, valued at $63, was stolen from the truck of A. R. Turner, Cicero, Hamilton <fc Harris Tobacco Company driver, at Twen-ty-fifth street and Keystone avenue ' yesterday, he reported.

SHOCK FATAL TO VICTIM OF TWOROBBERS Telegraph Company Employe Succumbs Following Seizure. Death last night of Miss Emma Nicholson, 38. of 2019 Broadway, today was attributed to shock resulting from being seized and robbed by two Negro footpads Saturday night in front of her home. Miss Nicholson, Western Union HUSKY THROATS Overtaxed by ( r<nc& \ speaking,sing- \ N** to noO p 1 ing, smoking

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j Telegraph Company district manager at the Illinois and Thirtieth streets station more than eighteen years, soon was to have been married. She was on her way home from work when the attack took place. At first, it appeared she took the incident calmly, but the reaction set j in later, and she had been in serious condition since Tuesday afternoon. Funeral services will be held at 2 1 tomorrow in the home, with burial in Crown Hill. She is survived by a sister, Mrs. Benjamin Wolma, and six nieces and nephews.

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