Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 298, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1934 — Page 18

PAGE 18

i'OLITICS ENTER FINAL DAYS OF PRIMARY RACE Candidates for Both Parties Continue Round of Speech Making. Increased political activity will be carried on this week, with various organizations announcing meetings in all parts of the city where candidates of both parties will start the last laps of their speaking engagements. Two Democratic meetings have been arranged for Perry township this week by the Leonard A. Hohlt. organization. One will be held at the home of Harry Cook on Sherman drive Thursday night and the other at Glen's Valley Friday night. A general ward meeting sponsored by the Young Republican organization will be held at the Broadway Baptist church tonight. Walter Pritchard, candidate for mayor, will be the speaker. Old Hickory Democratic Club will hold an old-fashioned torch parade and meeting Thursday night at the Eagles’ clubhouse. Members of the organization will ride in a parade which will be led by a military band and a motorcycle escort. An Eighth ward Democratic meeting will be held at 937 Fort Wayne avenue Friday night with Superior Judge John W. Kern, candidate for the Democratic nomination for mayor, as principal speaker. Michael O'Brien will be chairman and candidates and the public are invited. Two mass meetings in support of the candidacy of James A. Collins for the Republican nomination of criminal court judge has been planned by the Collins-for-Judge committee, according to Harry C Hendrickson, chairman. The meetings will be at 8 Thurs- I day night-in the South East Social Club, South East and Buchanan streets, and at 8 Friday night in the ! Yugo-Slav Community house, 3624 West Sixteenth street . Earl McKee, candidate at the Democratic primary for city councilman. First district, in addresses! last night declared in favor of regulatory measures by the city council prohibiting young girls to serve intoxicating drinks in public establishments. Mr. McKee also asked for reasonable closing hours for beer taverns in residence sections. Strict law enforcement is the solution of all ma.ior crime. Russell J. Dean, candidate for the Democratic nomination for prosecutor, said at a political meeting in the home of Walter Neukom, 5608 Beechwood avenue, Sunday night. Boynton J. Moore, candidate for ihe Republican mayoral nomination, reviewed his qualifications for the office at, meetings last night. He said that while president of the city ! council he had been instrumental j in raising pay of police and firemen \ and had reduced the tax levy.

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MARY KINDER SEEKS AID FOR ILL BROTHER NOW IN STATE PRISON

Mary Kinder, sweetheart of Harry Pierpont of Dillinger gang notoriety, paid her respects to Captain Matt Leach of the state police yesterday. Mrs. Kinder's visit was on behalf of her brother. Earl Northern, who is serving time in the state prison. Northern is said to be suffering from tuberculosis and she sought to have him released or transferred to a sanatorium. Since Captain Leach doesn't have anything to do with keeping criminals . after they’ve been caught, he referred her to the Governor s office. THREE"BITTE # N BY DOGS City Children Are Attack, Police Reports Reveal. Three children were bittpn by dogs yesterday, according to police reports. Those bitten were Gaeo Stevens Jr.. 13, of 2228’ 2 North Illinois street: Donald Van. 5, of 1944 Ludlow avenue, and Edna Studebaker, 4. of 2308 Shelby street.

What s YOUR Answer? WILL AGITATION RUM BUSINESS?

Agitators, right now, in Indianapolis, are misrepresenting the NRA to build up class hatred, rioting and lawlessness. In some cases they have persuaded working men and women that their employers must be FORCED into granting their demands. In view of these conditions Indianapolis employers may close their plants or contract for production in other cities free from the domination of these radical agitators. Is this ‘"Recovery” for Indianapolis? 1 Will these conditions help build Indianapolis hack to its former industrial pay rolls? Will they allow Indianapolis merchants or trades or professions to recover? Will they make more jobs or even allow you to keep YOUR present position? Many cities surrounding Indianapolis are getting together and going ahead on the sound, sane, practical co-operation of employer and employee. Will YOU allow Indianapolis to be held back in this Recovery Program by the agitation of a few disturbers who work only for

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—Let's Go Fishing—

TIPPECANOE AND FREEMAN YIELD j BASS CATCHES Blue Gills Also Taken From Lake in Week-End of Fishing. BV GEORGE DENNY Time* Fishin* Editor. This alleged fishing expert was , just about to get bounced from his job because he couldn’t catch any fish, but broke the jinx Sunday. Bon Aspy and I spent a profitable and instructive day on Freeman : lake and the Tippecanoe river. Profitable because we got five bass; instructive because we added a bit to our fish lore; the lore that bass fishermen finally realize can never be complete. We tried Freeman lake first. The

the Wa4/Wait/ T° C %™per

Because we believe Indianapolis business MUST be built upon an open-minded, square policy of all interests working for the common good, Indianapolis business men are paying for this message to YOU. We believe Indianapolis business, its jobs and opportunities and pay rolls CAN NOT be built upon the class hatred, violence and methods proposed by the agitators and so-called “union organizers" now operating in this citv. Communications mav be addressed to ASSOCIATED BUSINESS BUILDERS, P. 0. Box 394, Indianapolis, Ind.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

wind was high, so were the waves. Two hours of trolling with minnows drew a blank. One hour of casting into submerged tree-tops and stumps on a sheltered shore produced one twelve-inch big mouth on an A1 Foss pork rind bait. Another half-hour of minnow trolling on the edge of the old channel produced nothing. We abandoned the lake as an unprofitable business. A visit to the Oakdale dam convinced us that that wasn't the spot, either. The crowds lining the concrete w'ere doing poorly, though a few silver bass had been taken, and the word was out that fine strings of small mouth had been lured in on Friday and Saturday. So down we went, several miles below the dam. to a place where the river slipped down a riffle into a fairly deep, long pool. There we tried minnows again, casting them out into the current and letting them float down a hundred feet, with a small bobber to keep them just off the bottom. Still no luck. Along came three anglers in a boat, casting artificial lures. They took two bass out of our pool. They were using the same pork rind bait that had snagged our only fish that morning. After that it was different. We

themselves? Do YOU think these men w ho misuse the NRA and urge you to violence and lawlessness are going to build any jobs or pay rolls or business for YOU or any one else but the radical “leaders” they try to “organize” into telling the employer how he MUST operate his business? This is not an attack on union labor. One out of every ten workers in this country belongs to a union—and most of them are willing and anxious to get together and work to make conditions better. This is aimed directly at the agitator, working NOW in Indianapolis, who is attempting to use the banner of union labor and a “new deal” government and the National Industrial Recovery Act, to stir up strikes and violence and lawlessness which strike at the very foundations of business. If the agitators are believed and followed, Indianapolis will spend its time and efforts trying to settle disputes between employer and employee. Why not follow the example of cities that are GOING AHEAD and GET TOGETHER and WORK for RECOVERY?

changed back to the A1 Foss and took four nice small mouths in an hour, all in the same stretch. It proves again the thing that we are most likely to forget—that you have to keep trying until you find what they want. In that territory, at least, bass did not want minnows that day. Furthermore, they were particular about the artificial baits that they "cracked down” on. Today it might be only a surface plug with a red head, tomorrow helgramites, next day anything, next day nothing. But the fact that all the fish that we saw caught on Sunday were fooled by exactly the same bait, keeps me sold on the idea that bass are usually selective feeders. Anglers that have a favorite lure and stick to it will challenge these statements. Maybe so, but a lot of the fun is in mixing 'em up and if we had stuck to minnows on Sunday I might not be eating bass tonight. Carence Babcock reports that he

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The agitator says the NRA FORCES YOU to join his “organization” with its strike and violence program. The head of the NRA says: “Employers are not compelled to agree to any particular scale of wages or conditions of employment merely because they are bargaining with selfchosen representatives of organized workers ... No employer is denied the right to bargain individually with any worker if the worker so chooses. . . . This law establishes the right of workers to organize and deal with their employers through any representatives whom they may choose. Workers are not compelled to do this. They can deal with their employers individually if they so choose .. •Joint NRA interpretations of Section 7(a) of the Recovery Act, as issued on August 24, 1933, plainly say that: can choose any one they desire to represent them, or they can choose to represent themselves. Employers likewise can make collective bargains with organized employees, or individual agreements with those who choose to act individually, but neither employers or employees are required by law, to agree to any particular contract, whether proposed as an individual or collective agreement. ...”

i nailed a four-pound twelve ounce large mouth in a gravel pit near ; Vincennes on a rainbow pal-o-mine. Ray Roberson headed a party to j Freeman lake that returned with a J large string of particularly hefty blue-gills. The finest bunch, witnesses assert, they have seen in a long time. 19 TO GRADUATE FROM JORDAN CONSERVATORY Music School Will Hold Sixth Annual Commencement. Max T. Krone, director of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, has announced that nineteen students will be graduated at the sixth annual commencement on June 18. Sixteen of that number also will participate in the seventyninth commencement exercises at Butler university on the same day, and will receive awards offered jointly by the affiliated institutions.

DOCTORS TO DISCUSS MEDICAL LEGISLATION City Society Names Speakers for Session Tonight. The Indianapolis Medical Society will meet at 8:15 tonight in the

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