Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 113, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1934 — Page 6

PAGE 6

LA GUARDIA NOW VIEWS LOTTERY WITH DISFAVOR

Recognizing Wide Protests Mayor Calls Hearing, May Not Sign*. Bp VnitrA Prrtt NEW YORK. Sept. 20.—As the Protest again.** the proposed municipal lottery to raise relief funds grew hotter today. Mayor F H. La Guardia appeared to be cooling toward the scheme. Mr. La Guardia said he would hold a public hearing on the project next week and if he was convinced of its undesirability he would not sign the municipal assembly's resolution which empowers the mayor to set up a body to administer the lottery One of his chief aids. Controller Joseph D McGoldnck, admitted he felt no pride in the scheme as a fund-raising measure. He called it a "mongrel tax program." "We took the lottery with a certain amount of reluctance." he said. “We have doubts about its legality and we question its social desirability. We do not know how to estimate its returns. Certainly. I can not boast about this tax program *’ While business men's organizations expressed disapproval, the greatest protest came from religious groups. The American Protestant Defense League telegraphed the mayor, protesting the lottery as "both unethical. unchristian and contrary to our American heritage.” The league also called it a democratic plot to bring the mayor into disrepute. Washington Warning By f nit I it Prrt WASHINGTON. Sept. 20—Cities Intrigued with the idea of promoting lotteries to replenish their treasuries must steer a straight and narrow course to avoid trouble with federal authorities. So long as the lotteries are kept within the letter of federal laws, there seems to be no disposition here to interfere with them, federal legal officials, in making that clear today, emphasized they were not taking a stand one way or another on the moral issues of a lottery. Where federal jurisdiction is concerned. the law is clear and has stood the test of supreme court decisions. Tickets in a lottery, whether an outright one or one surrounded by subterfuge, can not be sent through the mails, either locally or from one state to another. In addition, tickets can not be transported across state lines by any other means of interstate commerce. In the scheme approved by New York city’s lawmakers and put up to Mayor Fiorello La Guardia for approval, it is proposed to have lottery participants pay "dues” to a welfare association. "Officers'' would be chosen by lot from among the dues paying members and the lottery prizes would be huge “salaries” from the officers.

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INVENTORS’ CHIEF

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Albert G. Burns

Inventions of local people will be exhibited Friday night at the meeting where Albert G. Bums, Oakland. Cal., president of the National Inventors Congress, will speak. Plans are being arranged for a meeting of the national organization in Indiana during 1935. J. A. Schilling, secretary of the Jenkins Motor Company, will be chairman.

201-INCH LENS TOBEPOURED New Disc Will Replace One Spoiled Last March in Pylon Mishap. By 1 nlt'4 Prtn* CORNING. N. Y„ Sept. 20.—A new 201-inch lens, designed for the largest telescope in the world, will be poured before Christmas, Dr. G. V. McCauley, official of the Corning Glass Works, announced today. The lens will replace a “eyclopean eye” which was poured last March but which developed imperfections because of the intense heat. Pylons in the lens mold broke away and floated to the top of the glass mixture, leaving a smooth surface in some sections instead of the holes necessary to hold the eye in place on the telescope. The rejected disc, it was disclosed, cost a quarter of a million dollars. It will be less expensive, Dr. McCauley said, to pour anew lens than to grind holes in the present one.

■ *'My recipe for renew ing energy g M |M A i v ■** >,r?l r j|,4 ls to smoke a Camd * hcn tircd ‘ . Em Back Alive”) Buck: "I an HM v smoke Camels all I want because Hi ® n t u f sct . tennis champion v flavor appeal to my taste, but I actually feel a 'lift’ from a Camd,” says Ellsworth ingjnie! Jack Ford says: “Engi- SAIESMAN E. W. Davis says: r >* v '" Vines, Jr., Pasadena athlete. "Camels have a refreshing way of bringing my energy up to a higher level. They seem to restore neers like Camels. They help in- “I’m a salesman, and when tired \ v y my ’pep’ and take away that tired feeling. And I know I can smoke all I want for Camels don’t interfere with my nerves.” crease energy v'hen worn out.” a Camel revives my energy.” j ITH EY ALL PHONE OPERATOR in New York’s Beaux Arts Apart- j||f| * S' *Jf f ments, Marion Erickson says: "Camels freshen up H| -ym 7/^" § 9B my energy. They are the mildest dgarette I know.” g||j §■ :... r - jMM|i T ' " ~ ~ ||ll /j Men and women in every walk in yourself, if you are a Camel flli sportsman. Rex Beach says: "A Camel quickly gives me a 4 '1 7 rPn, ‘of life report rha, smoking a smoker. It is a wholesome and ■ mi Camel offers an immediate natural "energizing effect,” fully ■■—— - - -'— IIMM ■^Pi—* ' . - ... A natutew JF \\v i j HnS "I watch my nerves as care- clay: "I prefer Camels. I fully as I do my can smoke them jr mnHSH RHHHRBsBI That’swhy I smoke Camels.'* without jangled STAR PITCHER. Guy Bush says: "After nine hard in- DEIP4EA OIVW. FrankCril- PiSHERMAN. Arthur Neu OITMPIC DIVW. Miss Georgia Coleman: "When I’m OOlElt. Miss Helen Hicks SPEED demon. "After a championship speed-boat race,’’ says nings, there's nothing that lifts up my energy the way ley says: "Camels never says: "I smoke Camels tired and need a 'lift* I smoke a Camel. Soon I feel says: "A Camel always 801 Horn, "1 'break out my pack of Camels quickly, and a Camel does. I feel freshened up in no ume at all.” upset my nervous system.” steadily without'nerves.'” my real self again. They axe the mildest cigarette!” quickly restores my energy.” mno time at all I get a lift in energy. It s a swell tecling.

SAFETY TESTS FOR MOTORISTS START MONDAY

Police Sponsor Five-Day Drive to Check Defects on City Cars. Police will conduct their annual safely tests of city residents’ automobiles for five days beginning Monday, Chief Mike Morrissey announced today. The tests will be conducted in safety lanes, located in various parts of the city, from 7:30 a. m. to 5 p. m. for the five days. Motorists ; will be directed into the safety lanes :by motorcycle patrolmen under Sergeants Timothy McMahon and Harry Smith of the accident prevention bureau. Traffic Captain Lewis L. Johnson has general supervision of the safety campaign. One lane will be on Nineteenth street, between Meridian and Illinois streets, at the Hoosier Motor Club; another, on Orange street, between Meridian and Union streets. Others are to be arltiounced before Monday. Motorists will be required to show their drivers’ licenses and certificate of title cards and cars will be tested for brakes, lights, stop signals, horns, rear view mirrors, windshield wipers, steering wheel play and wheel alignment. Satisfactory cars will receive “O. K.” stickers. Drivers of others I will be ordered to remedy the cars’ defects and report for a second test. Special attention will be paid to brakes because, according to the Hoosier Motor Club, 17,170 cars with defective brakes were involved in accidents causing death or injury to persons in the United States last | year. NRA BOARD ADJUSTS 67 OF 124 DISPUTES 51,382 in Back Wages Paid, Wells Announces. A total of sixty-seven out of 124 NRA violation complaints filed at state NRA offices from Sept. 1 to Sept. 15w r ere adjusted satisfactorily, Francis Wells, state assistant NRA compliance officer, announced today. Mr. Wells stated that $1,382 in back wages for thirty-five employes were paid during the period as the result of adjustments. zzilLd D( Scholls Zinopads

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

POPULAR COLLEGIAN

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James Eaton

A popular collegian is James Eaton, Peru, newly-elected senior class president at Indiana Central college. He has been class president each year since 1931 and is president of the campus Y. M. C. A. and the Zetagathea Literary Society. ICE CAMPAIGN PLANNED Advertising and Sales Promotion Discussed at Severin. An advertising and sales promotion campaign for next year was planned by Indiana Association of Ice Industries members at the meeting in the Severin yesterday. The meeting will close today, following a golf tournament at Hill Crest Country Club and a dinner at which golfing awards will be made.

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FARLEY SEES G. 0. P. HELP FOR DEMOCRATS Postmaster-General Levels Blast at Republican High Command. By Lnitti Prest OMAHA. Neb., Sept. 20.—Post-master-General James A. Farley today offered Democratic officeseekers new campaign ummunition in a blast against "croaking of the Republican high command," in which he predicted ‘‘several million Republicans will be with us this year as they were in 1932." Farley replied militantly to attacks upon the Democratic party and President Roosevelt delivered in recent state campaigns, and particularly those in constitutional day addresses. While he lashed those who have asserted the Constitution was being disregarded by the administration, the chairman of the Democratic national committee praised Senator George W. Norris of Nebraska, who supported the Roosevelt candidacy in 1932, and the Republicans who voted the Democratic ticket. “Level-headed Franklin D. Roosevelt has not gone Bolshevik," Mr. Farley said, ‘‘and just because California nominated a one-time Socialist for Governor the Democratic party is not meditating a plunge into the depths of radicalism, or into the slavery of despotism.” Farley termed Senator Norris the “banner statesman of the middle west.”

MASSACHUSETTS VOTES ON GOVERNOR CHOICE Close Race Predicted Between Cole and Curley, Democrats. By Tuffed Pren BOSTON. Sept. 20.-Massachu-setts voters voted in great numbers today after a sizzling primary campaign waged in pan around the New Deal. Not in years has a primary battle aroused the interest of that between

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j Charles Henry Cole, who entered ; the World war as a private and emerged a brigadier-general, and | James Michael Curley, thrice mayor of Boston. They seek the Democratic nomination for Governor, a post now held by Joseph B. Ely, who in 1930 became Massachusetts’ first Democratic chief executive in flf- , tween years. Governor Ely, retiring | after two terms, is backing Cole, who i also carries the indorsement of the j Democratic pre-primary convention.

.SEPT. 20, 1934

INSURANCE FRAUD BARED —i Police Seek Boms Agent Who Fleeced City Woman. Police today are looking for a fake insurance agent who fleeced a widow. Mrs. Clare Feldman, 1330 Carrollton. Apt. 10, of $lO yesterday. The spurious agent obtained the money for charges which he said were due for settling the insurance on Mrs. Feldman's husband who died last week.