Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 251, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 February 1935 — Page 3

FEB. 28, 1985.

RARE AND UNPOSED CAMERA STUDIES—THE PRESIDENT AT WORK

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Now he smiles as they enter.

MISS COLBERT AND GABLE WIN ‘lt Happened One Night’ Brings Highest Honors to Film Stars. By United Prr*i HQl.t.ywoqd. Feb. 28 —The motion picture industry today acclaimed Claudette Colbert and Clark Gable for winning the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awards for the best motion picture performances of 1934. Their victory followed a joint performance in “It Happened One Niv-*.” one of the surprise pictires of the year. With their victory they brought five additional honors to Columbia studios, leading independent picture producers in the film colony. But a curly-haired youngster upset all tradition when she won a special gold statuette. Shirley Temple. not yet 6 years old. was honored by academy members who decided she had held up her head among the greatest stars of the screen in not less than six major productions last year. Frank Capra, director of "It Happened One Night." was given one of the symbolic gold statuttes for the best direction. Columbia Studios won a similar award for the outstanding production of the year. A Walt Disney cartoon. "The Tortoise and The Hare," won the best short subject prize while the best comedy award went to "La Cucaracha,” a Pioneer production.

FUND GROUP TO HOLD 15TH ANNUAL PARLEY Honorary Member to Be Chosen at Session Tonight. The fifteenth annual meeting of the Indianapolis Community Fund will be held at 6:30 tonight in the Riley Room of the Claypool. More than 300 welfare and civic workers are expected to attend. An honorary member will be elected at the meeting in recognition of “outstanding and unselfish service in the public welfare.” Several new directors also will be chosen. Harold B West Is chairman for the meeting and Mrs. La nr Whitcomb is chairman of the ushers' committee. Woodmen to Install Heads New officers of Pioneer Camp. No. 1. Woodmen of the World, will be installed at a meeting in Castle Hall 230 E Ohlo-st. 7:30 tomorrow night. The camp was re-or-ga razed after several years of inactivity.

Hey, Hey!

Hah!

THERE is the Mr. President you and the whole world know: The charming, gracious gentleman whose smile—flashed with equal warmth upon visiting foreign dignitaries and prize-winning watermelongi iwers—has been perpetuated in countless newspictures. . . . Then there is the Mr. President known to few besides White House attaches: The sober-countenanced, quick-thinking Chief Executive intent upon his daily problems—and upon yours, and yours!—as they come one by one to liis desk. ... It is "both” these Presidents, but more particularly the latter, that you see in these remarkable, unposed photos, taken in his White House office on the afternoon that the Brazilian Trade Agreement was signed. . . . Awaiting his visitors, the President went on

Fierce Battle Rages in House Over Liquor Bill; Bauer Leads One-Man Filibuster, Rips at Measure

(Continued From Page One) would distribute two-thirds of the license money to civil cities and the school city one-third. Under the proposed amendment Indianapolis would receive approximately $28,000. Administration leaders contend this re-distribution of license fees which deprives the state of onethird of the retail license money from beer and liquor, will not throw the state budget out of balance. Sees Balanced Budget Rep. Barrett contended that SBOO,OOO will be raised by the stafe participating only in the wholesale licenses and beer and liquor taxes and that this will suffice to balance the budget after approximately $400,000 is taken out of the estimated $1,240,000 revenue from the liquor bill for administration costs. Vitriolic in dcfendnng his minority report and his proposed substitute liquor bill. Rep. Lenhardt Bauer iD.. Terre Haute) charged that members of the General Assembly and any one who by newspaper or radio inferred “that I’m interested in the breweries" is a liar.” In angered tones he declared: • I've got the dope on the importers. They’ve been on the radio. They’ve had speeches written about me. I can take it. Tney can’t prove anything. I’ll stick my chin out. When they say I’m interested in the breweries they're liars in the purest >ense of the word.” "Rake-off” Shouts Bauer "The importer system is famous in Indiana and will continue to be famous. They say they've taken out the monopolistic features of their bill. But what about the port of entry man. or importer, or whatever . you want to call him. Have they taken him out of this bill? "They say,” he continued vehemently waving a liquor bill at the House members, "that the port of entry has been put in their bill to control malt beverages.” He paused: “I'll tell you what he is in the bill for. He's in that bill to give some deserving Democrats a job and give them a rake-off. He’ll be a man with no capital who can sit back in a big chair and collect that rake-off. "If they want liquor regulation or

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Senhor Aranha presents Brazil’s Finance Minister.

(All photographs by Thomas D. McAvoy; from NEA Service, Inc., Copyrighted by Time The Weekly Newsmagazine)

control why do they try to hide it beneath a bushel basket? "They say that they took out all the monopolistic features of the bill. They tell you that in the newspapers and over the radio. I'll tell you what they took out. They took out the misspelled words. Out of the 249 amendments about 9? per cent of the amendments were misspelled words. "Did they do anything with the importer system—No! They did find that famous lost section, that most damning evidence of all, which permitted the distiller to be an importer. They did include that section with amendments. But they didn't take out the provision that the distiller could sell to the retailer,” he declared. Charging that the powers granted to the proposed liquor commission by the majority report are contrary to every principle of democratic government, Rep. Bauer shouted: "Without a hearing, wbthout records. without appeal, this commission would write the law. It would have police power to enforce the law. and the decision of this commission would be final. Powers Separated, He Cries "Here we have legislative, executive and judicial functions all in the same commission. That in contrary to every principle of our common law heritage which provides for the separation of powers." he declared. Rep. Bauer went on to point out that the commission which his amendment would set up does not have this final power, and it further provided for a single retail license instead of triple license. "This triple license system, one for beer, one for wine, and one for spirits, hasn't worked in any state where it has been tried.” he said. "Yet this majority report doesn't consider past experience but sets up the same old evils.” He declared that bootlegging would come back as a result of this triple licensing system. “Gravy for Them” "I don't blame these administration men for fighting for the majority report. Why shouldn't they —it is going to be worth $1,500,000 to them in the next two years. These same men. who will g-?t the gravy, havfle called up the beer wholesalers and told them to ‘put the - -I’ on members of this House

-Another EXCLUSIVE Pictorial Triumph for The Times-

Oh, Mac—

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with his work, perusing letters and orders, while loyal Gus Gennerich and Secretary Marvin Mclntyre hovered in the background. Ignored was the presence of a photographer, Thomas D. McAvoy, of the Washington Daily News, a Scripps-Howard newspaper, who, employing a tiny camera with film specially sensitized in an ammonia bath, snapped away to get these intimate pictures which are historically valuable because they show the President’s "other side.” Continuing, Scripps-Howard Photographer McAvoy recorded the cha .ge of expression as Mr. Roosevelt turned the full play of his charm upon his pleased callers, Brazil's Ambassador Oswaldo Aranha and Finance Minister Arthur Souza Costa.

to get the majority report adopted,” he charged. “These beer wholesalers had to do that, or they knew they wouldn’t get licenses. We are living in a great state when any legitimate business is put under a political black-jack and has to carry out orders of administration leaders.” Walking across the front of the House chamber he pointed a finger at individual members and said that as amended the majority report would provide for road houses. Fight Becomes Personal Mr. Bauer veered his attack and became personal after Mrs. Roberta West Nicholson <D., Indianapolis) defended the majority report committee's bill. "Will Mrs. Nicholson yield to a question?” "Yes. I will,” retorted Mrs. Nicholson, the assembly’s only woman legislator. "Mrs. Nicholson,” said Rep. Bauer in measured tones, "does your husband hold a job with the state of Indiana?” Rep. Carl Wood (D.. Indianapolis) attempted to persuade the woman members not to answer the question. "Don't answer it. Don’t,” urged Rep. Wood, as he placed a hand on Mrs. Nicholson's shoulders. Face reddened Mrs. Nicholson, above the hub-bub. said. “I’ll answer his question even if it is casting aspersions.” "Don't answer it,” pleaded Mr. Wood. But the woman legislator in loud tones said: "He does.” It Never Gets to Illinois. Asserting that the state is losing large amounts of revenue daily through conniving of breweries, Rep. Bauer said: "I'll tell you how the state gets beat out of its revenue. A truck pulls up to a brewery. It is loaded. The truck is then billed to Paris, HI., Calumet City, HI., or somewhere out-state. The brewery is not forced to pay a gallonage tax. But that beer never gets to Illinois. It does get to Ft. Wayne, Indianapolis, Bedford, and other cities. The state is beaten out of the revenue. The Terre Haute representative charged that the public morals committee did not write the amendments to the proposed administration liquor bill. i "But the people who did writ* it

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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The Ambassador takes pen in hand.

were not sincere in their effort to collect taxes,” he shouted. "If you want bootlegging then vote for the majority report which places liquor at $1 a gallon. If you want to stop bootlegging then vote for the minority report that places only a 50 cents gallon tax on whisky. Bootlegging Rampant, His Claim "Bootlegged liquor is rampant in Indiana. Ninety per cent of the bootlegged liquor comes from Danville, 111. I have been on their trail for two years and I’m not a gumshoe artist. "I want to tell you that the ‘heat’ really has been turned on since this liquor bill came to a showdown and after the ‘heat’ was turned on, five members who have signed the majority report decided they -couldn't sign the minority report. “The attorney for the importers —the racketeers —drew this bill. You've had a chance to read both bills. You can’t fail to know what and who is back of the majority report. “There’s been more heat turned on in connection with this bill- since there was when D. C. Stephenson (former Ku-Klux Klan chieftain) forced the members to vote the way he wanted them to.” Closing with a quotation from the poem "Lost Leader,” by Robert Browning. Rep. Bauer charged "the whole body was being sold down the river for a few pieces of silver.” He “dedicated” the poem to “the boys in Room 803, the Indianapolis Athletic Club/* MAGICIANS TO PERFORM Program Arranged for Luncheon of Optimist Club. Members of the Optimist Club will be entertained with a program of magic provided by the Indiana Society of Magicians at the club's luncheon in the Washington tomorrow. Dr. W. S. Zarick, a member of the Optimists, is president of the magicians’ society. Nightingale Club to Meet The Florence Nightingale Club will meet at 1:30 tomorrow afternoon in the Architects and Builders Bldg. A representative of the Indiana State Nurses Association will talk, and Miss Emily Mae Johnson will give a reading.

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Tch, Tch—

ASKS $20,000 DAMAGES Shelbyville Lad Sues Power Firm for Alleged Injuries. Suit for $20,000 damages was filed in Superior Court here yesterday by Clyde Hobbs Jr., 7, of Shelbyville,

New Spring and HAND3ACS I VERY SPECIALLY PRICED AT J[ • Plenty of NAVY! •Plenty of Pockets! • Plenty of Metal Trims! Pouches! Zippers! EnA grand with suits. Black, m alilllii I blue, brown or red. Buy L S. AYRES & CO._

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The President closes cordially.

Ind., against the Public Service Cos. of Indiana. The complaint alleges he suffered painful and permanent injuries when he came in contact with an unguarded high voltage wire owned by the company on May 25, 1934, near his home.

so good.

There!

Rioting Students Arrested By United Prexx VIENNA, Feb. 28.—More than 100 Pan-German Vienna University students were arrested today during, a riotous advance celebration of the return of the Saar to the Fatherland.

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