Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1936 — Page 3
COUGHLIN'S AID
GETS BIG VOTE
Threatens New Dealer in| Michigan; F. D. R. to Tour East Next Week.
{Continued from Page One) :
M 1ine reversed
£C attered primaries, the New Deal by of Republicans to state and office. Senator James Couzens, rich | Michigan Republican, who sought renomination although he indcrsed Mr. Roosevelt, was badly beaten in his primary contest. Former Senator George H. Moses lost H. Styles Bridges in New Hamp- | shire when he sought Republican | renomination to his former Wash- | ington job. Mr. Ward's showing in was the political surprise of week. He yan on an anti-Roosevelt
the
platforin and developed his greatest | strength in industrial Wayne Coun- |
ty tion has been expecting to find its principal support in the pres Sidensial | election Nov. 3. Frank Murphy, Mr. Roosevelt and - his post in the to run for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in Michigan, | "was nominated. poll was only 377,136 votes and Re- | publicans cast 507,864 in selecting | their candidate for Governor. ! Primary polls are not conclusive but the large Republican vote combined with Mr. Ward's anti-Roose-velt demonstration in the Demo-| cratic primary combined today to add to the enthusiasm of G. O. P. workers, already encouraged by returns from Maine.
hand-picked by
borrowed
Disagree on Analyses
Coincidental with reports of the |
Michigan primary, the revealed that Mr. Roosevelt. would invade West Virginia, New Jersey. and/Pennsylvania next week. He will speak at Jersev City and Pittsburgh but may merelv make an appearance at the Mountain Elkins, W. Va. Some political observers read into his surprise program a maneuver to whip up the. Democratic paign althou White House represent velt as extraordinarily that he will defeat Gov. Landon in November. Michigan's primary, election, has ‘aroused general disagreement among interpreters. | Friends .of the counter Republican claims with the assertion tHat many
Maine and White House
Mr. Rooseconfident Alfred
Tuesday will be for Mr.
on presidential
primary Roosevelt day,
Meantime the Democratic
uniform election | national |
to Gov. |
Michigan !
(Detroit) where the Administra- |
from | Philippine Islands |
But_his aggregate |
State forest festival at |
cam- | gh persons close to the | M. |
like ‘Maine's |
Administration |
of the 190,000 | cast for Couzens in the Republican |
election |
high | ©
7 Scores "Are Evac | Coastal Areas as Gale Nears
‘Coast Guard and Red Cross | Mobilized for Action as Barometer Falls.
(Continued from Page One)
{points 700 miles apart. Several {craft were wallowing in the gigantic waves tossed up by the winds {but no new reports of endangered | shipping were received. Coastal craft hove-to in safe havens under dou- | ble anchor until the blow was over.
Ships Assigned Red Cross
Red Cross and Coast Guard offi- { cials worked out co-operative plans {for the aid of the endangered resi- { dents. Coast «Guard stations warned {all inhabitants of low-lying areas {from the Chesapeake Bay region
| | | |
¢ (south to the South Carolina line to
seek safety on higher ground. Two Coast Guard vessels, one at { Elizabeth City and one at New {Bern, N. C., were assigned for use {by the Red Cross in carrying food tand clothing supplies to the hun'dreds of small sandy islands which {string out for miles along the Car{olina and Virginia. coast. Two more { vessels at Moorehead City, N. C., { received stand- -by orders for similar service. Arrangements were made by the {Red Cross with telephone company executives to warn all subscribers on the Eastern Maryland shore in
|case that region is endangered. | By noon the Red Cross had eight
{national disaster workers in the | threatened area or en route there
and sik or eight more were held ‘in | Washington
ready to leave at a
moment's notice. Warnings Ordered
The last advisory bulletin issued by the hurricane warning system, | said: “Northwest storm warnings or{dered on North "Carolina Coast south of Beaumont. Warnings now | displayed from Southport, N. C., to Virginia Capes. Great tropical hut{ricane approximately 400 miles southeast of Cape Hatteras, moving { northwestward about 10 to 12 miles { per hour. Will cause increasing {northeast and northwest winds on | North Carolina and Virginia coast, probably rehching gale force by
i |
{command proposed a recount in { Maine where Louis J. Brann, Democrat, lost election to the Senate by approximately 5000 votes. He was defeated by Senator Wal- | lace H. White Jr. They coupled | this proposal with emphasis upon campaign confributions to the Re- | publicans from wealthy persons including several members of the American Liberty League. Chairman { James A. Farley of the Democratic National Committee said the Demo- { crats lost Maine by a margin of 50,000 Morgan-du Pont dollars.”
IN INDIANAPOLIS
MEETINGS TODAY
Feal Estate Board, Washington, noon. Advertising Club of Indianapolis, eon, Columbia Club, noon. Engineering Seciety, luncheon, I'rade, noon Sigma Chi, noon American Business Club, Trade, noor Acacia,
luncheon, Hotel
lunchTrade,
luncheon, Board of
of
‘u, luncheon,
Indiana Motor Traffic Association, lunch- |
eon, Hotel Antlers, noon.
MEETINGS TOMORROW
. Exchange Club, luncheon, ington. noon Optimist Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, Delia Theta, luncheon, Board of . noon.
Taw Delta, Muncheon,
meeting, Hotel
Board
Stamp Club, Warren, 8 p. m. Beta Theta Pi, Trade, noon.
MARRIAGE LICENSES addresses frequently are Marriage License Bureau deliberately. The Times in printing the official list assumes no for such addresses.)
luncheon, of
{Incorrect given to the
McIntyre, 22. of - student. and Ellen Rebecca Speer 23. City Hospital. nurse. Walter McDonald, 22 of 21189 Pernwayat. truck driver. and Frances Thomas, 25. f 2205 Tempie-ay 0 John Cochran, 63, of 308 N Tilinois-st. salesman, and lda Schenkel. 80. of 4826 AV, nurse, . Parkcav. m Paul Wolfe Jr, 23. of 226 N Addison-st, photo-finisher, snd Mary Josephine Dugan, 18. of 245 N. War-mMan-av.
Malcolm T Pennsvivania-st,
BIRTHS Girls Fred. Daisy Honaker, 1863 Tallman Melvin, Evelyn- Hudson, 2509 N. Harding Bors
Edwin, Alice Jones 1144 E 18th. Dailas Helen Moore, 823 Arbor.
DEATHS
William Laffoon, 25, ag City, carcinoma, Thomas Behymer, 79," 3325 N. Capitol,
lobar pneumonia. illiam T. Lory, 68, 3128 McPherson, carcinoma. Herman Arnholiz, 83, &ctue cardiac dilatation. George Miller Bartleit, 63, at Methodist, puimonary embolism Frank A Fisk, 51, noma Carol Sue Ireiand, 2 months Pulmonary edems. Houston Ramsey, 38, at City
fuberculost ; Thomas Raision, 78, 2344 Ralston, car-
1803 Broadway,
at Veterans, carciat Riley,
miliary
| . William E. Lane, 51, 434 S. East, ¥*! hemorrhage.
Board of |
uncheon, Board |
Hotel Wash- |
§ temperature tomorrow.
Columbia | —
responsibility | i | tonight and Friday; 947 N. |
cerebral | Daniel Delelu, cirrhosis of liver. | Nellie Pemberton, | sclerosis. Willie 55, | Wd Ti | Lucille Perry 19, | monary tuberculosis. Mary Sturges. 71, { bral hemorrhage
43, at City,
63, at arterio2010 Alvord, mitral 933 Edgemont,
1412
City, teele, pul-
Commerce, cere-
Sone, Board of Trade, noon. | Hotel Washington. |
OFFICIAL WEATHER
U. 8. Weather Bureau
INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST: Mostly cloudy and unsettled tonight and tomeor- | row: continued cool tonight; slowly 5:28 ..5:51
Sunrise .. Sunset ......
TEMPERATURE —Sept. 17. 1985—
1.68 1p m,
f
BAROME TER . 30.37 S10 m....
Precipitation 24 hes. ending &t 7 Total precipitation since Jan. Deficiency since Jan. 1
--30.32
18.09 ..10.39
MIDWEST FOREC AST
cloudy snd unsettled | slowly rising tempera-
Indiana—Mostly
ture Friday. Hlinois—Mostly cloudy and unsettled tonight and Friday; slowly rising temperature Friday and northwest and west-cen-tral tonight, Lower Michigan—Partly cloudy tonight and Friday; not so codl north portion late tonight; slowly rising temperature Friday. Ohio—Mostly cloudy tonigh} and Pridav: probably showers Priday in west and south portions; not much change in temperature. Kentucky—Cloudy; probably occasional showers tonight and Friday. cooler in east portion tonight.
WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT J A. M.
Stat ion Weather Bar. Temp. i 3 56
Cleveland Denver Dodge City. Kas Helena, Mont. Jacksonville Kansas City,
i Little Rock,
Los Angeles .. .. Miami. Fla. ... Minneapolis ... Mobile. Ala. ........ New Orleans New York
Pittsburgh Portiand, Ore. San Antonio, . Tex. ... San Fran 5.
rising | today.
{ limits is estimated as being slightly
4
.02 | tion cost Ng $1.46 per ballot, while it
| Between these extremes are Min- | neapolis,
| ver, 438.4 cents; St. Louis, 51 cents:
uated From
| night. All firteresis this area |advised take precautions and stand by for further advice. Caution advised vessels in. path of storm. “Tropical storm will be attended by increasing northeast winds, probably reaching gale force (on the { coast) Thursday night, accompanied by high tides.” Another bulletin described the disturbance as a “severe storm, of great extent and hurricane intensity, attended by gales and squalls oyer a {very large area and winds of hur|ricane force in a considerablef area around center.” The fringe of the storm opposite to that expected to strike here tonight was battering Bermuda today | with a gale and flooding gusts of rairr that kept the big S. S.. Monarch of Bermuda in port. She had been scheduled to sail yesterday for New York.
Dead Placed at 31 in Shipwreck
By United Press REYKJAVIK, Iceland, Sept. 17. — Two Danish warships sped to Iceland today to the scene of the tragedy that cost the life of Dr. Jean Baptiste Charcot, famous French Arctic explorer, and 30 of his companions on his ship the PourqoiPas. . The vessels, the Aegir and the Hvidbjoérnan, were expected to take the bodies, which were washed ashore at Borgafjord, to Europe. A raging storm along the treacherous coast: of western Iceland sunk the Pourqoi-Pas and sent the explorer and 30 companions to death. One man, Petty: Officer Eugene Geonidec, survived. Lashed to a plank he was washed ashore more dead than alive.
AMMON TO DIRECT ROOSEVELT LEAGUE
Omer 8S. Jackson, Democratic state chairman, and Alvin C. Johnson, president of the Young Democrats of Indiana, today announced the appointment of Lawrence Ammon, 2433 E. Washingtonast, deputy county clerk, as director of the Roosevelt First Voters’ League in Indiana. The appointment was approved by James A. Farley, Democratic national chairman. Miss Rosemund | Smith, Shelbyville, was named vice director. Headquarters are to be established in Hotel Claypool. . Mr. Ammon is president of the Young Democrats Club of Marion County.
GIVEN HOSPITAL POST Times Special $ MARION, Ind. Sept. 17—Dr. E. F, Jones of this city has been appointed to the staff of the Richmond State Hospital for the Insane and is to leave here next week to assume his new duties.
Crowds gathered quickly to administer first aid to three ‘Columbus residents who were seriously injured when their car skidded off U. S.
Highway 31 in Southport yesterday.
Passersby are shown above after they had pulled victims out of
their wrecked auto.
The injured, brought to Methodist Hospital here, were: 2-year-old Hugh Newsom, pnd Mrs. Gertrude McKnight,
Newsom, 33; 55, all of Columbus,
Paul R.
Witnesses said Mr. Newsom, who was driving the car, swerved to the side of the highway to avoid collision with another car at an inter-
section and lost control of his machine. It crashed over a five- Sook ditch and landed headon into a railway
embankment.
THREE INJURED AS CAR UPSETS
Driver Faces Five Charges
After Accident at Loading Station.
Three persons were injured early today when the automobile in which they were riding overturned in the 5700 block on Sunset Lane. They were Harold Miller, 20, of 420 N. DeQuincy-st, who received a
possible compound fracture pf his.
left arm; Mike Ryan, 20, of 528 East-ern-av, a bruised right leg, and Thelma Clark, 20, of 46 §. Brook-ville-rd, leg injuries. All were taken te City Hospital. Miller told police he was driving north in Sunset Lane and started to make a left turn when his car turned over, Police arrested Bracie Mayweather, 39, of 1749 N. Kdéystoneav, on charges of drunkenness, drunken driving, reckless driving, failure to have a driver's license and resisting an officer last night after he ran into a loading station at North-st and Massachusetts-av.
LANDON TO STRIKE AT FARM POLICIES
By United Press TOPEKA, Kas.,, Sept. 17.—Gov. Alfred M. Landon promised today that he would carry to America’s farm belt next week a ‘dependable and permanent program that will give farming the equality it deserves.” Seeking to maintain the “fighting pitch” of the Republican campaign, the Kansas Governor will strike at the Administration's agricultural and reciprocal trade policies in speeches at Des Moines, Minneapolis and Milwaukee on his first major campaign trip through the farm and lake states area.
TALK TO BE BROADCAST Senator Sherman Minton’s address at 8:30 Monday night before the Young Democrats of Delaware
County in Muncie is to be broadcast over, radio station WLBC, Muncie, the Democratic State Committee announced today.
BY TOM OCHILTREE
Every ballot cast in a Marion County primary election costs the taxpayers 74 cents, and the cost per vote in a general election is 21 cents, a survey made by Chief Deputy | Clerk Charles R. Ettinger showed |
Since the vote cost inside the city
below the' county figure, Indianapolis has a low general election {cost compared with cities of a similar size. In Columbus, O., the general elec-
is only 24 cents in Salt Lake City.
312 cents; Milwaukee, { 35.7 cents; Omaha, 43.5 cents: Den- | Boston. 64.2 cents; Detroit, 65.1 cents, New York City, 66.7 cents; San Francisco, 73.4 cents: Kansas City, 89.7 cents: Chicago, 91.8 cents; Baltimore, 91.3 cents; Cincinnati, 83.7 cents; Cleveland, $1.08, and Dayton, $1.30. The money is used to pay election commissioners, watchers and canvassing board members, repair of votimg machines, hire clerical workers and laborers and provide voting supplies. Costs Are Shown Mr. Ettinger’s survey showed the following total election costs in Marion County from 1928 through 1934: y General Year. Primary. Election. 1928 $51,924.96 1930 63,092.50 1932 48,611.33 1934 62,346.88 A combined city and county elettion was held for the first time in 1834, and the city paid $27,125.82 as
a by
its share of election expenses that
Primary Poll Cost 74 Cents Per Ballot, Clerk Reports
show a Teduction instead of an increase in election costs, Mr. Ettinger explained. Total county vote period was: General Election. 184,217 142,807 212,847 172,323 Research organizations, making nation-wide surveys of election costs, report that the price of the ballot goes up as political patronage increases. After one survey, the Schenectady (N. Y.) Bureau of Municipal Research reported: “Schenectady spends from two and a half to three times more than would be required to hold elections according to law if, patronage was eliminated, and special favors in the size and number of disbursements
were removed.” AUTO LOANS a Loan Rl ley 4466 Schloss Bros. Co. Consolidated With
| Phone for Lowest Cost in" City, LD >
Primary. 80,083 62,074 80,593 89,229
Year, 1928 1930 1932 1934
§
during the |
n u
Driving Hints BY THE NAT'L SAFETY COUNCIL
ad YOLRKIZEN
INATTENTION
F there is any place in the world where silence is really golden, it is in the driver’s seat. When the tongue wags, the mind lags. Driving a car is a full-time job. It can not be combined with sociability, « “necking,” sight-see-ing, window - shopping or. daydreaming. Just remember that if you are traveling at even 30 miles an hour you will go 44 feet in that single second that your head is turned or that your mind lapses. If another car is approaching yours at the same speed your speed is automatically doubled as far as your relative position with that other car is concerned. Keep your eyes on the road and your mind on your driving. MARION COUNTY TRAFFIC TOLL TO DATE 3936 siassaccesstransnesinvanees 107 1935 ®esecrssrvennssesiensssnane 103 TRAFFIC ARRESTS . September 16 Speeding .......00000iv00000n.ie Running red light.............. Running preferential street..... Reckless driving ..%.ceriveceeess Drunken driving .....cococeeese Others except parking.......... TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS
Accidents Injured
PRINTS BY VAN GOGH ARE DISPLAYED HERE
An exhibition of color prints taken from original paintings by the Dutch artist, Vincent Van Gogh, An display at the Lyman Broth- ' art gallery on Monument Circle. The exhibition of reproductions is being held here simultaneously with the display of original Van Gogh paintings and drawings now fea-
S00 sets etgatantanann 14
tured at the Chicago Art Insti-.
tute. ”
EX-QUEEN IN NEW YORK By United Press NEW YORK, Sept. 17.—Victoria Eugenia, the former Queen of Spain, arrived today on the Conte di Savoia to see her eldest son, Alfonso, the Count of Covadonga, who is seriously ill in Presbyterian Hospital from a recurrence of an hereditary bleeding disease.
Wheres’
\_§ AN © Mathews-Carr, Ine
-—gone fo .... SEVILLE
“Yes, Marm,” says George, “Seville Cooks can sure teach-yere somthin’ about fryin’ Chicken Southern style.”
A Platter of Chicken for Two, T5¢ ea. Hot Biscuits, Cream Gravy, Whipped Potato and Coffee.
7 N. MERIDIAN ST.
SVWeoenNeS
S00 sscrensenenssetantans 12.
George dl
Townsend Gives Labor Policy;
Springer Flays Tax ‘Burdens’
" (Continued from Page One)
.sales tax and consumer taxes to rob
the bread from the tables of the poor and filch pennies from children’s banks in order to protect the homes and property of those who are able to pay their share of governmental services,” he said in conclusion.
600,000 Workers Covered
More than 600,000 employes are covered by unemployment compensation in Indiana, Wilfred Jessup, Indiana Compeisation Board president, told delegates today. He said reports filed by employers during the first four months of the law's operation showed contrfbutions totaling $2,400,000. “This is about $4 in the unemployment fund for each insured employe,” he said. “The unemployment compensation division, with a staff of 38, has col-
lected the money at a cost of only 22 per cent, which is paid with Federal funds.” Mr. Jessup caid contributions can be used solely for payment of benefits to unemployed after April 1, 1938.
Face Controversial Issues Three highly controversial issues
‘were before the delegates as they
met to hear committee reports on resolutions. sideration resolutions concerning: 1. The industrial-craft union fight between the American Federation of Labor and John L. Lewis’ Committee for; Industrial Drgeltizas tion. - 3 2. Sponsoring a State Farmer. Labor Party. 3. Indorsement of President Franklin D. Roosevelt for re-elec-tion. Severe fights were anticipated on the C. I. O. proposal and the labor party idea.
Times Special EAST CHICAGO, Ind., Sept. 17.— State administration claims that the Indiana state budget has been balanced were ridiculed today by Raymond S. Springer, G. O. P. nominee for Governor, in an address before local business men. “No budget can be regarded as in balance with a $10,000,000 surplus as that boasted by Gov. McNutt,” he said. “The McNutt conception of a balanced budget would mean that a $20,00,000 surplus would be twice as much of an accomplishment.” Mr. Springer then pointed to the administration of Gov. Landon in Kansas and how he “actually balanced the budget and is content to go along with a $1,000,000 surplus.”
Balancing Pointed Out
“A budget may be out of balance,” he added, “because of too heavy expenditures, cr because of insufficient income. It may also be out of balance because of too heavy an imposition of taxes. It is no mark of statesmanship nor of economy in administration to place upon the people unnecessary burdens of taxation. “Connected with the departments of the Indiana state government there are 16 highly paid publicity workers. They owe their appeintments to Gov, McNutt and hold their positions ‘subject to his pleasure. Perhaps it is only natural that they should use every means to build up the fiction that Gov. McNutt is the greatest living Governor in the United States ahd the greatest citizen our state ever has produced. “Doubtless,” he .continued, “their jobs are made more -isecure by blinking at the facts that might reflect -on ‘our. Governor. The pretended reductions in costs of gov-. ernment point to the viciousness of one-man government.” He cited alleged heavy costs in state administration, saying: “The expenditures for 1935 exceeded 1934 and became the alltime high, and the expenditures for
TROTSKY ASSAILS STALIN AS BRUTAL
By United Press : NEW YORK, Sept. 17. — Leon Trotsky, writing from his Norwegian retreat to his American publishers, assailed Joseph Stalin for “brutal and ignorant mediocrity.” Trotsky quoted Lenin as opposing Stalin's. continuance as general secretary of the Soviet in 1921, warning that “this cook would prepare too bitter a brew.’ The exiled Trotsky said that Lenin's widow told him in 1926 in the presence of Zinoviev and Ka=' menev, recently executed as conspire ators, that Stalin “lacks the most | elementary sense of honor.”
HELD ON CHARGE OF RACE AMALGAMATION
Lawrence Harrod, Hancock-rd, was bound over to the Marion County grand jury, under $1000 bond on charges of“race amalgamation when he appeared in Municipal Court this morning. An affidavit charged that Harrod is a half Negro and. recently mar= ried a white woman in violation of the race amalgamation law. -
DISCHARGES PISTOL IN DETROIT COURT,
By Un ah
DETROIT, , Sept. 17.—An appat=
ently mentally unbalanced man. brandished a pistol in the courts room of Judge Homer Ferguson to= day and fired several shots into. the walls and ceilings before he was overpowered.
+
1936, reluctantly released, far ax
ceeded 1934 and 1935 and stand as
a mountain peak of expenditures, “Thus, Gov. McNutt for three successive years exceeded all former - Governors in expenditures and yet the Governor would have the peo= ple, believe he practices what he preaches — ‘Economy _ in Govern= ment.’ ”
The Seeret of Qur “Ups and Downs”
Hilndreds of efectrical horses are puiling for you eyery time you ride an elevator or an
escalator at Ayres.
- Like an army of soldiers on duty in shining array, these powerful motors, shown gbove, serve you from the penthouse at Ayres. With their steel cables and hundreds of miles of copper wire .they are equipped with reliable gears, ratchets and governors to assure you’
safety and service.
®
The pleasant voiced, eiperienced women who operate the elevators which save you so many
millions of steps at Ayres, were selected to
They are under constant supervision by a
crew of trained men and no baby receives more care ‘or attention than this mighty
equipment.
L.
»
serve as hostesses to you. of airline pilots they are there to give you happy landings and are pleased to chart your coursé to any department in the store. Day-in and day-out service like this is only one of the many aids that makes shopping at Ayres a pleasure.
With all the skill
7
“Quality Endures”
(Registered).
S. AYRES & COMPANY
