Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 May 1938 — Page 5

TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1938

Model Plane to Fly Under Radio Control

PEPPER VICTORY MAY ENCOURAGE THO GOVERNORS

Other New Dealers in South See Florida Vote as Good Omen.

By THOMAS L. STOKES Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, May 10.—The victory of Senator Pepper in Florida

appeared likely today to have other |

political results than the ate impetus it gave to the WageHour Bill in the House and the general lift it gave to Administration morale. Reports at the Capitol were that the triumph of this stanch New

Dealer might induce Governor Riv- |

ers of neighboring Georgia to attempt to unseat Senator George (D. Ga), who has been fighting the Administration and was particularly bitter against the WageHour Bill. New Deal lieutenants have been

trying to lure the Georgia Governor |

into the race. He professes to be a strong New Dealer. Roosevelt spoke kindly of him a few weeks ago at Gainesville, Ga. and omitted any friendly reference to Senator George. Governor Rivers has until June 1 to file for Senator. Poll Tax Repeal Factor

Similarly, New Dealers who

immedi- |

President |

LEWIS BLOCKS Mother's Day WABASH'S 100TH

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

i a — | E Bi | |

{ | |

| | | |

Brown (center), | Roachdale, finish construction on

they are building at Purdue University, they expect to fly it at a speed of more than 45 miles per hour by radio control from the ground. The model is being constructed as their thesis

When P. R. Marshall (left), Peoria, Ill.; E. R. Indianapolis, and F. M. Crosby,

the model plane | | The plane is

line motors.

project in aeronautical engineering. result of the work done on the design of the model, Crosby has been awarded a $2000 scholarship to the Boeing School of Aeronautics at Oakland, Cal.

Largely as a

to have a wing spread of nine and

one-half feet and will be equipped with two gaso-

PAGE

TRAVELERS’ PARLEY WILL OPEN FRIDAY

Fred L. Dennis to Address Protective Group.

The Indiana division of the Travelers Protective Association is to hold its 49th annual convention at the Claypool Hotel here Friday and Saturday. A business session will be called to order by the association president, William J. Frohmuth, Ft. Wayne, Friday afternoon. A banquet and an address by Fred L. Dennis, Bendix Products Corp. highway safety director is scheduled for Friday night. Officers will be installed at a business session Saturday. The association ladies auxiliary also will meet Saturday morning. O. Frank Stevens, Indianapolis, is Ser elury- treasurer of the associafon.

OUTFITTERS TO

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MARTIN OUSTER

would like to see the defeat of Sena- |

tor Smith (D. S. C.), a foe of the Wage-Hour Bill and other Administration measures—predict that the Pepper victory will help Governor Johnston, an advocate of wage-heur legislation and a stanch New Deal supporter, in his bid for Cotton Ed’s seat Widely overlooked in the big vote rolled up for Senator Pepper is a factor which may play an important part in breaking the power of Southern political machines. This was the first election in Florida since the repeal, last January. of the poll tax. To this is attributed the largest vote ever polled in the state's history. The tabulation thus far, still incomplete, shows a total vote of 405,000 in the recent primary. The largest previous vote was 326,000 in the 1936 Presidential election. Though the poll tax is only a dollar a ‘year, the Florida law—like other Southern poll-tax laws still in effect—was cumulative. Anyone who had failed to pay for a period of vears had to pay up all the arrears in order to vote.

Eight States Hold to Rule

There are lots of people in Florida, as in other Southern states, who don’t see much cash money from one end of the year to the other. Thousands of these were in effect disfranchised, as last week's increased vote demonstrates. Senator Pepper undoubtedly benefitted by the poll-tax repeal, receiving the support of the low-in-

come groups which form the founda- | Roosevelt's |

{Ora E. Gasoway, personal repre-

tion of President strength The eight states which still have

a poll tax voting requirement are

Frankensteen Accepts His | Demotion Calmly, Seeks | To End Factions. |

DETROIT, May 10 (U. P).—

Richard T. Frankensteen today ac- |

‘cepted calmly his demotion from |assistant president to vice presi{dent of the United Automobile Workers Union as punishment for | leading a rebellion against his | boss, Homer Martin, U. A. W. pres- | ident. { Mr. Frankensteen said he would {not fight for reinstatement but that “this step will have no bearing on {my campaign to end factionalism within the union.” Mr. Frankensteen's rebellion as {the leader of a coalition of union | radicals and conservatives, died be- | fore it began yesterday when the | 24 members of the executive board {opened their quarterly meeting. It was so apparent that Mr. | Martin was in command of the situation that his enemies were dis|couraged and no motions against {him were even introduced. Mr. | Frankensteen’s malcontents had | counted on Fred Pieper of Atlanta, | Ga., former executive board chairman, to file charges of irregularities against the union administra- [ tion, thereby opening the way for | ouster charges.

Lewis Aid Appears

| sentative of John L. Lewis, was

Baby Brought | By

| Times Special

ACTON, May 10.—Mr. and Mrs. | | Charles Patrick were back on their | | farm near here today with a brand |

new Mother's Day gift, a baby girl. While Mrs. Patrick, who is 19, | recuperated, Charles, 20, stood on {the front porch twisting his feet as | he explained to calling neighbors {how it happened that the baby was {born in a farm lane near Indian|apolis instead of at the St. Francis | Hospital, where the birth was | scheduled.

| our doctor and told him to meet us lat the St. Francis Hospital,” he said. “I put my wife in the car, jumped in and drove toward Indianapolis. My wife told me to hurry. “I guess we didn’t go fast enough | because I had to pull into a lane |of a farmhouse on the Old Shelbyville Road half-way to the city and holler to the farmer who was upstairs.

Come and help me.” The girl was born Sunday at 2 a. m. in the back seat of the Patrick’s car. Edwin Otts, the farmer,

| there the Patrick child and its

{ mother remained until today, when |

But when the meeting opened, Foriid returned to receive congratu- |

lations from friends.

| way.

Hasty Stork!

“Saturday at midnight, when we | knew the baby was coming, I called !

“He asked me what I wanted and | I said ‘My wife’s having a baby. !

and his wife, who aided, took the | Patricks in, called the doctor and |

It's the Patrick's first, too, by the |

GRADUATION SET

Marietta College President To Speak; Student Wins Speaking Contest.

Times Special CRAWFORDSVILLE, May 10. — Wabash College officials today were preparing for the school’s 100th annual commencement. Among the prominent speakers who will attend the graduating exercises are President Harry Kelso | Eversull of Marietta College and | Father Alphonse Schwitalla, St. | Louis University Medical School { head.

Charles A. Gaines, Danville, Ill. | today had become the seventh Wa- | bash College student to win the State Peace Oratorical Contest. He was one of more than a score of contestants from eight schools | who competed at Franklin College last Friday.

INSPECTOR BECOMES ASSISTANT DIRECTOR

Perry H. Inman, Winslow, today | began duties as assistant director | of the State Motor Vehicle Division | of the Public Service Commission. | He has been an inspector in the | division for three years. Moie Cook, commission member, | has acted as director since the | resignation May 1 of Richard Sharpless.

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all in the South—Alabama, Arkansas, | present and he announced that the |

Georgia, Mississippi, South Caro- | Committee for Industrial Organiza- ‘STARTS HOME AFTE | $150,000 POKER LOSS

“Couldn’t Feel Better for My

lina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia. |; was “lending all its support, |

In recent years the tax requirement | . { has been wiped out in Louisiana, | Delp and advice to the officers and

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North Carolina and Florida, and the result has always been a mendous increase in the vote. Arkansas will vote this year on a proposed constitutional amendment to repeal the poll tax provision, and it is expected to carry. Repeal campaigns are also on in Alabama and in Tennessee, where the two rival political leaders, Governor Browning and Ed H. Crump, Memphis “boss” have publicly declared for repeal. Labor Laws Weak

A Labor Department survey discloses that the states which retain poll tax requirements for voting

have the weakest laws for the pro- |

tection of labor. The rank and file are unable to exert their influence upon legislatures because of the disfranchisement of thousands of them. This also explains partly the spectacle of Southern Congressmen fighting a Democratic President on reform measures. They usually represent the industrial and business element rather than the masses. As an example of the effect of the poll tax, North Carolina cast 839,462 votes in the Presidential election in 1936 against 115,437 cast by South Carolina, which has about the same number of residents of voting age.

17 PIGS IN LITTER OF 22 STILL LIVE

COLUMBUS. Ind., May 10 (U. P.). —Henry Nolting today proudly exhibited a litter of 17 pigs born to one of his sows and wondered if some sort of a record might have been broken. Twenty-two pigs were born to the sow but five of them died. Now Mr. Nolting is searching for another sow to help the mother nurse her large family. At Indianapolis, Marion County Agricultural Agent Horace E. Abbott agreed that Mr. Nolting's litter was one of the largest ever to come to his attention but explained there is no written state record.

DUTCH SHIP ON FIRST TRIP

ROTTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS, May 10 (U. P.).—The Hol-land-America Line's new 36,287-ton flagship, Nieuw Amsterdam, was en route to New York today on her maiden voyage with a group of distinguished passengers aboard.

tre- |

| membership of the union.” This was taken to indicate that {the C. I. O. chief was interested |in seeing that Mr. Martin stayed in | office and the simmering revolt was snuffed out. Mr. Martin then announced that Mr. Frankensteen would new job. Instead of being assistant | president, a position that Mr. | Martin created for him when he |was a loyal protege, he would in | future be on a par with the other | four vice presidents. Mr. Martin | added that it was “not a demotion,” | but that he had learned that the | constitution did not provide for as-

| sistant presidents.

| Mr. Frankensteen considered this {a gesture of courtesy on Mr. | Martin's part. He said it seemed | like a demotion to him but that he “has no quarrel with anybody” about it.

‘DINNER TONIGHT FOR BANK 20-YEAR CLUB

The 20 Year Club of Fletcher | Trust Co. is to hold its fourth annual dinner tonight at the Marott Hotel, with 54 members attending, L. Albert Buennagel, club president, announced. Nicholas H. Noyes, Eli Lilly & Co. secretary treasurer, and Seventh Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago | director, is to speak. | Katherine L. Resener, club mem- | ber with the longest service record, | was employed by Fletcher Trust Co. (on Jan. 11, 1890. She is now retired { but remains an organization member. Three directors who have served more than 20 years are Henry C. Atkins, Evans Woollen and Hugh McK. Landon.

HEADS CULVER FATHERS Times Special CULVER, May 10.—R. R. Bair, 930 E. Maple Road, Indianapolis theater and restaurant owner, has been named regional vice president of the Culver Military Academy Fathe.s’ Association.

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to America because she is ill.” | Mrs. Clifton telephoned Los An- | geles police and asked them to hold her husband until she could get to the United States. She said she would sail on the first boat. Clifton called on District Attorney Buron Fitts to inform him that he wanted no more of America’s poker, that all he wanted was permission to leave California. * Pitts granted the request.

‘HIPPO BECOMES | DEVOTED MOTHE

WASHINGTON, May 10 (U. P.).— Hannah, the hippopotamus at the National Zoo who surprised attendants Sunday night by becoming a mother two months earlier than anticipated, broke precedent again today by developing maternal instincts. The 10-year-old pigmy hippo has killed three previous offspring— twice by crushing them in her powerful jaws and once by trampling. The latest baby hippo, however, apparently won her complete approval. While zoo attendants proposed to remove the baby if she should have a change of heart, Hannah exhibited all the tendencies of a proud mother.

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HOLLYWOOD, May 10 (U. P.) — |

sportsman who lost $150,000 to Lew | Brice at poker, plans to leave today |

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“I telephoned my wife and told | her ito stay at home.” he said. “I! didn’t want her to make the trip!

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| SOLD THE CHOICEST LOTS OF MY LAST CROP TO CAMELS AT TOP PRICES. SO DID MOST PLANTERS 'ROUND HERE. YOU WON'T NEED THREE GUESSES TO KNOW WHAT CIGARETTE 1 SMOKE ITS CAMEL. | KNOW CAMELS ARE MADE FROM COSTUER TOBACCOS. NATURALLY, MOST TOBACCO PLANTERS HERE SMOKE CAME

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