Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1938 — Page 4
PAGE 12
Democratic State Committee Reports | n Treasury
$3159 Is 1
To Contributions From 938 Are Listed at $63 Which
»
9)
-
The Democratic revealed in a statement on file today The statement disclosed that bet
State Committee has $3159.41 in its treasury.
17, 1936 to May 14, | Greater Part of
Nov. %) 20
Dy (av)
Per Cent Club Supplied.
They'll Marry
| it was
with County Clerk Glenn B. Ralston. |
ween Nov. 17
the committee received contributions of $63.729.89, of which $51.000 was
from the Hoosier Democratic Club, which collects a 2 per cent fee on S
Contributions $5000 from club were listed on Dec. 1, 1936, Feb. 2, April 1, May 6, Aug. 11 and Nov. 15, 1937, and March 28 and April 15, 1938.
of
937. $2000; June 15, 1937, $3000; Feb. 1, 1938, $6000. Other receipts were listed from Judge Harvey Curtis of the Appeilate Court, $100 on Nov. 23, 1936; | $100 from James D. Adams, $100] on Nov. 23, 1936; Marion Coun- | {v Central Committee, $2500 on Dec. | 1936: Democratic National Comittee, $5000 on the same date.
m $60,570 Disbursements of Nov. 17] Disbursement totaled $60,570.48.
Balance shown as 1036, was $4144.24 during the period of them were: | Townsend pins in 1936, $408.35; | salary to Dick Heller, who manthe campaign of Governor Townsend, $300 on Dec. 4, 1936, $100 on Dec. 12, Dec. 17 and | 31; telephone expenses, Dec. | 11, 1936, $1056; French Lick Springs | Hotel
Some
agea
ANA na
De C
owned by Tom Taggart, | prominent Democrat, $934.36; James Beatty, salary, $350 on Jan. 28, 1937, $346.50 on Feb. 22, 1937. poll books in 1937 was set a donation to the National Committee on 1937, totaled $2500 M successful for nominajudge of Superior Court spent $1891, he reported. Of this 21000 was for a contribution to
wr ad
Cost $2167.76, ratic
of at and Democ April 13 Herbert Spencer, candidate Democratic
inn for
vives the
committee.
AMIN TY COoull
19 Others File Expenses
Nin 13 filed in
candidates and six Republicans today. They
eteen other Democrats
accounts the for County E. Weir Superior A. | for Amos |
Russe, defeated for Democratic nominaton Clerk, $44232: Clarence Democrat, defeated for Court 2.38; William BRrown, Democratic nominee County Commissioner, $237. Stevens, Democratic nominee for | the same office, $106, and Frank Carnes, Republican nominee { County Treasurer, $920.25
Certification of Remy Is Opposed
An asking
Elect Commissioners
judge $50
0
injunction tha the
ion be strained from certifying William H. Remy as the Republican candidate for the Judge of Juvenile Court was asked in a on file today in | Superior Court The suit was filed by hite, whom Mr. Remy for the nomination by a 30,735 to 4902. Mr. White contended that Mr Remy did not represent the Repub- | ican Party because he was the can- | te of the Juvenile Court Committee and a nonpartisan running n the Republican ticket.
Lists 1 order to become a Republican candidate,” complaint | “one must make a declaration will support the principles f the ® Republican Part ty; that those
re-
1 suit
9 <
Harrison defeated vote of
vr VV
Qualifications
the aid,
that he
the ®
Other contributions | from hans organiztaion were May 14,
i Pauw
counted,
at ed WD Sle
known as the “Two Per Cent Club”
alaries of State employees.
BALANCE SYSTEM
1936, and May 14, 1938, |
DECLARED MENACED
Republican Women Hear Attack on New Deal.
The making
National Administration
y |
is an attack on the balanced |
svstem of government, Mrs. Eleanor | Parker Snodgrass, Nashville, Repub- |
lican State vice chairman, charged in a speech before the Indianapolis Women's Republican Club at Columbia Club today.
“We have never before President who wanted citizens to
the |
had a |
look to him and not to the Govern- | |
ment for help,” she said.
Mrs. President sought control of Government jobs by the proposed reorganization bill and scored him seeking to change the Supreme Court personnel. She charged also that the President is seeking to have millions in relief funds placed in his hands and that he sent Postmaster General Farley into Pennsylvania to choose candidates in this week's primary.
PUBLICATIONS HEADS NAMED AT DEPAUW
GREENCASTLE May 18-De-University's publications | board of control todav announced | new editors and business managers The DePauw, student newspaper, and The Mirage, yearbook, for next veal James Baxter, Rising Sun, is to be editor-in-chief of The DePauw. and Harold Cook, Mishawaka, is to be The Mirage editor. John Life, Kokomo. business manager of
of
is the new
be The Mirage business manager
principles must needs be partisan | | principles: { enforce the spirit, | of the said
that it is impossible to letter and intent (State) primary law in | when the Republican |“ County Committee would (and did) refuse to support the integrity of the Republican Party by and supporting the said program that would take away ship and the equity under the law | of individual Republicans . . .” Dr. Frank S. C. 'C. Wicks, venile Court Committee chairman was named as a codefendant.
———
Judge Buente Gains
this State
‘In Evansville Recount
EVANSVILLE, May 19 (U A recount of five out of 82 Vvan-! derburg County precincts today showed Judge Benjamin E, Buente | gaining on Edward E. Meyer, Dem-
P=]
[ocratic nominee for Superior Judge. | Mever was declared nomin: |
Mr. ed by 822 primary,
votes after the May In the five precincts Judge Buente gained 45 | Election commissioners re- | thev
"Oo. |
votes, ported
The DePauw, |
| and Jack Pearce, Terre Haute. is to |
indorsing |
its partisan |
Ju- |
|
found numerous muti- |
Snodgrass charged that the |
for |
this summer are McCormick, 66millionaire farm ma- | manufacturer of Chicago, | and his nurse, Adah Wilformer confidante of the Jean Harlow, pictured at dup
To Harold year-old chinery (lower), son, ate
CHAIRMAN USTED BY MADISON G. 0. P.
‘Ray Gibbons Is Successor to Blanchard Horne.
marry Fowler
35,
ANDERSON, May 19 (U. P).~— Ray Gibbons took control of the | Madison County Republican Com- ( mittee today following the ouster last night of Blanchard J. Horne, who was re-elected county chairman after the primary. Mr. Gibbons is a former chairman, served a term | as State Representative, and once was employed by the Public Serv[ice ‘Commission. Mr. Horne said he will appeal the vote to the State Republican Committee. Mr. Horne was charged with appointing precinct committeemen and women who were not Repub- | | licans, but who were pledged to vote {for him. He also was accused of | issuing proxies to his friends. Mr. Horne presided over the session which decided to oust him by a vote of 71 to 54. He formerly was { Mayor of Anderson.
|
[a special retort to Mr.
Is Noted Along With Farley Rebufl.
(Continued from Page One)
tin’s power record and praising Mr. Hess, Because of these circumstances, a victory for Governor Martin over Mr. Hess would be interpreted as a direct rebuff to the President.
lengthening series in which White House influence, correctly or not, regarded as involved.
The shadow of the crucial Kentucky contest, where Senate Majority Leader Barkley, bearing a Presidential letter of endorsement, faces th challenge of rambunctious Gov= ernor Chandler, fell across the Pennsylvania primary in an exchange of statements between National Committee Chairmen Farley and Republican John D. M. Hamilton. Mr. Hamilton suggested that Mr. Farley's last-minute endorsement of Mr. Kennedy in Pennsylvania was part of a deal with Mr, Lewis, in return for which Mr. Lewis would throw his influence to Mr. Barkley in Kentucky. Because of Mr. Farley's endorsement of Mr. Kennedy, Mr. Hamilton
“well-deserved rebuke to the Presi dent and Mr. Farley.” And added: “I have no doubt that Kentuckians will resent Mr. Farley placing them | on the political auction block in the same manner that Pennsylvanians did.” Mr. Farley, having already issued | la statement on the Pennsylvania | primary—an appeal for party har {mony in order that the Democrats | [might win in November—released | Hamilton, | charging him with giving “currency [to a deliberate falsehood.” The Hamilton Statement,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Heavy Republican Ballot Mr. Farley,
great wisdom but certainly I would
[such a deal, lof truth in that story.
Oregon's primary is but one in a
!
is |breech in Democratic ranks were {the factors on which chief political {attention centered.
| |
called the Pennsylvania result a |
{
| | | |
said |
FRIDAY, FRIDAY NIGHT & SATURDAY
Et i pid icici) TR 5 . op
Pennsylvania Primary Spurs National G. O. P. Hopes for 40
| named Mr,
lis decent. I lay no claim to any
not be idiot enough to enter into | There is not a word | Both Mr. Hamilton and former Governor Landon of Kansas saw in | the larger aggregate of Republican than Democratic primary votes in Pennsylvania an augury of G. O, P. success in November. Mr. Landon called the vote jencouraging.” The numerical superiority of the Republican vote and the deep
“very |
Farley led in the effort to close Democratic ranks by prompt messages of full support to Gov. George Earle, successful Senatorial candidate whom he had indorsed, and to Charles Alvin Jones, who won Gu- | bernatorial nomination over the Farley-indorsed Kennedy. No message or statement issued from Mr. Lewis nor from Senator Guffey, sponsors of candidates Kennedy and Mayor S. Davis Wilson of Philadelphia, who lost the Senatorial fight to Earle. Mr. Lewis, Mr. Guffey and Wal- | ter A. Jones, Mr. Guffey’s Pittsburgh lieutenant, conferred lengthily late yesterday. Mr. Guffey emerged | D to say that he had “no statment” on support of the Democratic ticket. |
Editorial Opinion ‘Sees Lewis Rebuffed | By United Press Following is a cross-section of edi- |
torial comment on the results of the Pennsylvania primary:
NEW YORK SUN—The Prottin, | primary election gave the White House general staff a bad case of | overconfidence; the Pennsylvania returns ought to bring all concerned {down to earth.
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Per-
his political strength.
NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE | @OLUMBUS
~The most significant feature of the Pennsylvania primary results is their stinging rebuke to John L. Lewis. |
“is going beyond what haps Lewis has passed the peak ot | big strongholds of the organization
is reassuring.
(0) DISPATCH - It is a note of encouragement to the business man that the American worker, as well as the employer, is aroused to the dangers which beset
NEW YORK TTMES-1t is evident | him,
that another C. I. O. campaign has come a cropper. NEW YORK MIRROR--Pennsyl-vania proves that the New Deal | political machine has cracked wide | open. . Even plainer was Penn- | sy Ivania® s ‘message to John L. Lewis. |
WASHINGTON POST — Outstanding .
|
|
‘Martin Is Favorite
In Oregon Primary PORTLAND, Ore, May 19 (U.P) | <Governor Martin and Henry 1, Hess, seeking the Democratic gub-
. is the drastic deflation | ernatorial nomination, closed their |
THURSDAY,
| Rosevelt told him that
fably cause more misery-
MAY 19, 1938
third of the voters reside, but that he would carry the out-state pres cincts by enough to offset the Port«
land figure, Mr, Martin, President You and I make a good pair,” only to draw an official White House denial, ase sailed “outsiders” who injected themselves into the campaign. He Ickes, who accompanied tO sco
who said
Mr, Hess’ campaign manager President Roosevelt,
SORE FEET How Napoleon’s
Soldiers Fixed Them Up Right
Bore, foot
“More
aching, burning probe ige tress—more bad temper and cursing than most any other human | ment “Oil your feet,” ordered Napoleon
to his soldiers before a battle or a
alle
of the high hopes entertained by | campaigns today with Mr. Martin a long march-he was a clever man,
John L. Lewis, generalissimo of the C. 1. O,, to become a power behind the throne in Democratic politics. |
WASHINGTON HERALD -—
1t | | White House and the encourage-
| slight favorite in the betting despite | | the rebuff he suffered from the
may well be that the National | ment lent Mr. Hess by Secretary |
Democratic Chairman figursd that | Tekes and Senator | he could not afford to let Kennedy
win without his support.
BALTIMORE SUN-—It would not | Governor Martin would lose Mult- |ought to know it-
Norris of Ne |
braska. The primary is tomorrow, Politcal writers predicted that |
Many a time—overnighttake out the sting—the
-you can sorenes
{the burning and aching from your | poor distressed feet by giving
them (a good rubbing with penetrating medicated OMEGA OIL Sleep more soundly and tomorrow morning foot agony will be on ils way -= thousands know this — vou «35 cents, “Oil
do to deduce from the defeat of the nomah County (Portland), where a | your feet. "Advert isement.
Lewis-Guffey combination that Mr. Lewis and the C. I. O. are wholly shorn of power or that their political aspirations are thrown into the discard. KANSAS CITY STAR — The
Democratic and New Deal forces of the state in their heated contest for
control of the immense state and |
| Federal spoils involved, have fur-| nished their G. O. P. opponents with enough ammunition to wage a most destructive battle from now until November.
DETROIT FREE PRESS-—-The C. I. O.... failure. . , in one of “i “John, Mary, Don’t Worry! | All the Clothes You Want WITHOUT CASH
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knee-hol
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6-CUSHION GLIDER
Six-cushion glider, in fine weather repellent covers — sagless coil sorir ng base -- sensationally priced.
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WHITE’ GAS RANGE
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With Trade-In 17¢ A DAY
We were able to secure a limited number of these refrigerators for
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you never
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THE STORE
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SURPLUS - STOCK IDISPOSAL SALE
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man linen wash ma 14 to 44
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Whites & Pastel Colors! SUITS
tailored chark tea
34
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2 LARGE RUMMAGE
TABLES
50¢ to $1 Values Men's, Women's and Children’s SHIRTS — UNDER WEAR — SWEATERS -- DRESSES POLO SHIRTS — PAJAMAS, WASH SUITS and much other merchandise. Soiled from handling. Your Choice Tables
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bY
39¢ to 49¢ Values
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Whites, blues
Misses and Children’s
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Women's 29¢
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Hardw ood, no Friday
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colors esh
fan Linen finish,
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914 -Inch Glass
MIXING BOWLS Verv snecial for Fri-
8:¢c
Glass
CUPS-SAUCERS All first 1 2;¢
day at
15¢
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WE 26
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TRADE IN YOUR OLD SUITE FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 9 P. M.
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Self - Sealing vegetable crisper and conven ient fruit basket
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PANT OVERALLS
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