Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 January 1939 — Page 9
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20 DEMOCRATS MAKE PLANS FOR
JACKSON DINNER
“Campaign to ‘Restore Party To People’ lzaunched By New Group.
Ww i : 5 w, A campaign to “restore the Dem-
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Jocratic Party to the people” will be Jaunched with a Jackson Day ban-
" quet here Jan. 12, Bert Wilhelm,
chairman of a committee of 20 Democrats, announced today. > The committee, organized a week ‘ago to sponsor legislation designed ‘to prevent “boss rule” in party politics during primary elections, voted to stage the banquet at a ;meeting at the Hotel Washington ‘yesterday. : * “The banquet will mark the be(ginning of what we hope will be a
‘Sisuccessful campaign to take con-
‘trol of the Democratic Party in Marion County and Indiana away from a few political dictators and J give’ the party back to the people where it belongs,” Mr. Wilhelm said. 4 Limited to 100 | Members of a committee appoint‘ed to arrange the banquet include: Thomas Magee, attorney; Perry ‘Easton, former State Senator; Clar-
* «ence E. Weir, former judge of Su-
|perior Court 4; Joseph Williams, ; former judge of Superior Court 2, .and Thomas Meeker. In addition to a bill designed ‘to ban issuance of slates by party +leaders in primary elections, "Mr. Easton said the committee will ‘sponsor a measure to take control of patronage away from the State ‘House and “restore it fo precinct
*“ committeemen in the various coun-
‘ties of the State.” " - “Political control in Indiana is ‘ ‘becoming ‘Hitlerized’ by the stead"ily increasing centralization of ! power with a few party bosses,” Mr.
: "Easton said.
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‘ The Spink-Arms Hotel has been , Selected tentatively as the site for the banquet but committee mem- " bers said this may be changed be- . fore the banquet date. : Tickets for the affair will be lim‘ited to 100 Democrats and “speak-
. ers in sympathy with our movement
. will be on the. program,” Mr. Wilhelm said. ' Ira Haymaker, County Democratic _ chairman, declined to comment on
« organization of the committee or
» .
e
; its plans for a Jackson Day ban- . quet. i
"RECORDING ARTISTS FIGHT NICKLELODIONS
NEW YORK, Jan. 4 (U. P.)—Recording entertainers were united . today in a war on the nickel-in-the-slot phonograph and other me- . chanical music devices which pay no royalties to the artists other “ than revenue from original sale of ‘records. ‘ The National Association of Per-
¢ forming Artists absorbed the rival
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* American Society of Record Artists. ‘ Fred Waring, band leader and head ‘ of the new organization, announced start of the war on “destructive” competition of the electric phonograph. Directors of the NAPA include ° Mr. Waring, Al Jolson, vice president; Mary Garden, Dick Powell, John McCormack, Lucrezia Bori, Victor Young, Noel Coward, Arthur W. Levy, Alfred Hertz and Richard ‘Crooks. :
MRS. ROSS TIGHTENS PHILADELPHIA MINT
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 4 (U. PJ). —Workmen today began placing heavy grills on every unprotected window of the U. S. mint here to forestall a “break” similar to that by two small boys at the San Francisco mint. When news of the Pacific Coast exploit reached Mrs. Nellie Tayloe Ross, director of the Mint, she | im- - mediately started an investigation to determine whether protection | was adequate. Although basement and
« first floor windows were heavily
barred, Mrs. Ross discovered that about 50 third and fourth story windows were unprotected and ordered the grillwork installed.
MOTHER TO SURVIVE YULE TREE SHOOTING
ELYRIA, O, Jan. 4 (U. P.).—Mrs. Mae Rousseau, shot and wounded seriously by 84-year-old farmer, Will Case, who shot to death her hus-
® b pand, William, when the couple was
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chopping down a Christmas tree for their children, was reported danger today. ton
g of || Physicians at Memerial Hospital
‘said that barring complicatiohs Mrs. Rousseau would survive two shotgun wounds in the right side. She is 29. Case is free on bond awaiting grand jury action on a charge of manslaughter in the death of Xr. Rousseau, who was 37.
‘SENATOR GLASS SORRY FOR 81ST BIRTHDAY
WASHINGTON, Jan. 4 (U. P.).— Senator Glass (D. Va.) said today ‘there were “81 reasons” why he was sorry that.he would celebrate his 81st birthday today. them. “TT feel }i¥%s the A--porters seeking ‘a ‘birthday inter view. “Nobody would have known 1 was 81 if it hadn’t been for the newspapers. | : “There’s nothing to talk about: I'm just sorry about the whole thing.” |
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Augustine © Waldemaras, once leader of the Fascist “Iron Wolf” organization, may be included in Lithuanian Government because of Nazi demands.
Ducky
When Local ‘Corrigan’ Mallards Sail South It'll Be Warm.
CIENTIFIC weather observations might be ‘all right for some people, but not Albert Losche, City Purchasing Agent. He prefers to rely on the natural instincts of 18 wild mallard ducks. The ducks, which Mr. Losche acquired three years ago, live in a still pool of water in Fall Creek
just behind his residence at 3214 Sutherland Ave. i, They look exactly like thousands of other ducks of the same species, but here the similarity ends, he says. : ; It is a general tendency on the " part of ducks to head south when it gets cold, but not Mr, Losche’s ducks. They go north. + And when Mr. Losche finds his ducks splashing around in the creek about four blocks north of his back yard, he knows it is time to get out the earmuffs and mittens. . » 2 2 R. LOSCHE says that his ducks usually are impervious to cold, but they have an instinct which tells them when the water in the still pool where they spend most of their time is going to freeze. L As soon as this inStinct begins to work, the ducks, like a battle squadron directéd by radio, wheel around and sail northward so fast they leave a backwash, They go toa peint in the creek where the current prevents the ice from forming, and they stay there until all danger of getting their tail feathers frozen is past. fe “I don’t know what it is, but they seem to smell the ice before it comes,” Mr. Losche says. “Sure enough, right after they go northward, the water in the creek backof my lot freezes. : “Then when they start moving south again, you can be pretty sure the ice is going to melt.”
U.S.COURT UPHOLDS DENMARK DECREE
NEW YORK, Jan. 4 (U. P)—A
mark dissolving the marriage of two Danish citizens living in the United ‘States was upheld today in an opinion by the Appellate Division of the New York Supreme Court. Mrs. Eva Hansen, Freeport, N. Y., had requested a separation from her husband, Ernest, of Baldwin, N. Y,, déspite the royal decree dissolving the marriage. She obtained a favorable: opinion from the Supreme Court. The Appellate Division, in reversing the lower court’s decision, ruled that “a judgment of the courts of Denmark dissolving the marriage is entitled to full faith and credit by the courts of this state.”
CALIFORNIAN SWORN IN
the first time in New York legal history an attorney was sworn .in here as a member of the California bar. Magistrate Irving Ben Cooper administered the oath to Mendel H. Lieberman of Los Angeles, Cal, son of his close friend, Jacob Lieberman.
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43 WEST WASH....23 N. PENN
INTER,
SUITS TOPCOR
OVERCOATS
( nesuLak 51.68 MEN'S |
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All sizes, new wanted patterns in collar attached styles, guaranteed. - fast colors. Our $1.65 values go out at
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$1.95 Men's Dress Shirts go at 97¢ Il +$2,50 Men’s Dress Shirts at $1.47
/ :
—
SUITS, TOPCOATS, OVERGOATS
Oiir standard $20 values. The suits are all tight woven, long wearing fabrics in a ‘wide
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‘at 9 a.
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SUITS, TOPGOATS, OVERGOATS
‘Our standard $25 garments.
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on sale beginning Thursday m. at either of
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A Group of Regular $1
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better coats from our higher-priced
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TR an IY
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Our regular $3.95 men's finest genuine Hockemeyer ‘corduroy pants, all sizes in fancy patterns for young
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S
i7
Tw Tm i v 35¢ Men's SHIRTS or SHORTS = Our regular 35¢c men’s sh or shorts. he shorts are o
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