Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1940 — Page 6
PAGE 8
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EQUIPMENT FOR VOTING READY
Distribution to Start on Saturday; Must Be Done By Monday Night.
Distribution of county election equipment, including ballot boxes, | voting booths and tables for Tues-| day's primary election, will begin Saturday. | Trucks will be sent to the County vards at 2001 Northwestern Ave. to pick up the equipment, which the law specifies must be distributed to the 341 precinct polling places by Monday night. Last-minuite preparations for the central ballot counting Tuesday night will be started Sunday at 11 a. m., when 341 precinct poll inspectors will meet at Tomlinton Hall to receive instructions from the] County Election Board. County Clerk Charles R. Ettinger, a Board member, said the meeting is specifically for the inspectors, but judges, clerks and sheriffs appointed for election day may attend. | The public also is invited. | At 4 p. m. Sunday the Election Board will discuss plans for the
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central counting, to be held inf Tomlinson Hall, with 30 counting supervisors. | The ballots, now coming off | presses at the Indianapolis Print-| ing Co. will be ready for distribution to voting places Monday. They also must be at the voting stations by Monday night. New tables equipped with special lights will be set up in Tomlinson Hall Sunday afternoon for central counting.
Raps ‘Mud-Slinging’ In Sheriff Campaign
The fight for the Republican nomination for sheriff seems to| have ceased to be a gentlemen's fight, Morris D. Corbin, a candidate for the nomination, asserted Jast night in a talk before a Wayne Township audience. | “Judging from the lies that are being circulated about me and] which are reported to come from | my opponents, they don’t want a | clean campaign,” Mr. Corbin said. “But I want to remind you that those with the dirty hands threw the first mud.” |
SPEED SUITS ME IN A RACING CAR ee BUT | WANT MY CIGARETTE SLOWBURNING. CAMELS BURN SLOWER GIVE ME THE ‘EXTRAS’ IN SMOKING PLEASURE —AND EXTRA SMOKING Bf FOR MY MONEY, T00!
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CITES MENACE
T0 LABOR ACT|
Halleck Says ‘Irritants’ Hold Threat; Papers Discuss Race.
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Times Photo.
A new traffic flag standard, which will fly a black flag on day's of traffic fatalities and a white flag on other days, is being erected
to drive and walk carefully. Zook tear down the old standard
County Accident Prevention Bureau decided more people would see | it on Washington St. than on the Circle.
the on the south side of the Court House, along Washington St. where | a stream of motorists and pedestrians can see it plainly as a reminder 'mittee for changes in the law. Above, George Pollard, left, and Edward ge
on Monument Circle. The Marion
Bloomfield Joyously Waits Bridge Opening Tomorrow
|perintendent of Linton City UtiliBLOOMFIELD, Ind, April 30.— ties, will read original poems. Music at about ¢ will be provided by the Switz City o'clock a Bloomfield High School and Linton High School bands and
Times Special Tomorrow afternoon
girl will cut a ribbon opening the new half-million dollar bridge across White River here. The queen has been selected by a vote of the high school and eighth grade students, but the result of the election is to be kept secret until the parade starts in front of the Court House at 1 o'clock tomorrow. The two girls receiving next highest number of votes will be the queen's attendants. X Details of the formal dedication program were announced by Mrs.
i Bertha A. Crane, general chairman, t following conferences last week with
State Highway Commission and State Police officials. John A. Watkins of Bloomfield is to be master of ceremonies, Chairman T. A. Dicus of the State Highway Commission is to be the dedicatory speaker. Walton Stover, su-
f /majority throughout the which demands changes both in the J
} | Indiana newspapers, the Lafayette
| | “meddling”
. imanship and accused him of plan-
ination of Rep. Halleck and accused
THE INDIANAPOLIS
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2 ® TIMES _
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“Poland's Loss
Unless irritants in the present
{National Labor Relations Act are! ‘removed, they may ultimately up-| {root the entire law, Rep. Charles! A. Halleck (R. Ind) said in al {broadcast over a NBC network last night. Rep. Halleck, who is seeking renomination from the Second District, said he feels there is a clear country
law and in its administration. Meanwhile, Rep. Halleck was the subject of front page articles in two
Journal-Gazette criticized him for in the fight for the Second District Republican chair-
ning to stampede the state convention to obtain the senatorial nomination.
Plymouth Paper Supports Him The Plymouth Pilot urged renom-
supporters of his opponent, Frederick Landis Jr. Logansport, of “crooked politics” in urging Democrats to call for Republican ballots in the May 7 primary and to vote for Mr. Landis. Rep. Halleck was a member of the committee which studied the] acts of the National Labor Relations Board and made recom-| mendants to the House Labor Com-
In his radio talk last night, he outlined the various amendments recommended by the committee and incorporated in the Norton Bill, now pending before the House.
Says Board Faced Difficulties It is true, he said that the present Board has had a difficult and troublesome job, made more difficult by the division in the ranks of labor. “But it is likewise true,” he said,
by the Jasonville Triads, a singing| organization. Blomfield schools will missed and the children will join in| the parade. The bridge is to be! decorated with bunting and all residences on Main St. in Bloomfield are to fly the American flag. { Mayors, presidents of chambers! of commerce, town boards, and community and service clubs in all the towns of Greene County and, Bloomington, Vinoennes, Sullivan and Washington have been invited to attend as guests of honor. Highway 54, on which the new bridge is located and over which traffic has been routed on the old; bridge, will be closed during the ceremonies, from noon to 4 p. m. State policemen in Bloomfield and! Switz City will re-route the traffic
{
“that a fair consideration of the
evidence before our committee will
[sustain much of the contention
generally prevalent that a great part| of the difficulty has been the ad-|
be dis. / ministration of the Act, rather than Cent Club is not unconstitutional
in the Act itself.” One of the proposed amendments would provide for appointment of| a new board of five members, instead of the present three,
Stresses Importance | Of Primary Choices
Republican success in the general election depends on the quality of nominees selected in the primary next Tuesday, A. Jack] Tilson, candidate for the G. O. P.| nomination for Marion County prosecutor, declared last night. He! spoke at several ward meetings. “The burden of Republican suc-
a
You'd smile too if, like pretty Polish ballerina Toni Noviska, pictured above on her recent arrival .in New York, you were safely. headed for Hollywood, after " having to flee Russian Poland. T0 JOIN 29% ACTION i 0 1 Carl Vandivier, County Re-| publican chairman, is studying the] request of Glenn W. Funk, candi-| date for Prosecutor, that Mr, Van-| divier join Mr. Funk's pending suit] against the Two Per Cent Club: . Mr. Funk's suit, filed a week ago, seeks to remove the clab’s immunity from the Corrupt Practices Act. In a letter to the chairman yesterday, Mr. Funk said he believes Mr. Vandivier, as county chairman, is as “interested as I am” in the suit and invited him to join as a plaintiff. Mr. Vandivier, confined to his home by illness, dictated a reply in which he said that because of his official position in the party, he felt it best to confer with party leaders before acting. “I wrote,” Mr. Vandivier said, that I approved heartily of the suit and said that if the so-called Two Per
and in violation of the Corrupt
DEAN ATTACKS 6.0. P. APPEAL
Calls Opponents’ Pledges Weirdest Ever Heard In a Campaign.
“Our Republican friends are making the weirdest assortment of promises ever heard in a poltical campaign,” Russell J. Dean, candidate for the 11th District Democratic Congressional nomination, said at a Beech Grove campaign meeting last night. “They are perfectly serious,” he added, “when they pledge increased expenditures for WPA, higher pensions, more social security and a greater Navy on the one hand, while on the other hand they promise lower taxes and a balanced budget. “They become so childish as to believe that the public has forgotten the looters of the Harding administration, the plunderbund of Coolidge’s term, and the fantastic economics of Hoover’s day, and tell us that the financial salvation of the country depends upon the Republican Party. “Yes, there are humorous sides even to politics.”
Owens Claims Farm Problem Is Mishandled
The nation is beginning to realize that the farm problem has been terribly mishandled during the last seven years, Ernest E. Owens, candidate for the 12 District Republican Congressional nomination, said last night. Speaking at 2111 Miller St, Mr. Owens said the New Dealers have tried one expensive experiment after another and “they are still groping in the dark for something that will produce the desired results.” >
Collective Bargaining
Termed Un-American
Harrison White, candidate for the 12th District Republican Congressional nomination, declared collective bargaining and the National Labor Relations Act are un-Amer-ican, in a campaign talk last night at 802 S. Belmont Ave. “Collective bargaining is unAmerican for it leads to dictatorship and regimentation and to a power
Practices Act, then we had better change the Constitution and get|
back to where the people can vote|
out the influence of shockingly| large sums of money.” El |
TAFT CAMPAIGN UNIT T0 BE OPENED HERE
The Claypool Hotel, already bulg- | ing with politicians and political | campaign headquarters, will make
so great that it becomes a menace to the nation and to those who toil. The Labor Relations Act and the
lon principles and candidates with-| power of the Labor Relations Board
are un-American for they put into a straitjacket the man who toils and the industry of the nation.”
Erbecker Attacks WPA Layoff Rule
The law requiring layoffs of all WPA workers who have been on the rolls . 18 months was criticized by William C. Erbecker, candidate for the 12th District Democratic congressional nomination in a talk last
cess is on vou as voters and work- room for one more Thursday when night at 1907 Park Ave.
ers to exercise both your right and |
Senator Robert A. Taft, Republican |
“It is impossible to believe,” Mr.
on Roads 57, 67 and 157. |duty to nominate men who are Presidential aspirant, will open an|Erbecker said, “that some Congress-
City Photo Club
STARK PRAISED BY |
honest, capable and who have had | in their own right the friendship of the party workers over a long| of years,” he said.
period Collins to Address
“information” office here. | The Claypool, hub of the Hoosier) political arena, already houses nine| separate major campaign head-| quarters, including the Republican | and Democratic State Committee]
men want to’ stop the WPA and throw thousands of worthy men with families out of work. At present there is no private employment for these unfortunate men and to cut them cff the WPA would, in
In Congress Race
Mrs. Margaret Chase Smith, 39-year-old widow of Republican Representative Clyde H. Smith of Maine, has announced that she would be a candidate for the office left vacant by the death of her husband. With her announcement she became the first woman ever to seek a major office in the state of Maine.
BOSSERT HITS U.S. BUREAUS
Which Will Shrivel Our Liberties.’
FT. WAYNE, April 30.—Walter PF. Bossert of Liberty, candidate for Republican nomination as U. S. Senator, told a party audience nere last night that the “rapidly multiplying regulatory bureaus set up under the New Deal are as a creeping paralysis, which will, if not abolished, shrivel our liberties to the vanishing point.”
“Ours is no longer a government by law,” Mr. Bossert said, “but a government by edict. The average man thinks Congress writes the laws, but this is not so. Bureaus und agencies, so many that one has trouble in identifying them, not only interpret our law, but issue edicts, rules and regulations to suit themselves. | “These bureaus exercise quasi- | legislative and quasi-judicial powers. Their rules are legislation and their rulings are judical decisions.”
Likens Them to ‘Paralysis’
Mr. Bossert said that it was disclosed during an investigation in 1937 that 130 of these bureaus had
and that “scores of others” had | been brought into existence since {that time.
Urges Repeal of ‘Reorganization Law
The State Reorganization Law should be repealed to give elected state officials the right to name their own deputies and employees, Ernest T. Lane, Republican candidate for State Representative, said at a rally last night at 2111 Miller St. “Those named to fill state offices
SY
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_ TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1940
EMMERT- URGES
“LIVE PLATFORM :
Advises G. 0. P. at Akron to Avoid Pitfall of Offering Merely Criticism.
Times Special AKRON, Ind., April 30. — Judge James A. Emmert, Shelbyville, Republican candidate for nomination for Governor, told the Akron Republican Club last night that a “strong platform—one that will offer constructive suggestions for the improvement of state government—
should be drafted at the G. O. P, state convention. Urging that the party convention, to be held next month, “avoid the easy pitfall of offering merely criticism,” Judge Emmert outlined several proposals he said he believed should be considered and written into the Republican platform. “With a sound, constructive program—one that will appeal to the voters of Indiana—we can hope to turn the political tide in November,” Judge Emmert said. “Criticism alone will not suffice.” The candidate enumerated “ways in which our state government can be improved.” He mentioned free school books, changing the expiration date of automobile and truck lirenses from Jan. 1 to July 1, state ownership and operation of liquor stores and a 25 per cent state payroll cut.”
G. 0. P. Will Finish Job
Started in ’38, Jenner Says
CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. April 30 (U. P).—William E. Jenner of Shoals, a candidate for the G. O.P, gubernatorial nomination, last night promised Wabash College students a “complete Republican victory” in the 1940 elections. He said that the party was going Yo finish “the job begun in 1938.” Mr. Jénner pointed out newse paper articles carried for seven years telling of criminal charges against governmental units and of convicetions for activities of many govern= mental officers.
DEMOCRAT CLUB TO MEET,
The Democratic Club of Center Township (outside) will meet at 8 Pp m. tomorrow in the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Degner, 351 N. 18th St., Beech Grove.
been set up under the New Deal [Ql
in Vitamins
A TR RR RE
~ CAPITAL ATTORNEY
A BD, and G Costs Less L. than a
x . |offices and the McNutt-for-Presi-| effect, wilfully starve their families | Support of Judson L. Stark's can-| Nationality Groups |dent national headquarters. land children. Let the Federal Gov-
Sua : Others “headquartering” at the er t slash it dit 1se- : ict Repub- ames A. Collins, former judge of |, =. : ernment slash 1ts expenditures eise |aidacy for the 12th District Repub Ld Marion Coty Criminal Court | hub” include two Democratic can-| where, but not where the very ex-
[lican Congressional nomination Is tho is seeking the Republican nom- |didates for Governor — R. Earl ist ence of poor people is concerned.”
by the voters,” Mr. Lane said, “should not be hog-tied in the matter of who shall do work for which the officials assume full responsibility. .
Exhibit to Open |
The Indianapolis Camera Club will hold its Spring Exhibition of
| Pictorial Photography at club
headquarters, 110 E. Sth St,
{Peters and Lieut. Gov. Henry
Thursday through May 12th and
| at the L. S. Ayres & Co. Galleries,
May 13 to 22. Among the 65 prints to be ex-
8 | hibited are three chosen by the
| judges as this year’s best.
| are by Earl A. Robertson, 1109 N. | Dearborn St.; George E. Tomlin- | son, 413 E. 43th St., and Mrs. Her- | man A. Scherrer. Marott Hotel.
BOB SWANSON Midget Auto Racing Champion WX HETHER you smoke a lot or a little, you'll find several definite “extras” in the slowerburning cigarette...Camel. You'll find freedom from the excess heat | and drying, irritating qualities of
too-fast burning. .. extra mildwess | and extra coolness. You'll find a cig- |
| {
arette that doesn’t tire your taste | Will be introduced. Russell I. Rich-| {ardson, Republican candidate forip
Judges were W. H. Beck, Miss Grace Custer, and Grant Steel. Neil Campbell is in charge of the
| exhibit.
G. 0. P. MINUTE MEN
T0 SPONSOR RALLY
A Washington Township Republican rally will be held by the G. O.
in the Riviera Club. All Republican candidates present
They |
contained in a letter received by| ‘Mr. Stark from Everett Sanders, |
former Hoosier Congressman and! former secretay to President Calvin Coolidge. Mr. Sanders, who as a resident of | {Terre Haute served eight years in| Congress, also is a former Republic- | an national committee chairman and is senior member of the Wash-| ington, D. C, law firm of Sanders, Gravelle, Whitlock and Howry. In! his letter, Mr. Sanders said: | “You are an ideal candidate to {restore this district to the Repub-| {lican column. Your ability and your
experience in public affairs will be of government for special classes|giqacy may receive campaign literaThe next|and are looking to the Republican tyre and reports of campaign acParty for the way out, Max M.|
tremendous asset. House will probably be Republican. | It will be, if special effort is made
‘swing toward Republican Party, can be recaptured.”
'P. Minute Men at 8 p. m. tomorrow Benadum Advocates
Gross Tax Revision
CENTERVILLE, Ind. April 30 (U. ~—Clarence Benadum, candidate
[Italian section, at 504 S. Alabama
ination for Congress from the 12th District, will be the principal speak- | er this week at two large Republican rallies sponsored by voters of | foreign birth. | He will address a group in the | St., tomorrow night, and will speak | before members of the Yugoslav) National Home Society, 3626 W. 16th St., Friday night.
Decries Government | ‘For Special Classes’
The people of Indiana are tired
Plesser, Republican candidate for
in the districts which, with the|State Representative, said in a series {of political talks last night.
“The Republican Party in Indiana has a splendid opportunity for victory in November,” Mr. Plesser said. “Let us make sure of that victory by presenting to the voters at the fall election a ticket of men for whom we will not have to apologize and upon whom we can rely to serve
Schricker, and four Republican can-| didates for Governor—James A.| Emmert, Shelbyville; George R. Jef-| frey, Indianapolis; William Jenner, | Shoals, and David Hogg, Ft. Wayne. ! Senator Taft's headquarters will] be directed by Mrs. Esther L. Allen, Cleveland. She will be at the Claypool office daily to answer inquiries regarding Mr. Taft's campaign. It was explained in Cleveland by David S. Ingalls, the Ohio Senator's pre-convention campaign manager, that the Indianapolis office will be a focal point where Indiana Republicans interested in Mr. Taft's can-
tivities.
ELLIOTT POINTS TO STONE FT. WORTH, ex. April 30 (U. P.). —Elliott Roosevelt, the President's son and a radio executive, said last night that U. S. Supreme Court Justice Harlan F. Stone was the Republican “to watch in 1840.” He suggested former Secretary of War Patrick J. Hurley as a dark horse for
McKinley Club Plans
Last Campaign Session
The McKinley Club, 2217 E. Michigan St. will hold the last of its series of pre-primary meetings at 8 p. m. tomorrow. All Marion County G. O. P. can-
didates have been invited and will
be introduced. The principal speaker will be George R. Jeffrey, Indianapolis, Republican candidate for Governor. served.
“I am opposed to any program that makes ‘yes men’ out of every political appointee and compels citizens to ‘line up right poltically’ before they get much-needed public relief.”
BARGAIN PERMANENTS Croquignole Steam Ofl Permatient, complete with hair cut, shame
poo, push-up $1 up
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Refreshments will be
ringlet ends. 528 Massachusetts Ave. \ LI. 0632
Canned Milk
Use Milnut in coffee, on puddings, and fos cooking where you ordinarily use milk, cream, whipping cream, or a canned milk, Whips to a fluffy, delicious topping foe desserts. Free from “canned” flavor. Milnut is a compound of evaporated skimmed milk and refined cocoanut oil. MONEY BACK if not satisfied. CAROLENE PRODUCTS CO., Litchfield, Waals,
Do not confuse Miinat with evaporated milk
Have you heard ahout the latest
...for slower burning preserves the x a full. rich flavor of el's p. | Erosecutor, is to be the principal for the Republican nomination for ’ Cam match- | speaker. : | Governor, advocated revision of the less blend of costlier tobaccos. At| The G. O. P. Minute Men is com- | Gross Income Tax to a basis that the same time, you'll be getting posed of young business and profes- | will be fair for all in a speech here . . _ |sional men of the county whose goal |1ast night the equivalent of extra smoking ; i i i Pa a, eq moking is a Republican victory in Novem-| He proposed uniform exemptions from each pack! | ber. (for all taxpayers, uniform rates for | Committee members in charge of all taxpayers, and collection of the | rangements for the meeting are tax through county treasurers in- | Farris Deputy, general chairman; stead of a central state collecting In recent laboratory tests, Roland Duvall, assistant; Lyman H. agency. He contended that his plan CAMELS burned 25%, slow- | Rhoades, speaker; Harry M. Stitle | would reduce the state payroll and er than the average of the Jr., secretary; Addison M. Dowling | “eliminate State House No. 2 in In15 other of the lar@est-sell land John K. Rickles, treasurers; |dianapolis,” referring to the Gross ing brands tested = slower John T. Goodnight, co-ordinator, Income Tax headquarters. than any of them: That and Eugene Fife, George Ryan and u Ci . ’ . {Edwin K. Steers Jr. assistant co-! HO means, on the average, a | Wes Lrges itizens
| ordinators. | : " smoking plus equal to Ter of g Advisory Committee
| Other committee heads are O. Hanger, attendance chairma n: | Selection of a citizens’ advisory EXTRA Charles committee for the prosecutor's
for the best interest of the greatest number of our community.”
Petit Tells Rally He's Pledged to No Faction
Otto W. Petit, Republican candidate for Sheriff, repeated his pledge that he is under obligation to no group or faction in a campaign talk last night at a West Side meeting. He said he has refused to make any promises other than to serve all the people. The former police captain urged the voters to study carefully. the candidates for all offices, adding that the Republican ticket will be no stronger than its
Vice President.
EE UGLY BLEWISHE m)
DISTAN SHiN-LOVELINESS! i ‘ ples. rashes, blackheads and other Hloalnes
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candidates, Thompson Kurrie, assistant; (Aldrich, -~eception chairman: Wil- office was advocated by Ira M liam A. Clabaugh, assistant; Fred Holmes, Republican candidate for Jeffrey, entertainment chairman: prosecutor, in a talk at a party
| George Wilson, assistant; John D. rally last night at 2111 Miller St. S P R I N 6 D R Y C L E A N l 4 G
| Hughes, publicity chairman; George| “I believe such a committee | 7
| Anderson, assistant, would be invaluable in helping un- | lc : . ‘ cover evidence of law violation in! | Entangling Alliances {the county,” Mr. Holmes said. EFFECTIVE MAY 1, ON MOST CALLS OVER 420 MILES Score d b R il | Referring to his own experience Y Reiley as a trial lawyer in handling crim- | Every candidate for prosecutor inal cases, Mr. Holmes said he had yg should tell the public if he has made | Pen practicing law “20 years be- Station-to-Station® a connection with any organized fore some of my worthy opponents faction, William E. Reiley, Repub-| Vere admitted to the bar.” Na Ruts ow fe lican candidate for prosecutor, said $2.20 in a campaign talk at 228 E. Wy-| 2.40 4.00 4.26 3.76
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From Te
. Boston, Mass. . . . Dallas, Texas Salt Lake City, Utah. Michigan City... Phoenix, Ariz El Paso, Texas. ...... Indianapolis Los Angeles, Calif..... Evansville. . ....New Orleans, La Anderson. .... . .San Francisco, Calif... Bloomington. . . . Portland, Me....... ve Muncie... ......Jacksonville, Fla...... Kokomo........Tulsa, Okla.......... Indianapolis. .... New York City. ..... Marion. ........Lincoln, Neb......... South Bend.....Reno, Nev........... Anderson. . .....Miami, Fla Evansville. . . ... Minneapolis, Minn.... Indianapolis. ....Denver, Colo......... New Albany. ...Seattle, Wash........ Vincennes. ...... Philadelphia, Pa......
Muncie. ....... Kokomo. ......
® Beginning May 1, coast-to-coast telephone calls and most other calls of more than 420 airline miles will cost considerably less. From Los Angeles to New York, for example, a 3-minute, station-to-station daytime call, which formerly cost $6.50, will cost $4. And after 7 p.m. and all day Sunday, only $3. A table of representative new rates is shown at the right. Look it over and you'll realize that now Long Distance is more economical than ever. Use it often to chat with far-away friends or to find busi. ness in other cities.
| joming St. last night. “No man in either party is qualified to be the nominee for prosecutor whose political fortunes are tied up to an organized faction,” he said. “The nominee for this office, above all others, should be free from entangling alliances.
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