Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1940 — Page 10
oi
§
CHANGE IN BANK LAWS
‘One Amendment Would
. of bank stockiwlders in the event
. the ‘banks, the same. as it now does for
° renewal
1851.
Ey
i lots for them. »
‘by - their father, . Paoli, Ind. rolled over in a four-car ' erash at 16th and Meridian Sts. ‘injuries and his brother, Wayne, 16,
“one else was hurt.
-
ON BALLOT
Frée Stockholders From ~ DoubléXLiability Clause.
Few voters know that they will have the opportunity to vote on three amendments to the State Constitytion wt the polls Nov. 5. The amendments, involving revisions of the state's banking laws, have little public interest, and only a small per cent of the voters are expected to vote on them. * The amendments, if adopted, would: 1. Eliminate the double liability
an institution is declared solvent.
2. Permit the Legislature to fix liability of shareholders in
other corporations. 43. Eliminate the Constitutional requirement that banks renew their charters every years. The double lixbility and charter requirements were incorporated in the: State Constitution when it became effective in Advocates bt the amendments im that protective national and legislation through the years has precluded the need for such Constitutional supervision. The amendments can be adopted by a majority’ of voters casting bal-
2 BROTHERS HURT IN FOUR-CAR CRASH
Two brothers were imjured; one seriously, today, when a car driven George Padgett,
Lawrence, 12, was taken to the City Hospital suffering from head
was given first did by police. No
Former President Herbert Hoover joins the campaign tonight with a speech at Columbus, O.
TRAIN KILLS 2 GIRLS AT GUARD FAREWELL
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y, Oct. 24 (U. P.).—Two| girls were xilledfand five persons were injured last night when a freight trapped them on the, tracks as they bade farewell to National Guardsmen entrained for the South. The girls were identified as- Lois E. Mosher, 18, and Helen M. MacNeil, 16, both of Saratoga Springs. Approximately 2000 ersons crowded the tracks near the troop train which was about tp leave ghe station. The freight, heading north, pulled into the station and the girls
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‘Tucker said at Batesville that “part of the excessive: burden of taxes
HILLIS PLEDGES FAIRNESS IN TAX
Minimum of $700 From Gross Income Levy Should Aid Schools, He Says.
By LOWELL B. NUSSBAUM
What a Surprise
A pledge to seek elimination of | Si
inequalities in the . Gross Income Tax was made By Glen R. Hillis, Republican nominee for Governor, in a campaign talk this afternoon
at Vincennes.
The nominee said it can be made into a fair and equitable tax with the proceeds devoted primarily to the educational system of Indiana. He promised that he would recommend legislation to accomplish this end.
A former teacher himself. Mr.| 38
Hillis said a minimum of $700 of Gross Income Tax funds should go to each teaching unit in the state.|
Assails Reorganization In a talk at Princeton last night,
Mr. Hillis renewed his attack on the §
1933 Reorganization Act which he referred to as the ‘notorious dictatorship law of Indiana.” Under the Act, he said, the head of the State’s department of justice —the Attorney General—becomes the puppet by appointment of the all-powerful Governor. . Raymond E. Willis, nominee for U. S. Senator, warned a Martinsville
audience last night to “preserve the| #&
‘no third term’ tradition in this election, or be prepared for a permanent dictatorship.
be everlastingly too late. : If we do not uphold the ‘no third term’ tra-
ditfon in this election, we may find| |
ourselves with a pérmanent ruler.” Richard T. James, nominee for State Auditar, declared at Dillsbdro! that “one of the most dangerous) trends ini recent years is the delega- | tion of legislative powers to bureaucrats who serve on commissions in Washington and Indianapolis.”
Urges Curb on Boards
“If -we don’t stop the New Deal] § in this election,” he warned, “it may | §
“Something must be done imme- |
"il diately,” he said, “to curb the # | power of ron-elective board mem- | | bers to pass rules that stand as
that are enforced by legislators,
law; rules
bureaudrats acting as judges and jurors.” “If the President has a monopoly on brains, how does it happen that we now have as many unemployed as in 1933?” Judge James A. Emmert of Shelbyville asked in a talk at Ft. Wayne last night.
Secretary of State James M.
saddled on, citizens of Indiana” is reflected in the number of stateowned automobiles in which state department heads and employees “tour the State at public expense.” Charles M. Dawson, nominee for Lieutenant Governor, fontaine audience’ that “there will} be no rubber stamp passed under the dictation of a favored few during the next Republican state administration.”
MARTIN ATTACKS INDISPENSABILITY’
PITTSBURGH, Oct. 24 (U. P.).— A third-term candidate, or “indispensable man,” if elected President would finally become ‘so strong nothing short of bloody revolution would blast him from his place of
power,” National Republican Chair-|§
man Joseph M. Martin Jr., ‘warned a Republican rally. Rep. Martin last night attacked the record of the New Deal and asked an audience in Duquesne Gardens what are the “accomplishments which are indispensable to the future of this nation for the next four or eight years?” “To elect a President for more than eight years is to accept the philosophy, or rather the theory of the indispensable man,” he warned. “He naturally would become more and more indispensable the longer he served. The fact is, a chief
executive simply would ‘become more §
and more firmly entrenched. behind a vast political bureaucracy.”
told a La-|}
legislation |}
Mrs. Ralph Martinie and a tomato plant . , , she's at a loss to explain, :
Mrs. Ralph’ Martinie planted four tomato ‘plants this summer at her home, 1025 N. Jefferson Ave. ‘And this is what happened, for some reascn which Mrs. Mar-
tinie is at a loss to explain: Two |
of the plants grew right up into a cherry tree and reached 11 or 112 feet; another on the north side Qf the house reach 10 feet, and the fourth one, the one which Mrs. Martihie is tending ' here, reached a height of 12" feet. Mrs. Martinie already has picked almost 100 tomatoes off the 12foot plant and she expects to get about half that many more.
“REPORT TO POLICE”
BERLIN; Oct. 24 (U. P.).—The official news agency, DNB, reported from Paris today that police there had ordered all foreigners older than 15-years ‘to report to police stations.
The practices of the “third-term | 3
candidate” inspection”
in going on
trips are the ‘very
essence of trickery, deceit, duplicity |g
and insincerity,” Rep. Martin declared. “It is obvious the third-term
“defense | §
candidate has a very poor opinion| RE
of the intelligence of the American
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tg A Nett ' THE INDIANAPOLIS TIME
G. 0. P. WOMEN HEAR ATTORNEY
L. B. Marine to Address County Meeting in K. P. Building.
A series of Republican campaign meetings in the county tonight will be featured by a countywide meeting of women at.8 p. m. in the K. of P. auditorium. Lewis E. Marine, Beech Grove and Indianapolis attorney, will speak, and Mrs. T. B. Wright, county vice chairman, will have charge of the program. : Only eight other meetings have been scheduled. These are to be at 2339 Hobart Road; 320 E. Troy Ave.
Eland 1425 Albany St. Beech Grove;
1326 Beacon St., at the University Heights School; 1433 College Ave.: 620 W. 29th St. 351 Indiana Ave. Note ‘No Third Term Day’ In their addresses last night, campaign speakers concentrated on the dictatorship issue in connection with observance of “No Third Term Day.” Alvah Waggoner, speaking at Five Points, declared the campaign is a contest “between those who believe in a democracy and those who believe in an autocracy.” “Franklin Roosevelt's self-dictated third term candidacy and his seven and a half-year record of executive aggrandizement,” Mr. Waggoner said, “make the issue clear. His election will mean to him a mandate
gt [for power.”
Maurice G. Robinson, 11th District congressional nominee, told an audience at the McKinley Club that, “We never passed a law prohibit-
f (ing any President from seeking a {third term because we felt that a
man ‘big’ enough to be President
¥ was ‘big’ enough not to be subjected
{to laws restricting this violation of jour sacred tradition.” Says Labor Fearful The rank and file of organized labor in America “fears the third (term as the first step toward dictatorship and they know that labor {always is the first to suffer under {the dictatorship,” the Republican | Wage Earners League was told by |S. P. Meadows. Mr. Meadows is vice president of the United Brotherhood |of Carpenters and Joiners of Amerlica. | . James “A. Collins, 12th District icongressional nominee, cited the |collapse of France as “a lesson we {cannot afford to disregard,” in addressing an East Side audience. Sherwood Blue, nominee for I Prosecutor, in a Second Ward talk, again pledged that if elected, he never would permit political ambition or special privilege to swerve him from the course of justice. “The people of the United States seem to have forgotten that our government is a republic and not a democracy,” Frederick] E. Schortemeier said at an Eighth Ward meeting.
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Colonna Fights $100,000 Shave
HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 24 (U. P.). — “Jerry Colonna’s handle-bar mustache may be just so many whiskers on a comedian’'s upper lip to Producer Gene Markey, but Colonna figures it’s worth $100,000. ‘ The film and stage funny man filed an action for declaratory relief to prevent Mr. Markey from fcreing him to shave off the mustache. Markey ordered the mustache shorn for a film scene in which Colonna is supposed to emerge without his mustache and eye=brows. ?
THE DETROIT NEWS INDORSES WILLKIE
DETROIT, Oct. 24 (U. P.).—The Detroit News, stating in a frontpage editorial it believed the 1940 Presidential campaign presented an “extreme emergency,” today urged election of Wendell L. Willkie. Explaining that it has publicly in-
dorsed candidates only in cases of:
emergency, the News said: “We have weighed carefully the argument that President Roosevelt has accumulated invaluable experience during his eight years in office. But we are unable to accept either that argument or its conclusion, that he should be kept in
office. another four years. The years| :
now ahead will be gravely important. The head of the Government during those years should be a man of sober, balanced judgement. . . . “We believe Mr. Willkie will fill that need better than Mr. Roosevelt.”
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‘NO VANDALISM ON HALLOWEEN’—FEENEY
There'll be no “monkey business” in the County over Halloween, Sheriff Al Feeney said today in a warning aimed at all potential pranksters. t The Sheriff said that 15 extra crews of deputies would be patroling the highways each night and any one caught at vandalism would be arrested. The warning came after deputies discovered a large root of a tree laid across one road last night and the finding of straw dummys on the highways in the past two weeks. Sheriff Feeney said that such actions may cause serious accidents.
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