Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1941 — Page 2
PAGE 2
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Hoosiers in Washington—
WORKERS MISLED,
VANNUYS IS TOLD
Senator Would Favor More Power for Mediation Board, He Replies to Local Railroader; Strike Settlement Up to U. S., Halleck Says.
By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Staff Writer
Ki
WASHINGTON, April 5.—Sen. Frederick VanNuys (DB. Ind.) this week received a letter from an Indianapolis rail-
roadman which he thinks represents the majority attitude §
of the rank and file of American labor in regard to the de-| fense industry strikes. Having supported the New Deal labor legislation, Senator VanNuys did not hesitate to condemn the sit-down] strikes several vears ago. As Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee he may have to deal with laws governing labor and defense if they)
are reported and passed = S v AR ADES the House Judiciary Commit-| {Jus 1 ———————
tee where several measures,
now are pending. Observance of Army Day,
Both Senator VanNuys and Chairman Hatton W. Sumners (D. Shows Expanding Strength.
Tex.) of the House Judiciary Committee have publicly stated that WASHINGTON. April 5 (U. P). —Against the backdrop of a spread-
they prefer that the problem be settled without legislation. ing world conflict, the United States today parades its greatest peace-
This would mean that the Adtime Army in observance of Army
{ But Holy Week begins Monday and
Maxa Nordau
Maxa Nordau, painter and daughter of Dr. Max Nordau, famous Zionist leader, will speak Monday night at the Kirshbaum Community Center under the auspices of the Asaph organization. Miss Nordau will speak on “What Max Nordau Would Say Today.” Considered one of the greatest portrait and landscape painters in Europe, Miss Nordau recently arrived from Europe and is on a lecture tour of the United States. Her father was the first vice president of the World Zionist Organization, having been elected to the office at the first World Zionist Congress held in 1897 in Basle, Switzerland.
UNITY ACHIEVED BY JUGOSLAVIA
Civilians From All Walks of |
Life Take Up Arms to Stem Invasion.
YY [automobile
BRITISH HALT AXIS IN AFRICA
Berlin’s Anger at Belgrade Rises Hourly: Tiny Nation Waits Blow.
(Continued from Page One)
calm, determined to fight in event of a German invasion and confident that they will be able to give a good account of themselves in the mountainous region where the Serbs in 1914 touched off the { first World War. | Full mobilization of the Jugoslav ‘army of possibly 1,000,000 apparently (was near completion. Trains and traffic were halted, |probably as a preliminary to the {requisitioning of transport. Frontiers were closed except with Greece.
Bridges Mined
Mobile mechanized units were concentrated opposite the German border, where Nazi forces have been massing for days. Bridges were mined on the border. Anti-aircraft guns fired on German planes that flew over the frontier, Italian and German diplomatic officials and their families had gone home. ; Athens issued a war communique saying that in local action on the Albanian Front “we captured strong enemy positions, taking more than
[70 prisoners including one officer, land the enemy abandoned abundant § jy | war material; at another point an
these smiles, attended a They are
Judging from publican officials Ohio convention. chairman; Mrs.
(left
enemy tank attack was repuised by anti-tank batteries.” : An official News Agency dispatch ; ‘ from Berlin said today that German ‘We Are Going Ahead,” Says |ocoupation authorities in France Bn | had signed an agreement with Michigan Governor; | French econdmic leaders yesterday ‘for a gigantic exchange of food- Dewey Cheerful. [stuffs between occupied and unoccupied country. (Continued from Page One) The agreement, according to the! a Official Agency, provides that un- tion workers who have been idle | accupied France shall send to oc-|SIce last Tuesday night and been cupied territory 755,000 head of cat- afraid to leave through the C. tle, 800,000 head of pigs and calves, O. United Automobile Workers
36,000 tons of vegetable ofl, 100,000 Picket line. tons of salt, 60,000 tons of fresh| Some of the besieged workers
Young Republicans Convene With Smiles;
everything's all right with the Republican party. conference here vesterday before moving on to Columbus, O.,
Marjorie Roemler Gypsy Corbin, Ashland, Ky., National Young G. O. P. Federation co-chairman; Tipton, Ind, vice chairman, and Miss Alice L. Gibbons, Ashland, Ky., vice chairman,
These Young Refor the Mrs. Bertha Lundberg, Muncie, Delaware County viceIndiana Supreme and Appellate Court reporter; Mrs. Mrs, Mary Compton,
to right): Kinnaird,
CiviC CLUB TO MEET IN WARFLEIGH MONDAY
The Warfleigh Civic Club, repre-
CENTRAL BUS LINE EXTENDED TO ARDEN
SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1941
LEADERS BUILD 1942 FENCES
Five Republicans and Two Democrats Mentioned for Mayoralty Race.
(Continued from Page One)
self to be put in the picture, indicating possible plans to run for renomination, Mr. Lewis also has not decided what part, if any, he intends to take in the 1942 political scramble. Despite his double defeat-—for prosecutor and for the Governor nomi nation last year—Mr. Lewis is regarded as formidable material and his decision, too, is holding up the parade,
Lewis Undecided
“I haven't decided any future Po= litical plans,” he said. The Republican lineup at this stage is regarded as "wide open” with anything likely to happen bee fore the home stretch campaign ing. Mr. Ostrom is close to the present county G. O. P. machinery and if no big factional breaches develop, he might maneuver a majority of organization support. Mr. Wolfe closad the factional gaps pretty well in 1938, but, his po sition now is unknown, especially since the county organization under-
senting the North Side community
whose 10-year building boom hasn't| Sixteen of the 44 trips on the stopped yet, will meet at 8 p. m.{Rionday-Fridey schedule of the Monday at the American Legion |Central Ave.-64th St. motor coach Hall, 64th St. and College Ave. line will be extended north into ArWork is already in progress on| den starting Monday, Indianapolis some of the storm and sanitary Railways officials said today. sewers needed by the growing com- | The new route, which will not opmunity and it will be these projects erate on Sunday, will be as follows: that will be discussed. North on College Ave. from the Other improvements desired by! present terminus at 66th St. to 70th the league, according to the group’s|St., west on 70th St. to Central Ave, president, Stephen A. Clinehens, are| Where the line will loop and return street paving and repairs, sidewalks| to the ctiy. and more adequate street lighting. The present Arden-Ravenswood ee mee crosstown motor coach line no longer will operate into Arden begin{ning tomorrow. It will follow its
{present route into Ravenswood but
went a thorough revamping last | year, [ Mr. Bookwalter has risen rapidly [in the ranks of State organization | machinery and this may put him in a formidable position in City politics. The possible lineups behind Mr, (Bowes and Mr. Jewett have not yet, | appeared and their positions will be | determined for the most part by | what happens behind the scenes to | the other candidates. | Several Scraps Due | Several primary fights will dee | velop over the lucrative six county | judgeships up for election next year
vegetables, 8000 tons of cheese and |left the plant last night on the |=all five Superior Courts and Juve=
The salaries for these
ministration's Mediation Board and Labor Department Conciliators would have to keep the wheels turning on defense production. Mediation ‘The American Way’ The letter which the Senator repeived reads: : . Day in a coast-to-coast demonstraa Hr a WY America’s expanding military Vinced of ihe seriousness of the | Generally observed on April 6, ansie situation (niversary of America’s entry into Pr Si ir ov a {World War 1, the celebration was have A hon ey {advanced to Monday because the S bs ings of mediation in settling dif= {regular date falls on the Sabbath. TH DUNE. TL | most, cities are celebrating today. direct action, and strikes born of | Jurisdictional differences and petty points of privilege especially have no place in this emergency. “I cannot help but think that patriotic laboring men are being misled by their leaders and that | the Government owes these mis- | Jed men a helping hand “The right to strike is a funda- | mental constitutional ‘right,’ but to strike without important basic |! reasons in these days is a ‘priv- | ilege'—not a ‘right'—and a very | costly luxury among the remain- | ing free people of this earth. “Labor will be
chieftains
Here in the nation’s capital, center of the multi-billion dollar preparedness drive, the top military will review the biggest parade in Army Day history. Presi-
| dent Roosevelt, unable to attend be-
cause of engagements, will be represented by War Secretary Henry! L. Stimson and Gen. George OC. Marshall, Army Chief of StafT. New York plans a demonstration lasting from mid-afternoon to dusk and other major cities—Chicago,| Los Angeles and Miami, among| others—also will hold parades. | Sponsored by the Military Order | of the World War, the demonstra- |
(Continued from Page One)
men. Everybody is being called for | duty. Nobody here talks of exemption for reason of family or business or because of any physical handicap. Bald headed, paunchy old timers
who know from the last war what Matsuoka, who conferred y can happen to a small country With Adolf Hitler immediately | attacked by a much larger one, are | his return to Berlin from a visit to] answering the call to arms, eager Rome, conferred today with Ger-| | to come to grips again with the | man Foreign Minister Joachim Von
old, traditional enemy of the Slavs. | Ribbentrop. Matsuoka leaves for | (to the Federal government and| Eighteen more Marion County
It is impossible to over-estimate
the importance of the decision of | tonight. Croat | tremendously [tions will emphasize the country’s| leader, to take his place in the
Vladimir Matchek, the
thankful in days to come for any unprecedented effort to rearm and | cabinet as vice premier, in full
help that you can give to ‘clean its house’ of leaders ‘unsympa- | thetic’ with democracy and to | show them the way of mediation |
to speedily transform the nation] into an arsenal and larder of democracies. No foreign diplomats have been
cQ-operation with the Government. For years the country had been torn by sectional rivalries. These rivalries have been put aside and
—the real American way to talk (invited to participate in the cere-| the people feel that they are united monies connected with the capital's| as they face their great test of | “I respectfully submit this—my parade in which 20,000 soldiers, sail- | fortitude.
over a difference of opinion.
own individual opinion—in
the |ors, Marines, Coast Guardsmen and |
Even the trial blackouts, though
hope that you may know there is members of patriotic societies will| everyone knows what they mean,
one man in Indiana deeply angered not by what he sees on the surface—but by the ugly manster he sees beneath the surface—gnawing at the very foungations of our democracy.” The letter was written in long hand and the home address given. Replying te it at once, Senator VanNuys wrote: “It is always helpful to have expression of views from men of your experience. “We in Congress have hoped that the Mediation Board would successfully solve this grievous problem. It has succeeded in some instances. Not so well in others. If a trial shows that it has not sufficient power, I shall support legislation granting such power.”
Called in Federal Business
Answering a suggestion of Rep. Sumners that the states should deal with the strikes, Rep. Charles A. Halleck (R. Ind.) had this to say from the House floor: “In consideration of responsibilities for dealing with strikes, I think we must all bear in mind that these strikes are affecting Federal contracts that are a part of the na-tional-defense effort. “They involve questions arising under national legislation, questions that must necessarily come to Federal tribunals for decision. And so XI do not believe that we can say to the states that the responsibility is all theirs, or possibly, even that the states that the resopnsibility “In that connection, the thing that struck me first of all was the more or less helpless situation in which we have left some state governments, when we inducted the National Guard into Federal service. “At the present time many states #o not have an militia because of action taken here in Congress. The additional responsibility thereby placed upon the Federal Government in respect of the internal affairs of the state is a question for every one of us to consider.”
g ” = ” On Farm Committee Four Indiana Republicans were appointed to the party’s augmented Agricultural Study Committee announced this week by Rep. Joseph W. Martin Jr.,, Minority Leader. They are Reps. George W. Gillie, Noble J. Johnson, Gerald Landis and Earl Wilson.
Change Beef Ban Vote
Both Senators VanNuys and Raymond E. Willis (R. Ind.) voted to ban Argentine beef. The former then inquired of Secretary of State Hull, a close personal friend, as to whether such action did really handicap the Good Neighbor policy. Informed by letter that such was the case, Senator VanNuys supported the compromise which passed the Senate by a voice vote. And s0 did Senator Willis.
TRIAL OF FAUSETT RESUMES MONDAY
GREENFIELD, Ind. April 5 (U. P.) —Defense attorneys planned today for the resumption Monday of the first degree murder trial of Francis (Dewey) Fausett, Fort ville tavern owner accused of slaying Damon Cook, also of Fortville, on Dec. 4. Before adjournment yesterday, 20 character witnesses appeared for the defendant after Hancock Circuit Judge John B. Hinchman over-
take part.
SUPER’ BOMBS ROCK
2 NAZI SEA RAIDERS
(Continued from Page One)
bomb aimer dropped his bombs in|
fall together. “The rear gunner saw ga huge] gush of flame go up about 20 or 30 yards from the ships and there]
completely blotted out all
len.” Many other attacks were made from ga higher level, the Ministry | said. “A majority of bombs were seen to straddle both battleships,” the Ministry said. | Air circles predicted that it would | be some time before the battleships could go to sea to prey again on British North Atlantic shipping. The R. A. F. has plugged steadily at the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau all this week. Last night's raid was the third of the week, the 49th of the war and the second successive night attack. Moonlight aided the attackers in locating their objectives and witnessing the results of the explosions, which started a iarge fire near one of the battleships. Brest also is being used by the Germans as a U-boat base. The Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, recently returned from a raiding foray in the North Atlantic, have been at Brest for several days. The Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, battleships of 26,000 tons, carry complements of 1500 men each. They are armed with 11-inch guns and each has a speed of more than 29 knots. A High Command communique issued in Berlin asserted today that Germany had sunk more than 718,000 tons of shipping during March. Submarines, in a second attack on a convoy, sank 48,500 tons of ships, the High Command said, making a total for the two attacks of 18 ships. A warship operating “overseas,” the communique said, sank the auxiliary cruiser Voltaire and the
transport Britannia.
are taken lightly. It is difficult for an American to understand the sense of historical destiny that is apparent among
ordinary men who glow with the | Four Tipton residents reported has | “critical” condition in Mercy H | pital
thought that their country stood up to the Nazi giant. I have heard many Serbs say something like: “Serbia was ‘the starting point for the last war, We owe a bit to
a tight stick so that they should the victors of that war.
“We will pay our debt by doing our best now and providing the turning point for this war.” Serbs point out to me that on the
was a sudden blaze of fire which| day of some big offensive the Gerlater man radio bursts so that it was impossible to| music and that now, starting with |see where the other bombs had fal-| yesterday, their own redio plays old Serb battle songs day and night.
statoins play martial
The man who is called up for Army service seems to go gladly. He stocks up with his own bread and dried sausage before he takes his place in the ranks. If an officer is called, it is found that weeks ago he bought his revolver and ammunition, which he displays proudly to his friends. I met last night a stooped spectacled university professor who from his academic brief case, usually filled with lecture notes and examination papers drew out a 45 automatic. He handled this gun wtih his eyes flashing and said: “We're off!” The most extraordinary thing to the foreign observer is the indifference of the people to the consequences of their cefiance of the Nazis, There is no hint in the atmosphere that at any moment the Germans might start a rain of bombs. Even as they wait to go to war, the people sit at the tables of the sidewalk cafes as usual, sipping drinks, while peasants sell oranges and flowers and gipsy ragamuffins beg for pennies.
NAZI BOMBINGS REVIEWED
BERLIN, April 5 (U. P).—German night air raiders dropped many millions of pounds of explosives and more than 1,000,000 incendiary bombs in 23 major attacks on England and Scotland during March, the official news agency said today in its monthly review. In daytime raids, the agency said, German planes sank 40 ships and seriously damaged 50 ships.
Celebrate Appomattox Day
School 55 celebrated Appomattox Day five days early yesterday because of the Spring Vacation next week. They received six silk flags from Daughters of the Union. Two Civili War veterans were present, O. M. Wilmington, senior vice commander of the Indiana G. A. R, and John Walker, who served in three wars. Mrs. C. M., Vanasdal (left above) was in charge of the program. Others in the
ruled a gefense motion for a di‘rected verdict.
-
photo are Mrs. Ernest Doan, School 55 P.-T.gA. president; Shirley Brown, who accepted the third grade flag, and Mr. Walker.
643.450 gallons of wines. Occupied | assurance of Mr. Dewey anda union France would send in return 800,000 leaders that they would not be] [tons of grain, 200,000 tons of sugar, harmed and they were continuing | 1 100,000 tons of bran and 800,000 tons to dribble out in twos and threes) of potatoes. today. Av noon a company spokes-|
Matsuoka in Berlin man estimated 1000, mostly Negro
: : . foundry workers, still were in the Japanese Foreign Minister Yosuke , | plant, esterday upon
Mr. Dewey and Thomas Donahue, | ol! chairman of the Governor's Special | Mediation Board, were cheered by some undisclosed turn in the nego[tiations even while the paralysis re- | Moscow on his way back to Tokyo | Sulting from the strike at the River | | | Rouge plant was spreading to al-|
In the Near East, it was indi-|MOSt all the Ford empire, The strike at the River Rouge
cated that Great Britain would] withhold recognition of a newly Plant began at midnight Tuesday formed government in Iraq, where after an eight-hour sitdown by the
Rashid Ali Al-Gailani seized power union in protest against dismissal
|
|
|
from the Taha El Hashimi Cabinet of eight departmental chairmeh., | in a coup d'etat said to have been| Persons close to the mediators beengineered by the Axis. {lieved they saw peace possible by | the middle of next week. FOUR HURT AS LIGHT Meanwhile, shut-downs ordered {000 men in 34 assembly and branch nasil plants all over the | country, plus the thousands em-| |ployed in independent feeder fac-| in Standing orders to 7000 suppliers os- | Who do an $11,000,000 average | weekly business with Ford.
last night spread the strike to 125.-| ELWOOD, Ind. April 5 (U. P.).—|tories. The company canceled out-
today from injuries received when the Igiht truck in which they were riding crashed into the rear of a huge-semi-trailer truck west of | Mr. Dewey made a dramatic plea here last night. to the men in the plant last night Injured were Trela Crawford, 20; |In an attempt to induce them to Maxine Goodnight, 19; Birdvilla leave and thus clear a danger point Johnson, 16, and Walter Voss, 28.|Which had provided constant irriAll received fractures of both legs | tation of the smooth course of me-! and severe cuts and bruises. Misses | dation. Goodnight and Crawford, who sus- I talked to a thousand of them. tained skull fractures, were not ex-| The attitude of the men in the pected to live. | plant was very bad,” Mr. Dewey
Their truck crashed into and |S2id. : wedged under the trailer truck,| Puring the night some 200 men |
: : a (left the plant, picketed since last | which was parked. State police said : | Irom ; ; { Tuesday. The C. I. O. pickets shook | the driver, Marshall Gibson, 26, | wis, : Muncie, had stopped to fix his lights | TEM hanae Sire Yen, fed Heh and was putting out flares when | em ow I AE ao the crash occurred, Y a; nl ; Fire which broke out in the rear UNem union sales talks. of the trailer hampered rescue of the injured.
AMA MAPS FIGHT ON TRUST CONVICTION
WASHINGTON, April 5 (U. P.).— Counsel for the American Medical Association announced today that it would contest the verdict of a Fed-|
eral District Court jury finding i Ford Counsel Charge guilty of violating the anti-trust Bias in NLRB Plea
law. The Association and its affiliate,| WASHINGTON. April 5 (U. P) — | I. A. Capizzi, counsel for the Ford
the District of Columbia Medical Motor Co., charged before the Na- |
Society, were convicted late last night of restraining trade by 0p- tional Labor Relations Board today | posing a group health co-operative.|that the NLRB regional office in DeEighteen individual defendants, |troit was “prejudiced and biased” in among them top ranking Associa- favor of the C. I. O.'s United Autotion officers .and nationally known | mobile Workers Union. physicians, were acquitted. Mr. Capizzi also charged that The two organizations face a|members of the NLRB regional ofmaximum fine of $5000 each. The fice are “either Communists, memcourt did not set a date for impos- | bers of Red Front organizations or ing a penalty. (fellow travelers.”
War Moves Today
(Continued from Page One)
Italy would be held outside the area of hostilities, then the possible danger of a Fascist collapse in Albania due to flanking operations, might be avoided. Otherwise, such a threatened complication would interfere with the German plan of campaign. Instead of concentrating all their strength for southern and eastern drives through Jugoslavia, as natural strategy dictates, they would have to divert forces westward to try to protect the Albanian boundary. Italy's reported attempts to try to pacify German resentments
Appeals to Men in Plant
| R. J. Thomas, international U. {A. W. president, telegraphed War Secretary Henry L. Stimson that the company had refused the union's offer to let defense workers through | | the picket lines to continue work nn Ford airplane and airplane engine factories and other defense work.
to Greece. Without that strategic necessity, the Jugoslav crisis would not have arisen. Italy, therefore, is responsible for Hitler's present Balkan troubles. | For Signor Mussolini to attempt to | remain quiescent while the Fuehrer sets forth to retrieve Italy's defeat, | would place Il Duce in a poor light, as a military leader, for the reason would be too apparent. Furthermore, if the British and | the Greeks joined Jugoslavia in resisting German aggression, it is not likely that Italy would be allowed | to remain quiescent. A flank offen-| sive against Albania might be or-|
i i , oT yway. It certainly would | against Jugoslavia undoubtedly are dered anyway. nl: oe to Mussolini's comprehension of | be attempted if the German rush the situation in Albania and the|into Jugoslavia were halted or seripossible threat to his forces there, |ously impeded. ) un It is certainly against Ttaly’s inter-| Il Duce must take this factor into) ests to have the war against Greece | consideration in estimating what his | expand into a possible envelopment 0Wn position will be if the war | of Albania. spreads into Jugoslavia, With it all, however, there is a chance that |
Yet if TI Duce were to try to remain at peace with Jugoslavia while Hitler went to war, his moral position would be paradoxical. The primary reason why Germany has become involved in serious Balkan complications has been the necessity for rescuing the Italians from their defeat at the hands of the Greeks. : Had it not been for this, the| Fuehrer would not have had to require the transportation of muni- |
tions and war supplies along the short Jugoslavian line of communications into Bulgaria, as a threat
he might hold aloof, at least until | the early phase of the campaign be- | came clarified, showing whether a| Jugoslav attempt to cross the Al-| banian mountains was in prepara-
tion.
ITCHED $0”
ese THEN A NURSE TOLD ME WHAT TO DO “First cleanse thoronghly with fragrant, mildly medicated CUTICURA Soap, then apply emollient QUTICURA Ointment on irritations of ex gin”, , . Recommended by many
urses, » Cuticura today—at all d !
REPEAL'S 8TH YEAR
lege Ave. looping over Riviera Drive land Bellefontaine St, The eighth anniversary of the Schedules for the extended route return of legal beer to Indiana will are available from Central Ave. bus be observed Monday, Harold C. operators. Feightner, Indiana Brewers’ As-|
Svan var sn rorn. COUNTY SENDS 18 TO FT. HARRISON TODA
In that eight vears, Mr. Feightner said, the Indiana brewing industry has paid in excise taxes and license fees $78,850,000—$56,359.000
$22,491,000 to the state. | men stepped off busses at Ft. HarThe 13 breweries in the state | rison today prepared to begin their manufacture more than 1600000 year of service in Uncle Sam's barrels of beer a year, standing 11th | growing Army. nationally in point of production.| There are to be 300 Indiana men The present beer excises taxes of who are to be irducted into the| $7.24 a barrel—$6 Federal and $1.24 Aymy today in the sixth State State—will be increased May 1 to| gelective Service call. $747 a barrel because of new state | legislation providing for a special| Bernard William Kijobsky, 424 N. 18th enforcement fund | st. Beech Grove; Glenn V. Wadsworth 3 a ao Castleton; James Edward Henderson, R. Other statistics listed by the asso-|j5 Box 179; Louis Anthony (orange, 3758 i i ¢ i i . Southeastern Ave... Herbert oward, 570: citation executive included: |FOUIeastern Trott “donn: Bavers. Aton, Indiana brewery payrolls total md: carl R. R. 10, $2,893,000 a year; Indiana beer Ye- (Dox, 264 ae quires products of more tian 100, cumberland; Donovan M Hunter, 901 E Ny . y ue 0 | Washington St... George William ompson 000 acres of farmland a year; more Washington St. Cleotgs I tery Hays than 20,000 persons are employed| jr 17820 E. Fortv-Sixth St: John Srity i 1 ‘i i i i i R. 13, Box 165-K: Floyd Franklin Weise, in manufacturing, distributing and R BO a BinC CHenry Prankits dispensing beer; beer
: : v.10 is available | Martindale. R. R. 9, Box 224; James Paul bv the drink and package in each | Taylor, 2850 Madison Ave., George Ernest of Indiana's 92 counties,
Trittipo, Lawrence, Ind. and nodrow
Edward Campbell,
Will terminate at 63d St. and Col-| njle Court.
The local men to be inducted are: |
George Arthur Berlier, 1141 N.| Clyde Richard Patterson
| posts—$10,000 annually—are higher than the Governor's pay All the present Democratic judges are expected to seek renomination, with plenty of competition for the dges who have held their jobs for u
|
ju [two terms. | Candidates for these and other | county offices have not been talked openly thus far. However, three | Democrats have been mentioned for | Sheriff to succeed Mr. Feeney. They include Center Township Trustee | Henry Mueller, former deputy sher= |iff; Thomas Sullivan, present depe uty sheriff, and William Brown, County Commissioner.
———
BENADUM TO SPEAK
Clarence Benadum, Muncie attor= ney, will address a meeting of | Townsend Club officials tomorrow in the K. of P. auditorium. B. J. Brown, head of the movement in | Indiana, will preside.
WHILE THE REST oF |
THE TOWN SLEEPS HAAG'S ALL-NIGHT DRUG STORE 22d and Meredian
IS OPEN
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