Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 34, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 June 1930 — Page 9
JUNE 19, 1930_
RUSSIA ROUSED . BYU.S.BANGN AIRPLANE SALE America’s Action May Have Important Bearing on World Relations. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripps-lloward Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, June 19—The refusal to sell military airplanes to Russia because of objections on the part of the United States government, sets a. precedent which may have a vital bearing upon this country's future international relations. The Kellogg pact, outlawing war, having become a fundamental of American foreign policy, the question of refusing or permitting the sale of war materials to countries engaged in, contemplating, or otherwise flirting with war, becomes an issue of major importance here, and one which can not fail to receive considerable attention hereafter. Russia, beyond doubt, will regard the action of the state department which brought about the cancellation of an order of twenty bombers from the Glenn L. Martin Company of Baltimore, at a cost of approximately $2,000,000, as an unfriendly act. Britain Sells Tanks Great Britain just has sold eleven tanks to the Nationalist government at Nanking, now fighting for its life against a rebel coalition in the north and an army of selfstyled Communists in the south, and an order for twelve more has been placed. True, the government itself is not filling this order, but it gave the British firm permission to do so. Furthermore, the Manchurian government recently has bought upward of 100 French planes of fnilitary design. , Russia may be expected to view the cancellation of the American ? m’oers as part of the iron ring which she complains the great powers are welding about her. When I was in Moscow last April, every Soviet official with whom I talked insisted that war seemed t almost a certainty within the next two or three years. They looked for Poland to be the spearhead of a coalition of European powers formed to crush the Union of Soviet Republics before it became too strong to be beaten. Germany, France, Rumania, Italy and England, they said- likely would back Poland, and perhaps the United States, morally and with money if not with arms. Feared in East Great Britain fears Russia in two spots—lndia and China, but particularly in India, where access is had through Afghanistan. Russia incurred this country’s displeasure last year when Secretary of State Stimson sent similar notes to both Moscow and Nanking, reminding the two governments that they had signed the Kellogg peace pact and urging them to forego hostilities over the Chinese Eastern railway in Manchuria. Peiping replied in a friendly manner, but Moscow’s answer fairly sizzled. In effect, it was that up to the present the United States had not even recognized the existence of Soviet Russia, so now it might go jump in the lake. Russia, it implied, could take care of herself very well without America's help. Secretary Stimson still is the head of the state department. And it was that department whose veto stopped the order of Martin bombers from finding its way to the Soviet army because of “certain recent developments.” While the department refuses to enlarge upon its reasons, it is known that Russia has been extremely active of late preparing for the war which her leaders appear to regard as well nigh inevitable in the comparatively near future.
PROBE DEMANDED IN ‘GAS BOOTLEGGING’ Lake County Legislator Charges Laxity in Bobbitt Quiz. J. Glenn Harris, veteran Lake county member of the house of representatives, appealed to the state budget committee Wednesday to authorize employment of a special investigator to halt alleged “gasoline bootlegging” in northern Indiana. ; “State officials have failed to halt these activities, and the recent probe by State Auditor Archie N. Bobbitt merely has shifted activities from day to night time,” Harris declared. “Legitimate oil dealers will demand at the next legislative session that the 4-cent tax be reduced unless these bootleggers are made to pay it. “They charge that Bruce Cooper, Bobbitt's field investigator, has been lax about the entire matter and are dissatisfied with recent settlements.” MILLER NAMED JUDGE Appointed by Collins to Sit in Webster Blackmail TriaL Sidney Miller, attorney, will sit as special judge in the trial of Irving i Webster, Indianapolis publisher, who was indicted for blackmail in connection with the use of coercion in an : 'vertising scheme. Criminal Judge James A. Collins ruled Wednesday. THE INDIANA TRUST C(L Pay 4% Savings j SKS $2,000,000 3-ROOM outfit fe S-FIECE JACQFABD VELOrK I LIVING ROOM SUITE. {* A I Good condition I EASY TERMS Lewis Furniture Cos. I nlted Trade-In Store 844 S Meridian St Phone Dr. *221 |
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Lives Periled
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Facing possible execution under a law nearly seventy years old, M. H. Powers, 25, above, and Joseph Carr, 19, below, both Communists, are on trial for their lives at Atlanta, Ga. Alleged to have organized an indoor unemployment meeting of white and Negro workers, they were charged with “attempting to incite to insurrection” under an old statute of Reconstruction days which carries the death penalty. Powers is the father of two children.
CHIEFS RETAINED BY TYPOJNION National Officers Will Be Reinstalled in Fall. Officers of the International Typographical Union were re-elected by large majorities, returns of the biennial union election showed today. The officers will be reinstalled in September. Figures showed 57,867 votes were cast by members of local unions. A resolution to boost salaries of the president and secretary-treasurer passed by a vote of 680. Those re-elected were: Charles P. Howard, Chicago, president; Theodore Perry, Indianapolis, first vicepresident; George Bentley New York, second vice-president; Woodruff Randolph, Chicago, secretarytreasurer; c. E. Tracey, Los Angeles, member of board ofi auditors; R. G. Gwinup, Denver, agent, Union Printers home, and Will B. Lowe, Winnipeg, Canada, delegate to Trade and Labor congress in Canada. Five delegates to the American Federation of Labor are; William H. Trotter, Vancouver, B. C.; William M. Riley, Dallas, Tex.; Frank X. Martell, Detroit; William J. Robinson, New York City, and William Young, Philadelphia. Trustees of the Union Printers home are: George H. Knell, San Francisco; William R. Lucas, Toronto, Ont„ and J. H. Fairclough, Boston. One trustee died just as he was elected and the council will appoint a successor.
HERE’S SOME RELIEF, AT LEAST, ON FARM Mad Dog Owner Can Recover From Township on Cattle. Anew form of farm relief was disclosed today in an opinion from Attorney-General James M. Ogden to Lawrence F. Orr, chief examiner of the state board of accounts. If the farmer’s dog gets rabies and bites stock, the farmer can recover from the township trustees, the ruling sets out. Orr had asked if this recovery statute, passed in 1929, applied when the dog biting cattle was owned by the farmer whose cattle were bitten. The answer was “yes.” After the motor ride try this The dirt and dust accumulated on a motor ride get into the pores of your skin, makes the complexion dead and dull, and often causes blackheads. You can delightfully refresh your skin and cleanse every particle from the pores by sprinkling a little Calonite powder on a hot, wet cloth and rubbing it gently over the face. Try it tonight before retiring and note the wonderful improvement in your complexion.—Advertisement. SUMMER ITCHES VANISH when antiseptic Zemo is used! Soothing liquid Zemo brings wonderful relief to bites, rashes and prickly heat. Its cooling touch also soothes the pain of sunburn. Thousands are discovering comfort in Zemo when they have itching, peeling toes. For 20 years it has been used to clear away pimples and itching scalp. Fine for mosquito Bites. Get greaseless, invisible Zemo today and keep it handy. All druggists, 35c, 60c, SI.OO. Excursion to CINCINNATI $2-75 Round Trip 8 SUNDAY, JUNE 22 BASEBALL GAME New York vs. Cincinnati Low Fares to Other Points . t ■ Leave Indianapolis 6:00 A. M. ■ RETURNING, leave Cincinnati * 1 from Baymiller Station 6:05 P. 11.. a Central Union Station 10:00 P. M. K Eastern Time Ask Conductor for ticket to - H beautiful Halnboa Park ; train ■ stops Winton Place <2 blocks from ft Park) in both directions. S Baltimore & Ohio I
MAN CONVICTED IN ARSON TRIAL RAVESAT FATE Reese Maxwell Declares His Attorneys ‘Let Him Down/ In a ten-minute speech to Judge Joseph M. Milner, Reese A. Maxwell, 54, of 27 West Pleasant Run boulevard, former county grand juror, today delivered a scathing denunciation of his attorneys and witnesses against him in the trial that resulted in his conviction on an arson charge. Maxwell was convicted of burning his house last March and was sentenced two to fourteen years in the state prison today by Milner. Appearing before Milner today for sentence the convicted man said his attorneys “let him down” in the trial and did not present the defense he outlined. Mrs. Loleta
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EVERY DAY PRICES
SI.OO Listerine 65c 45c Kotex 28c 50c Phillips’ Milk Magnesia 31c 25c Woodbury’s Soap . .15c 30c Grove’s Bromo- ■ Quinine 18c 25c Colgate’s Tooth Paste 17c 50c Auto Strop Blades, s’s 31c 25c Mennen’s Talc 15c SI.OO Horlick’s Malted Milk 67c 85c Mellin’s Food 54c 40c Castoria 23c 75c Mead’s DextriMaltose 51c U. S. Metal Polish, 3 for 25c Coty Face Powder and Perfume 94c SI.OO Celery Vesce ... 74c Acidine 69c
Jr Bostonian J Shoe Cream \ l 13c ) Friday and £r Saturday Special g Mufti l 35 ) Friday and M Saturday Special \ g Cream of \ a Almonds 3 § (Limit 2) 1 l 29c ) % Friday and SL Salurday Special M Household £ Package \ f Coco-Cola I 16 *° r 25*/ Friday and M ’W Saturday Special
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Miller and Roy Browns Indicted with him, wlto turned state's evidence, were scored by Maxwell, who charged that Mrs. Miller “tried to work the badger game on me.” He pleaded he was innocent and bemoaned the fate that “sends me to prison and leaves my wife and two children to the mercy of life.” Milner interrupted Maxwell’s tirade, asserting he had received a fair trjal and that his attorneys had represented him ably. Members of the Seventh Day Adventist church, of which Maxwell is a member, who were in the courtroom, said they will take up a collection to perfect appeal of the case to the supreme court. BROOKHART JR. TO WED Pv United Press WASHINGTON, June 19.—A license to marry Miss Elizabeth Waller, 22, of this city, has been obtained here by Smith W. Brookhart Jr., son of the Republican senator from lowa. Approve 13-Month Calendar Bu United Press BOSTON, June 19.—A resolution approving the proposed thirteenmonth calendar was adopted at the closing session of the annual convention of the American Optometric Association here Wednesday.
SI.OO Aspirin Tablets, 100’s 45c 60c Bay Rum, Vi pt. .. 39c $1.25 Chamois 74c $1.25 Sponges .... 74c 60c White Mineral Oil, pint 39c SI.OO Pure Cod Liver Oil, pint 69c SI.OO Milk Magnesia, quart 69c 60c Ex. Witch Hazel, pint 35c 40c Cascara Sagrada, 4 czs 25c $2.00 S. S. S 1.51.64 75c Rubber Gloves .... 49c Quinine Capsules, 1 doz. 2-gr 10c 30c Manhattan Foot Powder 19c $1.25 Stan-a-Sep Mouth Wash 74c
GolMSalis Hornet Balls are made by anew, perfected process. Long distance driving and perfect balance for true putting. Hornet Ball, 3oc; SI.OO Kroflite r*A Seconds OUC Kroflite y J Rubber-top Tees, 1A 10 for IUC
Electric FANS You may now have fresh, cool air rippling over the room . . . like a sea breeze, saving the family from discomfort on a sultry summer evening. Plug in a Polar Cub Quiet and smooth running as a J6-cylinder motor; Qp 6-ft, cord and plug... Star-Rite Electric 9§
500 EXAMINED FOR C. M. T. C. Fort Authorities Busy With Medical Onceover. “Open your mouth! Bend your knees! How old are you? Next!” These words were repeated over and over today as 500 candidates were examined for entrance to the citizens military training camp at Ft. Benjamin Harrison. From early morning through the dinner hour the candidates arrived at the fort. To prevent recruits from being lost, Colonel Horace P. Hobbs, commandant of the camp, had squads of Eleventh infantry “noncoms” meet all trains and interurbans and direct the students to the fort. Colonel Craig R. Snyder, post surgeon, was in charge of the physical examinations. Physical examinations will continue through Saturday with the first parade of the students in uniform scheduled for Saturday afternoon.
ff Maxwell House \ t Coffee \ V 36c J Friday and M Saturday Special E Stearate \ J/ (Limit 2) 1 V 10c j Friday and Af "u. Saturday Special # f Colgate’s t Toothbrush \ f (Limit 2) V 17c J Friday and jp Saturday Special Du Belle B Grape Juice \ V 39c J Friday and Saturday Special
$2.00 Value 1-Gallon Jug Wide-mouth jugs, made of earthenware, insulated to keep food and liquids hot qo or cold for 24 hours i/OC Thermos Bottles, 98 C .Thermos Bottles, (£-1 jq Quart pl*xO
Just 2 More Days PETTIS Reorganization . Sale Downstairs Store Special Friday
Shantung, Crepe and Print Dresses Friday so^-96 Included in this group are all the newest styles, materials and colors. Lovely pastel shades, white, polka dots and gay prints. Ensembles with clever jackets. Every dress from much higher-priced groups. Pettis, Downstairs Store.
Women's Rayon Hose Friday Prs. $ Fine quality rayon in summer shades. Sizes 8 ! / 2 to 10. Mattress Covers Friday 69* Well made of unbleached sheeting. Tape ties. Full size. Bedspreads Friday $ J.S9 Rayon filled spreads, scalloped edges. Boudoir shades; 81x105 inches. Rayon Pillows Friday 69^ Well-filled pillows, in many pretty shades. Wonderful values. Boys' Blouses Friday 44* •Summer wash blouses, in white and novelty figured broadcloth. All sizes. Wonderful values.
Children's Hose Friday 16c Popular anklet hose, in many patterns and colors. All sizes. Tennis Shoes (or Boys Friday 79® Tennis shoes for play w ear. White and brown. All sizes. Men's Rayon Shirts 39* Men’s rayon undershirts in w hite and pastel shades. All sizes. Wash Suits for Boys Friday 47. - Linene and broadcloth wash suits, in fast colors. Sizes 3 to 8. Summer Hats $ J and A large assortment of styles, fabrics and colors. All are splendid values, and taken from much higher priced stocks. Pettis, Downstairs Steve.
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Girls' Frocks Friday 97 Regular $1.25 value. Imported French voile and dotted Swiss dresses, trimmed with ties and capes. Sizes 2 to 6 and 7 to 14. Pettis, Downstairs Store. Wash Dresses and Organdy Hooverettes Friday 79 Dresses of linene, pique, broadcloth and novelty prints. All fast colors. Sizes 16 to 52. Sports Hose Friday 21c Boys’ three-quarter length hose, in several patterns. All sizes. Wash Fabrics Friday 19 Voile, pique, broadcloth, batiste, dimity and many novelty prints. All fast colors. Unbleached Muslin Yard Wide 8c Chiffon Hosiery Friday 7* Irregulars of $1.69 value. Women’s pure silk chiffon hose, fullfashioned. 20 Smart shades. Sizes SVz to 10.
