Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 63, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 July 1930 — Page 7
JULY 23, 1930.
HOOVER TOOK SOME BAD BLOWS, BUT EXTRACTED FROM CONGRESS MOST OF WHAT HE REQUESTED President at Last Holds Washington Stage Alone After Long Barrage of Lawmakers’ Brickbats, and Is Free to Work Without Criticism. AIDS POINT WITH PRIDE TO LEGISLATIVE RECORD List of Failures Is Short Compared to That of Bills Authorizing What Executive Wanted; Trip West Expected to Win Popularity. BV RAYMOND CLAPPER United Pri Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 23.—Happy days are here for President Hoover. Congress has adjourned after nearly eighteen months of almost continuous se.vdor. It was often turbulent, and it threw more brickbats than flowers at the White House. Now for the first time in his administration, the President holds the stage at Washington alone. He is free to push ahead with his administrative activities unhamt>ered by congress criticism. • His friends believe that for the first time Mr. Hoover will be revealed *♦o the country in his real stature. They are counting much upon his western vacation trip to emphasize a humai. side of him which many feel has been hidden under the burden of controversy with congress. Also they are now preparing to broadcast to the country a picture of •vhat actually has happened during these months of conflict with congress.
They arc convinced the record will show that -n spite of the confusion and denunciation, the President extracted from congress a high proportion of what he wanted despite the 'ipparent domination of those hostile *0 him, especially in the senate. The list of Mr. Hoover’s failures 1s short compared with the other list. The most sericas blows were the rejection of John J. Parker for the United States supreme court, the overriding of his veto of the Spanish war pension bill and the senate's action in failing to confirm three nominations for the new federal power commission. Failure of the senate to confiim these last three appointments practically may paralyze the power commission, already far behind in its work, until early In 1931. Long List of Successes* The President failed also to obtain action on the recommendations of the Wickersham law enforcement commission for handling minor prohibition cases through United States commissioners—the so-called juryless trial bill—and another measure for unification of the border patrol. He also failed to obtain final disposition of Muscle Shoals because the house and senate are deadlocked. Railroad consolidation still Is in the hands of congress. On the other hand Mr. Hoover made a long list of specific requests of congress in his annual message last December, practically all of which were enacted as follows: Tax Reduction—sl6o,ooo,ooo tax cut. Foreign Debts—French. Austrian and German debt agreements approved finally disposing of all war debt problems except those involving Russia and Armenia. Tariff—Hawley-Smoot bill passed which though not satisfactory to the President in all details, omitted the farm debenture plan and retained the flexible tariff plan, two results upon which Mr. Hoover insisted most stubbornly. Boosts Public Works Public W’orks—ln accord with Mr. Hoover’s desire to stimulate construction activities, congress enlarged the public buildings program and passed the largest highway building bill and one of the largest rivers and harbors bills in history. Power Regulation—Law passed reorganizing federal power commission with full-time commissioners. Radio—Federal radio commission given permanent status. Boulder Dam—Appropriations for Starting work passed. Prisons—Building program passed to relieve overcrowding in federal prisons. Veterans—All pension and veterans agencies brought together under one head. Prohibition—Prohibition enforcement transferred from treasury to justice department; Wickersham commission granted funds to continue investigation. River Gives l’p Body tv United Press SOUTH BEND. Ind., July 23 —The body of 11-year-old William Siesinski. newsboy, who was drowned on Tuesday in St. Joseph river, was recovered by a motorboat crew several hours later. It was the first drowning of the season here.
' fPabst-ett' VARIETIES PiMFNTO - SWISS- BRl'ck-SjANrAPjD FOR DELIGHTFUL ASSORTED^ANDWICHES
EXCURSIONS Saturday, July 26 Toledo .. . . .$5.00 Detroit .... 6.00 Leave Indianapolis 11:00 p. m.; returning leave Detroit 11:45 p. m. Toledo 1 30 a. m., Sunday night, July 27-28. Sunday, July 27 Cincinnati. . $2.75 Greensburg. 1.25 Shelbyville. .75 Lea.-e Inr anapolis 7:30 a. m : return Lig *ave Cincinnati 6:30 p. m. or 10:15 p. m. < Eastern time) same date. Ticke's good in coaches only. Children half fare. Tickets at City Ticket Office. 112 Monument Circle, Phone Riley 3323 and Union Station Phone Riley 3355. BIG FOUR ROUTE
DEFERS RULING ON DOG TRACK Milnor to Pass on 'Guess Project’ Tuesday. Ruling of Superior Judge Joseph M. Milner at 10 next Tuesday morning is expected to settle whether guess of a dog race track patron is a test of the patron’s skill, or merely another form of gambling. Judge Milner Tuesday afternoon took under advisement application of Hugh Frye, Louisville, for an injunction against Sheriff George Winkler, who is said to have threatened closure of a SIOO,OOO track Frye proposes to build, if the latter gives patrons guessing coupons with admission tickets. The coupon would allow the patron to guess on the outcome of one race on the program. A prize is understood to await the lucky guessers. “The customer gets a free ticket —for a dollar,” asserted Clinton H. Givan, county attorney, representing Winkler in couit T’.esday. “That Is their kind of gambling.” Ira M. Holmes, Frye's attorney, compared the guessing coupon with guessing contests staged by newspapers, theaters and amusement companies. “The coupon is a privilege, not a gambling proposition,” Holmes declared. “The idea is to imbue in the people desire to raise better dogs—dogs for speed. It is no blind guess. It is skill.”
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen, betone to: Ernest A. Rieener. 1515 Shelby street. Ford coupe. 762-483. from the rear of 1545 Shelbv street. j. j. Britton. 2022 Churchman avenue, Chrysler tourimr. 96-810. from Washington and East streets.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered by police, belong to: Arthur Reis. 1323 North Dearborn street. Studebaker sedan, found at Garfield Park. Frsnk H. Brown. 149 State House. Ford Tudor sedan, found near baseball diamond at Brookside park. Elected for Fifth Term NEWCASTLE. Ind., July 23—For the fifth consecutive year the Rev. Leroy F. Sargent, pastor of First Christian church here, has been elected president of Indiana Christion Missionary Society. The organization is in charge of missionary work of the Disciples of Christ In Indiana.
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Buy Health of your grocer Your grocer has Health to sell—the kind of Health that comes from light, nourishing, easily digested foods. You will find it in every package of Shredded Wheat. Eat it every’ day with milk or cream and you will be healthy and strong, ready for every test of mental and physical endurance. All the body*building elements in the whole wheat grain- -nothing added, nothing taken away —and so easily digested. It’s delicious with fruits. SHREDDED ifi&WH EAT WITH ALL THE BRAN m of the whole wheat
BELIEVE ITORNOT
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WHIPPEDJO DEATH Mother of Five Is Accused of Killing Rival. Bv United Press CHARLOTTE, N. C., July 23. Mrs. P. F. Butler of Belmont, mother o{ five children, faced grand jury action today on the charge of beating Miss Grace Whitaker to death with a horsewhip. Mrs. Butler accused the girl of being intimate with her husband. Retired Farmer Dies Ed! Times Special MARKLEVILLE, Ind., July 23Lewis Pring, 71, a retired farmer, is dead following an illness of two years. He leaves his widow, four children, Vinton, Eaton; Russell, Sulphur Springs; Mrs. Ralph Hendricks, Markleville, and Mrs. Lon Lewis, Mechanicsburg.
TEETH! TEETH! SPECIAL! FOB A LIMITED TIME ONLY HECOLITE A genuine Hecolite Plate. Very beautiful and natural looking. Extracting in- CIQ Cft eluded V * V GUARANTEED PLATE Lightweight and very (7 PA natural Trices reduced on other work. For a short time only. FA** Extracting JUC KOSS—DENTIST 714 Indiana Pythian Rida. RI. 6637 Cor. Mass. Ato. and Penn. St. 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Evenings and Sunday by Appointment
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
On request, sent with stamped addressed envelope, Mr. Ripley will furnish proof of anything depicted by him.
Hollywood
all the 76 important beauty shops advise Palmolive for home treatment
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"I advise the use of Palmolive twice daily to rid the pores of the accumulations of dust and powder—to provide really thorough cleansing, the foundation of beauty .” Anne Meredith Shop, 6734 Sunset Blvd.
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-Palmolive Soap l find most effective in cleansing complexions, for it embodies nature's gentle natural oils of olive and palm. Soaps far more expensive are net near so good, l find." BkAUTY SftOg
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And 23,720 beauty experts the world over recommend Palmolive for keeping skin lovely. IN Hollywood, beauty is not accepted as a gift of the gods and casually dismissed. Lovely women of the screen must rely upon professional beauty experts to keep their skin flawless for the tell-tale camera. Perhaps that is why laws regarding beauty practice are so stringent in California. Every beauty shop owner in this state must be a licensed operator, and must know, thoroughly, how to care for the skin. You can appreciate, then, the importance of this fact: 76 of the 80 beauty shops in Hollywood advise their patrons to use Palmolive Soap as the best means of keeping skin lovely between salon treatments. These 76 shops care for all the well-known stars of the screen. They are the Hollywood authorities on beauty culture! And all 76 of them consider Palmolive best! The Hollywood treatment The twice-a-day treatment advised by the Capital of Screenland is the very same method urged by the great beauty specialists all over Europe and America. Here it is: Massage a lather of Palmolive Soap and warm water gently into the skin for about two minutes. Rinse this off with generous applications of w f arm water, then colder and colder. That final cold water rinse closes the pores, acts as an astringent. You could use no finer daily care than this. And use Palmolive for the bath, as well. Millions do, ali over the world. It costs no more than ordinary soaps, you know.
Your Own Beauty Expert is Professionally Trained In every city in America are specialists who have spent years in study of the complexion. Go to one of them with your beauty problems regularly. Let them prescribe the daily treatment best suited to your skin.
IQ3IER FARM FRIGE LOWEST j FOR2SYEARS Mass Psychology Blamed by City Banker for Value Decrease. The price of Indiana farm land ! is the lowest it has been in twenty | or twenty-five years, according to I Clyde R. Raub, Ft. Wayne avenue ] state bank cashier, writing in the July issue of the Hoosier Banker. The price of farm land is deterI mined by its earning capacity and j the pride of ownership, the present | drop being due to the rejection of | farm land as an investment as re- ; suit of the mass psychology of the people, Raub said. | ' “Bank, deposits have decrease in | our best agricultural counties be- ; cause the cost of production has ; been more than the returns from ! farm land,” declared Raub. Hogs Total Is Lower “Livestock is the farmer’s liquid assets, and the United States department of agriculture bulletin No. 773 shows the number of hogs in Indiana as 10 per cent less on Jan. 1, 1930, than a year ago. The reduction in the number of hogs is caused by the farmer selling them to pay his debts, and he is deprived of the margin of profit to be had by feeding crops to livestock. “The Federal Intermediate Credit bank of Louisville, Ky., in a recent letter to banks, pointed out and illustrated this fact by means of a graph loaned to them by Swift & Cos. Tihs fact has cut the earning capacity of the Indiana farmer. “Adequate tile drainage is half of farm management in Indiana,” the writer pointed out, citing that climatic condi ions have influenced the crops. Autos Lowered Prices Motorization of the country resulted m a drop in prices for corn and oats, which were fed to mules and horses twenty years ago. “It always is darkest just before dawn. Fair weather, more tile, a lessening of land taxes, a cheaper price for farm implements and other
necessities of the farmer, keeping irrigation land from settlement and the revival of business will relieve our agricultural depression. “We have had three bad crops in a row. and if farmers can have a few good crops like in 1925 and 1926. we will have a return of values and
A Laundry So Six Family Services Steadfast and wet wash * Constant In Wet W 7 ash Flat Ironed , Economy Dry Wash StlpClflOP S©FViC© Rough Dry That It Has Economy Press llldl 41 nd * Family Finish Become Almost Dry Cleaning ait Institution! Also Domestic and Oriental Rug Cleaning ”s9i Paul H. Krauss Laundry
J§|j| oMHbP •"bF jgm /"“ANE of the most luxuriously furnished hotels in America. Situated in an exclusive environment ■■■■■■ overlooking the beautiful Lake Wawasee. Every recre--25 ational feature, including golf, bathing, fishing, motor- —— ing, yachting, horse-back riding. The best in service ggggg an d table that money can produce. Accommodations 555 for 300. Fire-proof building, every room with private bath. === The SPINK-WAWASEE " an HOTEL and COUNTRY CLUB On Lake Wawasee n. Wawasee, Indiana If On the Shores of Indiana’* Largest Lake ]1 > TflKtUM&tMtSt I —the Playground of One Middle West JJ
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“Among our patrons are the smartest women in Hollywood, Los Angeles, Pasadena. We must know all the beauty treatments ........ in i ague on the comment. Among ' ' these tho mod /onions is the Palmolive Soap treatment. MBm v mmm “You massage Palmolive lather .MMMKBm gently into the fare. I hen uash f,f l u 'tth uarm UQtcr followed Ambassador Hotel T fjf '''' Ifli and 9 Other Shops “Avoid soaps not made spe.■ ‘ --s.. cifically for the face. Avoid soaps that irritate and dry. >C... l se Palmolive, a real beauty j CU(J Su.S’iET &LM. tHu 10 C '
farm land will go up like It has in lowa, and everybody will be proud to be the owners of Indiana farm land." Levers Are Eliminated Screws and levers are eliminated in a saw handle which contains a plunger that locks the blade.
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Mme. Louise Zollars Gainsborough Beauty Shop 6655 Hollywood Blvd. James Simoniello cares for the complexions of many of the most important stars in filmdom. He says: “It gives us great pleasure and satisfaction that 76 of the 80 Hollytvood salons recommend Palmolive Soap, and tve specially use and recommend it in our complexion advice to stars." p 1608 No. Highland Avb,
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