Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 311, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1931 — Page 4

PAGE 4

BRIAND FACES GREATEST TEST OF HIS CAREER Bitter Attack Launched on Policies May Unseat Foreign Minister. BY RALPH HEINZEK United Prets Staff Corresnnnacnt PARIS, May B.—Aristide Briand, veteran of many European political crises, was threatened today by the bitterest and one of the most serious parliamentary tests of his career. Known among admirers of his conciliatory policy as the “man of peace," Briand has been made the center of a furious struggle ir. which the nationalistic elements have taken the lead against the foreign minister in a determined effort to oust him from the foreign ministry in a test vote, probably late today. Bitterness of the controversy and possibilities of violence have been indicated by the heavy police guard at the chamber of deputies and by riotous demonstration Thursday night by royalist students. A crowd of 300 students created a tumult at the chamber of deputies during the debate on foreign policy. The anti-Briand demonstration was ended only by the charge of police. Little resistance was offered by t.he students, many of whom were arrested, but released later. Despite his policies in the foreign office, Briand has promised as vigorous attack as that already under way by his political foes. Not only the question of foreign policy, but the question of the presidential election is involved in the debate in the chamber, which started calmly enough Thursday but was expected to become more tense today and Saturday. MUSICALE TO BE GIVEN Crlspus Atturks to Present Final Sunday Afternoon Program. Music department of Crispus Attucks will present its final Sunday afternoon musicale in the school auditorium at 4. Mrs. Lillian Le Mon, president of the National Association of Negro Musicians, and Mrs. Marjorie T. Brown, formerly director of music in Northeastern Junior high school, Kansas City, will be featured as guest artists. They will be supported by advanced pupils of the high school pipe organ class—Elsie Young, Bessie Patterson, Sylvia McCann and Hilda Mitchell.

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AWARDS ARE MADE IN HEALTH CONTEST

Red Ribbons, Second Place Honors, Are Given to 193 Children. Red ribbons, designating second award in the health contest conducted by the Indianapolis Kindergarten Society, were awarded 193 children Thursday afternoon at Brookside community house. These awards were made subsequent to those of 590 children who won first places and who were named last Friday, at the opening of Child Health Week observances. Winners of second-place award: Brlzhtwood—Leßoy Hadley. Raymond Paxton and Marzaret Shablik. Broad Ripple—Stella Frances Charles. Wiiford Chanes B asing Robert Greez. Patricia Heuntis. Margaret Richardson. Richard Emil Riley and Edith Eleanor Taylor. Brookside—James Thomas. Doris Jeanne Trump and Wayne Van Treese. Christamore —Betty EUsn Jones. Norma Petit and Bobby Plummer. Clifton—Paul Beam, Mary Patricia Cameron. Frances Netherland. Donald Rothenberzer. Marie Slaughter and Robert Sprague. Day Nursery—Laverne Gorby. English Avenue—Thelma Jean Emberton, Mary Bernice Kenneday, Donald Kindred. Leslie Masters. John Mathes. Robert Moates. Claude Maorv. Mary Katherine Prall, Marzie Marls Rice. Mary Virginia Schultz and Mary K. Stevenson. Emerson Heights Betty Brockman. James Greenlees and Joan Rose. Fairvlew*—Marie Bowers. Betty Jean Koss. William Luhman and Tony Todd. Fall Creek —Robert Dyer. Planner—Jewel Bennett. Marian Carter. Lillian Hartwell. Carl Dean Lewis. Garnet Rheirns and Virginia Sanders. Fountan Square—Edna Mae Alderson, Claude Edwards. Martha Green. Carl Jones, Ruth Irene Kirsch. John Knox Jr.. June Lester. Mary Margaret Morris. Margaret Jean Shad. Jean Tackett. Allen B. Wakelsnd. Lcuella Zimmerman and William Zimmerman. Garfield—Mida Mae Bush. Virginia Helen Carter, Doris Louise Hoeferlin, Fred Kleine. Charlene Stanton. Edward Strain. Robert Stuppy and Ernest Walker. George Merritt—Lillian Delores Anthony. Gladys Harvey. Robert Jarrett and Freddie Majors. Hawthorne Robert Browninz. Nellie Chadwell. James Ellers. James Edward Hvmes. James Martin. Forest* Wade Parsons. Mary Ellen Rhinehart. Holliday—Bernard Casey. Frederick Dufek. Virzinia Featherston. Elsie Harden, Anthony Laker. James McGinlev. Betty Nells, Leo Priller. Lorene Riley. Margaret Shauzhnesy and Charles Stammer. Indianapolis Avenue—Doris Fleck. Irvlneton —Nancy Ostrander. Ketcham—Dino Alexander. Carlos Bell, Edward Bencik. Carol Dell Christoff, Rosemary Dezelan. Lucy Falk. Josephine Hren. Florence Lambert. John Marendt Jr.. Herman Miller. Joseph Moze. Betty Lee Murray. Jack McAllister. Adolph Semich. Carl Stonich. John Stancia, Paul Stcyanovich, Louis Thomas. Charles Wazontr, Mary Ward and Brownie Yerick. Minkner Bryant Beach Jr., Florence Evanoff. Arthella Hulse, Lorma Kranins and Wiihilmlna Lewis. Nathan Morris Esther Abram. Sam Berzman. Esther Camhi. Esther Ccrtien, Mary Joan Clements. Mary Jane Dickerson. Sarah Franco. Millard Fredmon, Harry Fox. Robert Hams. Harvey Harris, Mary Levy. Jean Mozinzo. Goldie Nahmias. Esther Passo and Betty Jean Zuckerman. Hill—Betty Mae Archer. Betty Lou Martin. Alberta Newell. Jack Vermillion and Betty Zimmerman. Oscar McCullouch Ruby Inzraham. Dorothy Martin. Joseph Mills, Rosie Tomescu, Aurico Topuza. Rader—Leslie Blackburn. Walter Boyd, Marguerite Bryson. Lucy Jane Clark, Rich-

ard Cross, Geraldine Crawford. Vivian Dawson. June G oson. Evelyn Hayes. Gilbert Kill. Doro'li* Johnson. Eeteila Patton. Mary Alice Phillips. LeVier Phelps. Samuel Porter. Ferdonia Richardson. Frank Sullivan. Betty Jean Tanner and Kenneth Watson. Riverside—Rhea Jean Christy, Ruth MeNay. Juanita Olson and Marjorie Svmmcs. Twenty-elzhth Street—Luther Cabbaze. Donald Corey and Ellyn Gradv. Jean Kuzleman, Lenard McCay. Francis Sevenish end Donald Wazner. Wallace—Henry Edward Gleslnz. Joane Lewis. John J. Parry and Jack Runyan. Woodside—Jack Balccm. Marzaret Eller. Blue. Geraldine Louise Bremer. Marzaret Louise Duvall. Gloria Jean Duke. Ruth Keller. Svlvia Maxlr.e Lentz. Kathleen List. Jovce Audrey Moran. Gloria Ann Morris. June Price. Mary Robertson. Dolores Jean Rubush and Marzaret Jean Sullivan,

FEDERAL CREDIT STILL IS GOOD $50,000,000 Treasury Issue Oversubscribed 5 Times By United Press WASHINGTON, May 8-Federal credit is not impaired, despite forebodings to the contrary, it appeared today with announcement that a $50,000,000 treasury issue offered May 5 had been oversubscribed nearly five times. Applications for the ninety-one-day noninterest-bearing bills were opened at the treasury Thursday, and were found to total $291,690,000, or nearly six times as much as offered. Secretary Mellon announced that the average price of the bills issued would, be 99.701, equivalent to an interest rate of about 1.18 per cent cn an annual basis. •

TRUCKING CONFAB FAILS Lack of Indiana Legislation Holds Back Agreement, By United Press LANSING, Mich., May B.— Little progress toward co-ordination of the trucking laws of Michigan, Indiana, Ohio and Illinois was made at a conference here of officials of the four states, Clarke Brown, deputy secretary of state, said today. The chief barrier to united action, he said, is the fact that Indiana has little legislation which could be linked with those of her neighbor states. It was attempted to co-ordinate the reciprocal provisions of statutes so that identical requirements would be set up. Another conference has been called for late May or early June at West Baden, Ind., at which time a program for two years from now will be outlined.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

HOOVER FROWNS ON REOPENING TARIFF ISSUES Fears 'Effect on Business, Even Though Existing Rates Too High. BY PAUL R. MALLON United Press Staff. Correspondent WASHINGTON,. May B.—The administration Is preparing to frown down officially two widely circulated ideas of how to get out of the depression. Both President Hoover and the federal farm board, who are concerned with the suggestions are represented as desiring to nip'them before they get too well started. The first suggestion was brought forward by prominent Republicans as a measure of farm relief. It was proposed that the farm board take over one-fourth of the wheat crop, charge the farmers an equalization fee from the product, and sell it abroad. The plan would work about the same as the old equalization fee embodied in the McNary-Haugen bill. It would be putting into effect the principles of the bill without parsing it. The second suggestion contemplates a downward revision of the tariff at the coming session of congress. For some time it has been known that Mr. Hoover is reluctant to enter upon any general reopening of the tariff question. His friends say he fears business would suffer more that way than it does now, even if the rates of the existing law are too much.

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War Mothers to Attend Tablet Rite

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Otto P. Deluse

A delegation of American War Mothers will be an honored group at the English opera house Sunday afternoon when the Fraternal Order of Eagles unveils a bronze tablet ccmmemQrating the first known public appeal for a nation-wide observance of Mother’s day, made in the theater Feb. 7, 1904 by Frank

Guilty Plea to Slaying By United Press NEWCASTLE, Ind., May B.—John W. Saunders, 40, Richmond, Negro, was sentenced to tvto to twenty-one years imprisonment when he pleaded guilty here to a charge of slaying his stepson, Ernest L. Davis, in November, the climax of a family quarrel.

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John B. Hudson

E. Hering, South Bend. He has served the order twice as national president. Mrs. W. E. Ochiltree, Connersville, national recording secretary of the war mothers, will head the delegation. Hering, on Nov. 14, 1929, received from the war mothers a medal with a bar inscribed “Father of Mother’s Day." The unveiling ceremony will be carried out by the tablet committee of the Indiana Eagles aerie, of which Otto P. Deluse, Indianapolis, is chairman. Members are Mayor John B. Hudson, Lafayette, state Eagles president; Ray C. Brock, Kokomo, past state president, Ernest E. Cloe, Noolesville, state secretary, and Dr. Fred C. Dilley. Brazil, chief medical examiner of the insurance department. Music for this part of the program will be given by the quartet of Columbus aerie, which has as a member Mayor Karl Volland, state trustee of the order. A program on the stage of the theater will follow the unveiling, and from 2:45 to 3:30 will be broadcast from WFBM. Sound ampli-

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Ernest E. Cloe

fiers will carry the program to an overflow audience on Monument Circle.

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MAY 8, 1931

MOB TRIES TO RUSH EMBASSY Argentine Headquarters in Uruguay Menaced, By United Press MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, May 8, —Tenseness of the Argentine political situation was reflected here Thursday night, when a crowd of 103 persons attacked the Argentine embassy. Shouting threats against the Argentine government, the mob rushed the embassy doors, after a hostile demonstration in the street. The doors were closed by poUce on guard there, but the attackers attempted to enter violently. Police discharged their guns into the air, dispersteg the rioters, who continued to shout their threats. Two persons were arrested.