Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 223, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 January 1933 — Page 3

JAN. 2G, 1933

DEBT PARLEY BID ACCEPTED BY ENGLAND Roosevelt May Ask Return to Gold Standard in Revision Talks. BV JOSEPH H. BAIRD I'nitrd l’rns St(T Correspondent WASHINGTON, Jan. 26.—AngloAmerican conversations on reduction of Great Britain's 54.600,000,000 war debt and other economic issues were assured today. Britain, in a note to this country, has accepted President-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt’s invitation to send envoys hijre early in March. These discussions will inaugurate a parade of European debtors to Washington. Italy, Czecho-Slovakia, Luthuama, and Finland also have been invited to submit their cases for debt reduction. Latvia is to be given an invitation today. Forwarded to Roosevelt The British note was forwarded to Mr. Roosevelt at Warm Springs, Ga. Administration sources, in close touch with the President-Elect, regarded the British answer as satisfactory, despite its reservations as to the scope of the economic discussions. "It will be recognized," the note said, “that decisions on matters which affect other states can not be reached before discussions take place at the conference between all the states represented there.” In an informed official quarter, this reservation was interpreted merely as a friendly gesture to France—an indication that there will be no Anglo-American bloc at the economic conference and that France’s interests will not be ignored. Gold Standard Is Issue From the American viewpoint, the important consideration is whether Great Britain will be prepared to discuss a return to the gold standard. Nothing in Wednesday’s note is construed as preventing this. President Hoover has indicated to his associates that a return to the gold standard would be the greatest boon that the debtor countries could offer the United States in return for debt reduction.

TWO ARE INJURED IN CITY AUTO ACCIDENTS Driver lladly Hurt After Twisting Machine to Avert Crash. Forced to strike a curb to avoid crashing into another car, driver of which sped away, Lloyd Kellar, 50, Negro, 943 Torbett street, was injured severely early today at Herschel avenue and Harding street when his auto overturned. He was treated at city hospital. In a collision of three autos Wednesday night at Forty-sixth and Pennsylvania streets, George Richason, 56, R. R. 3, Mitchell, was injured on the head. He was a passenger in an auto driven by his son John, which collided with one driven by Mrs. Maude Nease. 43, of 4337 College avenue. Mrs. Nease's car then struck a third driven by Miss Josephine Bennett, 20, of 44 Kenmore road. Latter two drivers were not injured. Mrs. Eliza Burns, 72. of 3515 Drexel avenue, suffered a hip injury Wednesday when she was struck by a street car at Lambert street and Pershing avenue. She was treated at city hospital. Athlete Is Seriously Wounded Bft t nit id I’rcsx FT. WAYNE. Ind., Jan. 26.—Monroe Brosius, 20, former local high school athlete, was receiving treatment in a hospital here today from a serious bullet wound which he told police was self-inflicted.

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Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont , Long Leader in Society , Taken by Death in Paris

Colorful Figure of Newport and New York Circles Led Suffragists. (Continued from Page One) She continued her career as nonchalantly as she had begun it, unconcerned over gossip. Astor Belmont's death, Mrs. Belmont plunge?! into the suffrage movement, and for years was one of its foremost leaders. In 1909. she founded the Political Equality League, and immediately became a central figure in the woman's suffrage movement. At the same time, a social ecclesiastical storm broke because of her work and because of the first marriage of her daugher, Consuelo Vanderbilt, the now Mrs. Jacques Balsan. Consuelo was married to the duke of Marlborough and the union later was annulled by the Vatican. Society talked and talked of the part Mrs. Belmont played in the ducal marriage and its subsequent disruption. Mrs. Belmont gave up her public career and her residence in America twelve years ago to make her home in Europe, but she visited New York frequently, and was one of the strong financial supporters of the National Woman’s party. On one of her visits to New' York, she publicly rebuked Bishop William T. Manning after she had been asked to contribute to the erection of the cathedral of St. John the divine. Bishop Manning, she

pw|To Mothers p w^ose c^'^ren won’t eat /f NaTU RE knows best. Never ..<• k , coax a child to eat! Remove •'*' the cause of a youngster's poor / • appetite. When appetite fails, i tongue is coated white, eyes I I I are a bilious yellow, don’t give \ small children a constipating f 1 \ cathartic that drains the system. i: j California syrup of figs is all |\ | the ’’medicine ’ they require. Ijjf \ The Child’s Appetite Mk V Will Always Respond If M i sluggish appetite almost always | f J m^ ans the child has a sluggish ; \ -fW called stasis, and see how quickly :f °nly “medicine” such children seem to V Jf H / need is pure, unadulterated fig syrup. • ' lilf 1 $ Children who get syrup of figs, now H Jf lhc n, soon nave the appetite and • PH H 1 cn orgy of young animals! They keep well illlf |l ii and avoid colds and sluggish spells. Jaßra li vg|§| Nature never made a finer laxative for nil Mill children; and they all love the wholcppP* | some, fruity flavor of the real California | syrup of figs. It’s purely vegetable, but | every druggist has it all bottled, with J directions. Begin with it at once. The liif I very next day, your child will be eating I better and feeling better. Keep on with •IF I the syrup of figs a few days and see mm \ j amazing improvement in appetite, color, f / weight, and spirits. I A single IF 1 I The promises made by the bottlers t \ of California Surup of Figs are A JSr \ >. \ irue > ond it will do the same for C /Jr IF U \ s genuine CALIFORNIA. Don t accept substitutes.

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Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont charged, had caused her name to be withdrawn as chairman of a charitable institution, on the ground that she was a divorcee. Mrs. Belmont’s children, in addition to Consuelo, are Harold S. Vanderbilt and William K. Vanderbilt Jr. The latter who had been yachting off Florida, started for New York by train Wednesday night, hoping to reach Paris before his mother died.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BILL TO REVAMP TAX BOARD LAW KILLED IN HOUSE Measure Is Resurrected to Allow Two Pay Days a Month. Under the leadership of a Republican. the overwhelmingly Demo- 1 cratic house of representatives to- j day killed a bill to revamp laws affecting the state tax board and re- ’ surrected a oill fixing two pay days; a month, which was killed Wednes- j day. Representative Herbert H. Evans (Rep., Newcastle), was the leader of the tax board bill opposition, j Author of ihe measure was Representative Wilfred Jessup (Dem., j Centerville.) Vote sustaining Evans’ motion to postpone indefinitely was cheered and Speaker Earl Crawford re-1 marked; "I rather expected this 1 from the first.” Representative John F. Ryan I 'Dem., Terre Haute*, led the move- • ment to resurrect the two paydays ! a month measure, one of the sponsors of which is Representative Fred S. Galloway (Dem., Indianapolis). Ryan’s motion for reconsideration j prevailed by a vote of 60 to 24, and the vote on passage of the bill was 70 to 16. Supporters of the bill recalled Democratic campaign pledges to labor and Ryan said workers should be paid twdee monthly for convenience in meeting public utility bills. He pointed out that if payment is i

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delayed beyond a certain date, a penalty is added. Representative Fabius Gwin (Dem., Shoals*, was the principal spokesman against the measure, declaring it would be "an added burden on industry.” Bill requiring licensing of all contract motor carriers by the public service commission was attacked Wednesday at a hearing before house judiciary B committee. Although motor truck operators would be affected by the bill, none opposed the measure at the hearing. A. S. Thomas of Danville, representing the livestock marketing department of the Indiana farm bureau, expressed fear that the bill would benefit railroads and large truck operators, to the detriment of smaller operators and farmers. Bandit Escapes With S2O. After ordering chewing gum a Negro bandit early today held up Herman Housefield. 23, manager of a Kroger store at 463 Blake street, looting the cash register of S2O and escaping. Housefield was alone in the store.

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TROTSKIVENTS HIS WRATH ON STAUNREGIME Dictator Accused of Leading Soviet Away From Ideal of Lenin. ■ Bii Vnitcd Prr** NEW YORK. Jan. 26.—The regime of Josef Stalin, virtual dictator of Soviet Russia, is subjected to sharp attack from the pen of Leon Trotski, who was one of the foremost leaders of the Bolshevik movement, in ths second and third volumes of his "History of the Russian Revolution.” published here today. Trotski, once president of the Petrograd Soviet, after the Bolsheviks won a majority there, and later

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president of the military revolutionary committee which organized the October revolution, recently accused Stalin of responsibility for the death of his daughter, who committed suicide in France. Trotski s daughter, the exiled Bolshevik leader said, killed herself because of Stalins action in exiling her from Russia. “Stalin s errors," Trotski writes in his history, "have brought him to a vulgar realization of democracy, or a ‘democratic dictatorship.’ a thing which can be nothing in reality but either an imperialist dictatorship or a dictatorship of the proletariat. "Step by step. Stalin's groups have proceeded along this road to a complete break with the position of Lenin . . Ia another passage, discussing Stalin's character, Trotski writes: “When faced by great problems, Stalin always retreats—not through lack of character, as in the case of Kamenev, but through narrowness of horizon and lack of creative imagination. His suspicious caution almost organically compels him at moments of great decision and

de'ep difference of opinion to retire into the shadow, to wait, and if possible to insure himself against the insurrection.” Answering attacks made against him following publication of the first volume of his historical work, Trotski first points to the the high positions he held before he was banished by Stalin.

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DON’T be that worst pest of all —the chronic sufferer from colds who passes germs on to family and friends. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery builds up the stomach and the blood so

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