Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 233, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 February 1933 — Page 5
FEB. 7, 1033
SEEK TO KEEP •YOUNG TEDDY' IN ISLAND JOB Hawes, Hare and Other Democrats Talked for Philippine Post. BY MAX STERN Tlmrt stiff Writer WASHINGTON, Feb. 7.—Efforts are being made to induce PresidentElect Franklin D. Roosevelt to retain his distant cousin, “Young Teddy” Roosevelt, in his place as governor-general of the Philippines. Heretofore this place has been one of the fattest plums in the gift •of a President. In the past, it has been a stepping stone t.o cabinet posts, ambassadorships. even the White House. Such men as Dwight Davis, W. H Taft, General Leonard Wood, Ambn -ador Forbes, Secretary Henry L. Stimson and others have considered it worth the taking. Today, its tenure is not only less secure, but less atnaciive. Tenure I,ess Secure In July, the insular legislature will vote on acceptance of their independence under the Hawes-Cut-ting act. Should they accept it and set up a commonwealth government, the new appointee as governor-general might have to pack up and return to.the mainland, perhaps within two years from now. Meantime, the office would be the center of endless agitation. Those urging Governor Roosevelt's retention argue that he has Won the ocnfidcnce of the Filipino people, that he has done as good a job there as he did as Governor of Puerto Rico, that he has so far taken no sides for or against the Independence bill. Many Are Mentioned It is significant that one of those said to be urging his retention is Manuel Quezon, the Philippines’ No. 1 patriot. Senor Quezon is en route to Washington, and may urge such a course personally upon the Presi-dent-elect. Among Democrats mentioned for the place are Representative Butler Hare of South Carolina, Senator Hawes of Missouri, Robert W. Bingham, Louisville publisher; Henry j Morganthau, Brigadier-General Pelham D. Glassford and Charles Mar- | tin Hay, St,. Louis attorney. PETTIS HEIRS VICTORS IN FIRST COURT TILT Probate Judge Chambers Paid for Them in Suit Against Foundation. Heirs of the estate of Alphonso P. Tettis, Indianapolis financier, who died several years ago in France, Won the first round of their court battle contesting Pettis’ will Monday. Probate Judge Smiley N. Chambers found lor them in a suit against the Indianapolis Foundalion. The foundation was ordered by j Chambers to pay Leo M. Gardner, I administrator, $77,500 to satisfy Maims of the heirs. Prior to hfs death Pettis in 1920, treated a trust fund of $700,000 with I lie foundation, interest of which Was to become an annuity for a friend of the family. Heirs con- j iested legality of the annuity, charg- i Ing Pettis was of unsound mind j When the trust was established. j GIRL, 21. TRIES SUICIDE despondency Over 111 Health Blamed For Swallowing Poison. Despondency because of ill health Is believed the reason for an atlempt at suicide by Miss Margaret I’aney, 21, of 2528 Rockville road, t ho swallowed poison at her home llqnday night. She was taken to city hospital, Where it is said she may recover.
m FAS HIMP BARCA IHS- WEDNESDAY UNLYAT THE LEADER
WHAT 4c WILL BUY! | | WHAT 14c WILL BUY! | | WHAT 24c WILL BUY! | 10c PART LINEN TOWELING YARD A gasraan 10c 0.1. T. Threads3oo-Vil. A WSMm mmm 5-Pc. R’ffl’d Curtains A _ —a—l___ "”** ''<•<! --Hint. t#l C "Ts Var.l M.ool, in hl„rk n nrl Jfg 0, ■ £fi,C :v>r Vnl..-v vr.r.U 1..,. g "ill. tO-i.„l. eV "I,He. Nov 10. SO OMd apilOlS valance. Tie-back raw.., fringe! "ff P&^wSHL mmmma " 1 —■■■■l mi crcwcoim. .. Mi in Floor 4 IOC PALMOLIVE BEADS 4NjfffPf||f 36-In. OUTING FUNNEL Jly ds J|||g| Jergen’s “KiaeCocoa AL ? f „ AN ® , 01LI y E , SOAP 4 Bars 4 C JSwi. TOILET tissue d „||.| gami WOMEN'S SILK HOSE 27-INCH GINGHAMS Reg. 29c Curtain Panels | / aSjaß jSmMmP ”cTrls' 39c WASH DRLSSES REGI,L^ R l ? C <:URTAIf, “? DS Ac JP lillilaa 35c HOUSE BROOMS '* 1 * >< "" D&AE& I srunl ruin lirniniik. I line lianilles. Mill jK Blashll{3fiiafiMj SBoßb 1 *’' l ' l r, ‘" ' * *'' ‘"'eaters in nssnrteil < nlnr ‘ "in 4£Sj£ j|jHuMrosfw 1 g I |„ nr liinntinns. sizes '! lln spi ninl I innr rT 'lll'll I Innr. I nil '■' — 1 ■ NOVELTY BUTTONS Carii tjg M$M i|pifi| , Mx . r | torkV Do „- virio Pjaffijl SB SkSI Turtle-Neck Sweaters jA SSESm£MS H. I1 ! u’ m.I Ninill ul'* *r olmt ml ,jL f rr fcflj C Bt&Eg Ilj UTUA Mr *? bn O 711 U C Mm a JHH Kmvs* :,ii- supalrrw. Mostly uliltc. Trail 'M§ •• 1 1 * i*ii- % ft. 1’ mi iii <| Mm, floor , 10c , CURT^ IN , SCRIM An m$ 50C POND'S gOH ,- V.Vr‘'." "?V‘i4 C jfiHß . .. or - Ihß W HWIPffHPBIPW HMf ■■!■ '•" latent leather. o.|U ami ends. I’air V Si ** nf t • lea nsi n e tissue. Main Floor 'lain I 100- 4 Sc POT CLEANERS *9 f „ r A n JwBMBwMBI 2Sc Mennen's Talcum and >i Men's Dress Shirts A- - ror mH r I Baines • < sni;iiti' r.r..u<-n mmSm9SnSasvp. \' ■.; i. i #vSr MR u.>riT.-.i h.h% tai., m nr i il.miii [ino.inr mmt 'inn i i,o r (nr men. 'lain ft or * ]^p^CT|awßp Ladies' Handkerchiefs For c ? anitaryMa P 1 , 2>4 C BB 'Im^TPH INFANTS" SOFT SOLES jT~ (V ( t Childrens SLIPPERS 4At BBESI ( Men's Work Shirts jg fESgsm V k&Ofi ; WmM .H" in,l lila.k -naps and .(„.... ,„ „,„ , I W i I .? n , 8 I r ” *ll I ACHHI V' 4 Bine . liamlirav. triple titrhe,l. •* puck- \F* 'J i Musved from ti imlll n i M ihi floor |. lir 1 1 \ Irfv ifewHißaPl ~ *‘, f 1,1,1 Iri,herp,,H hw -** All A \ Jf*/ * ts ' ront st}U ‘- to 17 \k W**S' "ires to larce . Many colors. Main floor. Main Floor 5C LACE TRIMMINGS \ Yds A c j&BSB 25c Infants' DRESSES f A C |H WbH MENS FUNNELETTE SHIRTS )4.Bbn| Wi # V MMBEi I are trimmed "hi.e dre.se*. 2nd Hr A <.ra>. ,„ and iilal.ls. i |.;..'keß ...at ■ MmssaSMBBJBKMm htyie. in sizes to 1. Main Floor . nnniH.iiij.i;iH.iiiii.i [U ! WMWIwe reserve the right to limit quantities— [ ll fSpYTpJtfTI If •TQ i| J | fqfij | j I OC JAH. ON 10c BLEACHED sc WATER f Men's 10c Rayon I MAXWELL children', ns SOAP MUSLIN GLASSES H wW * wi 1 1 jM I W Plaited Hose nonce Full Length POWDER - * H W W W M KPH * . a iet * “ ose JSSId*” hosiery 3 pkcs 4* 6- 24' 3-4' Coupon With Coupon Ci.noon ffnlv . . mt Moor III 1 mh Bl i!-*3*JtL.& ■** ■ Mith foupon nniy .nd Floor ■■ Mitfi Coupon Only mmmmmmum—mm—mmmmmmmammmmmmmmm —r———i ■ i——■— LSSBSISSSSSESSSSSSSSISE!bfiSSSSSSBSSSSSMSSSIiMMMi I
Let’s Explore Your Mind BY DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM, D. Sc.
tb SHE JUSTIFIED IN LEAVING HIM?' - 'ft**' A ImEVE M fT i\ 'JlL'\ A 11 f:S DO YOU BELIEVE IT *:■ / ,/ ffl Kol W400"h5- ADVANTAGEOUS TO PLANT R3W&ES Wjjiy/ | OR ROOF U6MT BW& WRITE"vE'S SC.homU
. In the movies the answer is usually, yes. My answer in most cases would be. no. Usually a man commits a crime because he wants success without working for it. He wants to swagger and have
HOW TO MART PEOPLE LIKE YOU A distinguished psychologist has created a method by which you can analyze yourself. It will indicate desirable changes in your social habits which should be very helpful in increasing your popularity with others. This information is yours upon request accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope. Write Dr. Albert E. W'iggam in care of this newspaper. Just ask for “Popularity.”
money, but tries to escape the hard work you and I go through to secure success. He needs to rebuild his mental habits under the guidance of a psychologist. By assisting in re-
X)r. Wiggam will he glad to answer questions dealing with problems of conduct, morals, beliefs, husband and wife, parent and child—any question In the field of human relationships, questions of general interest will be answered in this department. If personal reply Is desired enclose stamped. (3e) self-addressed envelope. Address Dr. Wiggam in care of The Indianapolis Times.
Stamp Collectors Write Experiences in Contest
Letters Pour In From Fans, in Race for Seventeen Good Prizes. SI amp collecting is one of the most fascinating of hobbies and scores of Indianapolis fans are attesting to this fact in The Times’ big stamp contest, which now is hitting the peak in interest. Every mail brings letters from hobbyists, competing for the seventeen prizes which have been posted in the contest. You need not be a literary genius to have a chance to win one of the awards. Just sit down and write 15 words or less, telling why you like to collect stamps. For the seventeen best letters on the subject, “Why I Am Interested in Collecting Stamps,” the following prizes will be given: First—An International Postage stamp album for foreign and United States stamps. Has space for 22,009 stamps. A splendid prize. Donor. F. Vernon Smith, Inland Hobby Shop. Second—One package of 1.000 foreign stamps, all different. Donor. Inland Hobby Shop. Third—Album for United States
trieving her man, she performs a rervice for society and for herself. 2. Yes. This I think one of the weaknesses in the psychology of Freud. The most skilled psychoanalyst can scarcely avoid reading his own mental life into that of his patient. We all have this weakness when comparing ourrclves with others because we have no standards outside ourselves. That is the value of intelligence and personality tests. By them we compare other people not with ourselves, but with the averages of people in general. 3. This is a superstition that dies hard. I met a school principal recently who really believed it. Careful government experiments reveal no influence of the moon upon the growth of vegetation or warping of lumber. The only thing that seems to grow especially well in the light of the moon is love.
stamps. Donor, Stewart Book Store, Inc. Fourth—Package of 300 stamps, foreign and United States, some high values. Donor, Dr. H. A. Washburn. Fifth—Block of four mint United States “Molly Pitcher,” commemorative of 1028. Donor, Mr. Glenn M. Pagctt, president Indiana Stamp Club. Sixth—One package of 500 foreign stamps. Donor, F. Vernon Smith. Seventh —Book, “How to Collect Stamps,” by Ralph Kimple. Donor, Stewart Book Store, Inc. Ten prizes of one pound each of mission mixture (stamps on paper) may run a thousand stamps to the pound. Many are current United States. Good for trading. Donors, Joseph Zix and Floyd D. Shockley. Letters must not exceed 150 words. All letters must be sent to The Times office, postmarked not later than midnight, Feb. 13. 1933. Address Stamp Editor. Indianapolis Times.. Decision of the judges will b? final. Winners will be announced Feb. 20 and the two best letters will be published. Give age if under 18. Mrs. F. D. Leete, Dr. T. Victor Keene, and Mrs. C. O Robinson hav.e been named as judges.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
U. S. SHARE OF SOUTH AMERICA TRADE PERILED Radical Steps at Once Seen as Only Hope to Save Export Market. This is the third and concluding article of the foreign trade analysis written bv Harry W. Franti of the United Press foreign department. BY HARRY W. FRANTZ United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Feb. 7.—Like the fabled “Atlantis,” South America soon may become a “sunken continent’’ so far as United States export tradT is concerned, unless radical steps are taken to regain that once rich commerce. The present slump and the potential opportunity of United States trade in Latin America strikingly are indicated by the fact that exports to the tiny island of Puerto Rico, with 1.500,000 people, now are greater than shipments to such wealthy and populous countries as Argentina. Brazil, Peru, Chile, Mexico and Cuba. If figures do not lie, the export statistics strongly suggest that there has somewhere been a misdirection of United States commercial policy toward the twenty American republics. Vast Slump in Exports A long scries of Pan-American conferences, President Hoover's good-will trip to South America and immense capital investments in the southlands did not stay, a slump in United States export trade to South America from $539,000,000 in 1929 to $307,000,000 in 1931 and again to $97,131,000 in 1932. In the year 1932, United States exports to Puerto Rico alone were valued at $48,780,000, a substantial slump from previous years. But this figure compared with exports of $32,575,000 to Mexico, $28,600,000 to Cuba, $31,669,000 to Argentina, $28,600,000 to Brazil, $3,568,000 to Chile, and $3,964,000 to Peru. The drastic slump in United States exports to South America was due to the low purchasing nower of those countries, resulting from the fact that their exports products encountered falling prices and fewer purchasers in world markets for industrial raw materials and foodstuffs. Raise Trade Obstacles The depression in markets for South American commodities partly was due to commercial causes and partially to the multiplication of artificial trade obstacles in the United Sttaes, Great Britain and many countries of Europe. Important Latin Amp.ican commodities, formerly listed in the United States, but since 1930 subject to tariffs or excise taxes on imports, are petroleum, copper, longstable cotton and cattle hides. Duties were raised in 1930 on such important articles as grains, live cattle, canned meats, flaxseed and casein. United States exports to South America, experts believe, will revive when international commodity markets offer higher levels to basic commodities. The world economic conference offers the earliest substantial hope. In long range, reciprocal trade pacts may help the United States; but the history of such attempts has not been encouraging. Reciprocity has been studied and agitated at intervals since the Pan-American conference in 1831, without measureable concrete results, except the United States-Cuban reciprocity treaty of 1904, product of special circumstances. The underlying difficulty has been the United States’ desire to protect domestic agricultural and live stock production against external competition. Recently, the growth of sentiment here for metals and minerals’ protection, particularly copper and petroleum, has introduced anew political obstacle.
MRS. KRESGE IS BRIDE
v-
Mrs. Doris Mercer Kresge (above), former wife of S. S. Kresge, 10-cent store magnate, has become the wife of Prince Farid Khan Sadri of Persia. They -were married in Paris at the Moslem mosque, though she does not intend to embrace the religion of her husband. When she divorced Kresge in 1928. a $2,000,000 settlement was rumored. Prince Farid was a chamberlain to the shah. If you can’t afford anew car, do the next best thing and purchase a good used one. A fine selection always is available in classification 50 on the Want ad page.
A,so in THU Issue I ©Oll’t 11IISS it ! You will find a complete gangplank synopsis oi tne lirst installment by Isaac F. Marcosson 4 mecca AY t ° of thi® gripping story in the by Gay Gilpatric . 11 issue on sale today.
■j ' ' ' _■ : , •"' •-' \.\v/'.;.•' •: .'• 1 THE SATURDAY £f EVENING POST 5* AN AMERICAN INSTITUTION •_> ; Vr. JN •
‘TIGHTEN UP'ON DANCING HALLS WITH NEW LAW " Ordinance Passed by Council Provides for Strict City Regulation. Step toward more strict regulation of city dance halls and cabarets was taken by the city council Monday night with passage of an ordinance prohibiting operation of such places without payment of a SSO license fee. Permission from Chief Mike Morrissey also is required before application for a license. A police matron must be on duty at all times, | the new measure requires. Itinerant peddlers, defined as persons bringing foodstuffs from distant points and selling to retailers j from temporary locations, also will ; be checked under an ordinance esi tablishing a S2OO license fee and re- | quiring a SSOO bond to be posted with the city controller. Peddlers who sell direct to consumers. from house-to-house, are not included in the license requirement. Other ordinances passed provide: For reduction of license fee for concrete building block manufacturers from SIOO to $10; purchase of incandescent lamps at a cost not exceeding $2,500; purchase of city hospital supplies of milk, gauze and adhesive tape, and transfer of funds in the street commissic : #ers’ and health departments. New ordinances would establish Southeastern avenue as a preferential street from Washington street to city limits; permit the board of works to sell ground at Washington street and White river; appropriate $10,110.09 unexpended 1932 funds to j department funds, and transfer $34 ' in the board of health.
FRAUD IS CHARGED
Hr Hk lra George W. Weatherby, above, president of W. D. Boyce & Cos . Chicago magazine publishers, is named with two other officials of the company in federal indictments charging use of the mails to defraud.
Lowest Mnrili Grns Fare in Years From Indianapolis <542.55 ound Trip Ticket* to New Orleans at this rate on anle daily to April 30th. Return limit IB dnyn. 1 .orrc*|M>ii<li*K reduced round-trip fare* al*o available via Is. & IS. R. R. to .Mobile. Biloxi, (iulfport. I*a** < !liri*t inn. IVnnnrnln, etc. 1,. & N. All-Expense Mardi Gras Tour Leave* Tndianapoli* ivia IVnn. K. RA Friday. February 2ilb, 6- tO p. m. |68.39if upper berth i u*cd. $78..39 if lower berth i* lined. Include* Q round-trip railfare from Indtannpoli*. all-expenne* from (except meal* while in New Orleans), side trip tol*en*arola and nightaccing trip*. Hi Traveling to New Orleans via L. A N. you pan* along the Beautiful Gulf i ioaat For full information,literature, renervation*, etc., apply to O ■■arapMHH 11. M. Mount*. Traveling Agent " 0| /zH 310 Merchants Hank Bldg, phone Rilcv 1041, Indianapolis mWm Louisville & Nashville BLR.}
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OFFER TO RUN CITY ON Sl-A-YEAR PAY 40 Terre Haute Citizens Make Bid to Electorate. /.'>/ I >ntr<l Press TERRE offer by forty citizens of Terre Haute to serve in city offices at * salary of $1 a year was before th® electorate today. Announcement of the plan wa* made Monday night with the pledge that if elected, they would turn back all but $1 of their salaries into the city general fund. All poltical parties are represented in the group. Those offering to conduct the city's business at the reduced salaries mostly are members of a group of local business men who have been urgin;, economy in city and county government.
