Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 266, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 March 1933 — Page 7

MARCH 17, 1933

Cj/jtf Welcome Basketeers! time” QOLf jl 1110" f \ mßjf between -.he Saturday sessions of the Big Event, come wlkVI UwiXwklllfcL a 1 \ in and look these undisputed champion-values over! W \ \ 1011 Here’s your chance to stock un on needs for Spring ... 1 . . • \ We bought the entire surplus stock 1 *b3BBI of a large manufacturer just before 1 J JggSK V'jgrseS mmwme the recent upward swing of cotton! | <• ,;A- ‘ *' k mtmS üBBS hBB We doubt if this offer can ever be 1 / IT|JPP ! jßw Hu HH BffjxS i’imKill duplicated again! Its a golden oppor- f/ jJmT I ' H|Mjjjp* wl|| B tunity to save! ' mSaf m B& BB a Supply °f jjjjß iSflg BUg CTBHBaBMHBr > v fflMWy BBi|BHb - * MBSB funrC / MJHHiBBUKM ™ • J M ••-v ' S >-' A>f \ 1 , '■>:. f < * --.v **' BWF ' • r: .>■ •■■.*'<;’" Super-Quality Broadcloth ' i; h - fashion necklinn! jjyp |p| 1£ $1.49 jjof the town at 58.95! he v|k, r . Cm r A . 1/ r\ r*7r\ colors. Another great value! sasz Imperfects of Actual 69c, 79c icv Tweeds ,n r.ra KS3** o9c Qualities at 39c ims> t BLOCK’S —Downstairs Store. ■ ' jMffiwllll These are emphatically not ordinary shirts. They’re perfectly Sll^l '" ■ 1 - - ■' ' 1 1 1 r ' i ' tailored. They fit exactly like more expensive shirts. Every one is jjpj&yf full 34 inches long and boasts 7-button fronts. Collar attached fef|||S f styles! In white, tan. green, blue. Some novelty pattern broadcloths UH||h f' ■ . . all vat dyed and guaranteed fast colors. Sizes 14 to 17 for men and young men. Don't miss this exciting sale Saturday. HI 2-Trouser jS_ j —^ £b4IT S ~ JACKETS | ill —-jßfjl You’ll have to go a long, long way to find the a -Champion” |fcc| QjjlpT PhilHf'Pn’c Qhnoc J I ■L ?: ' , j : if ii ; ' ; Y~] equal of these blue and oxford cheviot TVS O-trou- value! Wanted brown '•' dale, omiuren S onoes B **? suits on sale tomorrow for only $10! Don’t Sil^coiiar^^nd Styles for *OO \ BLOCK'S—Downstairs Store. BLOCK’S—Downstairs^ Black or brown calf! r.itent leather! ? —'*" '■ '-'• v^-; -■-•'''■ ' •" ’ ''/-rfferfj Two-tone Oxfords or P® H ~ 1 straps! Made to tit growing feet com- 1 I ■H m !l H" K jSsk lj§ ■ H tjK HjK ■ Ja* BLOCK'S—Downstairs Store. IIM m. B B 888 B B 8 j| V’Ce’flf'v BJB BL. wk. 8 m B I

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 7

EUROPE FIGHTS TO KEEP VALUE OF DOLLAR UP Sound Money Places U. S. at Disadvantage in World Trade. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripn*-Hoard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON. March 17.—Great though it is. there was something j more than the mere soundness of American credit behind the amazing j firmness of the dollar on foreign exchange following the banking crisis. Great. Braitain. France and other 1 great nations of Europe exerted j every ounce of their strength to ■ prevent the dollar slipping. For this they had a two-fold purpose: 1. The high dollar puts the United j States at a disadvantage in international trade. It makes it easier for Britain. France and other commercial nations to compete in the foreign market. Cheap Dollar—Easy to Pay 2. A cheap dollar would do away with one of Europe's most convincing arguments in favor of drastic war debt reduction. Cheap dollars would make it easier for the debtor nations to pay. If more dollars could be had for j the same amount of pounds, francs or the silver used by half the mhab- | itants of the globe as purchase money, American exports would gain at the expense of foreign competitors. If it required fewer pounds, francs and so forth to settle the $11,000.000.000 war debts, that in itscll would amount to reduction. The demand for immediate revision, therefore, would have just that much less to stand on. Wait Economic Conferences So Europe would like the dollar to stay right where it is, at least for the time being. Two vitally important conferences are scheduled for this spring and summer—one to scale down the war debts, and the other to do something about the world monetary and economic situation—and. until these are over. Europe wishes America’s position to remain as is. For Europe, it means additional! bargaining power. That Britain realizes the advantages her depreciated pound affords her, at least for the present, is shown by her deliberate efforts to keep it from rising. She has a fund of more than £100.000,000 to hold sterling at approximately its : present value. POISON IVY EXTRACT IS USED AS REMEDY Sufferer Is Helped When Other Treatment Methods Fail. L’.y Science Service NEW YORK, March 17.—Daily | baths w r hich contained gradually inJ creasing amounts of poison ivy ex- | tract were resorted to by one poison ! ivy sufferer w’hen all other methods |of treatment failed. This method | did no harm and enabled the fluent to withstand successfully further attacks of the poisoning. To avoid bringing on an attack of the treatment, the dilution of extract must be very great at first, and the amount of extract must be very gradually increased, warned Dr. F. E. Maisel of this city in reporting it to the Journal of Ailergy. He suggested that the" method might prove equally helpful in skin irritations due to contact with other substances besides poison ivy. In such cases, of course, the extract would be made not from poison ivy, but from the irritating substances concerned. POSITRON INTRODUCED TO WORLD OF PHYSICS Discoverer Gives Report of His Scientific Invesrtrgation. I By Science Service NEW YORK, March 17.—The positron is introduced formally to the I world of physics today, in a commu- | nication by its discoverer. Dr. Carl D. Anderson of the California Institute of Technology, to the Physical Review. Aug. 2, 1932, is, given as the date of the first photograph of the positive electron, christened positron for short, which has the mass of the older negative electron, but a positive electron, christened positron which is nearly 2,000 times more ! massive. A search for a negative particle | of the mass of the proton was urged by Dr. Anderson, who predicted the I possibility of its existence. To date Dr. Anderson has obtain- ! ed fifteen photographs cf positron | tracks in a group of 1,300 photo- ! graphs of cosmic ray tracks. Posl- | trons are let loose from atoms bombarded w r ith cosmic rays. SPRING HERE MONDAY Time Set at 8:43 P. M. by Nautical Almanac. By Science Service WASHINGTON, March 17. : Spring of 1933 will commence at | 8:43 p. m., eastern standard time, ! Monday, March 20, according to | computations made here at the ! nautical almanac office, in the J United States naval observatory. At ! that moment, the sun, which has | been traveling northward through the sky since last December, will | cross the equator, and enter the | zodiacal sign of Aries. This is called the vernal equinox and at this time of year the sun |is below r the horizon just as long as it is above, so that days and nights are of equal length. Also, on this date, the sun rises directly east and sets due west. Spring will continue until June 21, when the sun ceases its northerly journey, and will start south again.

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