Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 36, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 June 1933 — Page 9
.TUNE 22, 1933
FARM BOSS OF 0. S. IS REAL ‘MAN OF SOIL' Waliace Keeps Agriculture Department on Toes in New Drive. Th . it th* <.*eond of a *rlf ®n the T)r*on!H's of th men who are d---rr n!*'e':ne Pr< , *'d*n t Rons*' elt a aweeptnc national rero erv plan. BV FREDERK K C’. OTHMAN United Pr* Staff t orreapondent WASHINGTON, June 22. Agriculture S -etary _>nry Wal]?fp has more ifuence upon food production than ~.ny other one man ir the histcfry nf the wor'd. Under President Roosevelt’* omni-
y is prescription \ur agricultural nils Wallace virtually is dictator of all major marketing and planting operation of the Amrl-.an faimer. His Dower enables him to fixe pr’ces indirertly through
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processing taxes, to limit produetion and hence to make his influence ielt throughout the world. So busy is the agriculture depart- | ment under Wallace that it will have no time for publication of such I famous brochures as “The Love Life of a Bull Frog” during his tenure. The secretary is a typical midwesterner from Des Moines—jovial, kindly and still slightly awed by the magnificence of official Washington. His hair usually is g little rumpled and his coat 1 little wrinkled as he holds conference after conference with farm leaders, millers, textile manufacturers, cotton planters, departmental experts and members of the President's "brain trust.” % Nothing Bothers Him He has announced forthcoming processing taxes on wheat and cotton. He has seen prices of both commodities soar upward—and has heard critics call his program ‘shotgun pa(ent medicine.” Nothing bothers the secretary. He is a real farmer himseif. He also is a real farm leader. He has a 400-acre farm in Polk county, lowa, where he develops hybrid corn, and demonstrates his ability as a man of the soil. His magazine, Wallace's Farmer, reveals his personal influence out where the tall corn grows. The secretary likes to play badminton, a game which is a mystery to most Americans. He likes to argue the Aristotelian theories, to attend services in the Episcopalian church, and to work problems in calculus for amusement's sake. Finally Learns His Wav He once disappeared from a picnic on his farm to be discovered later trying to calculate the course of a planet by advance mathematics. He has a flair for words. He can talk in the language of a backwoodsman or a college professor. He writes in a pithy style, as for example: “Show' corn ideals lead too much with beauty and too little with utility. Whether corn has smooth nr rough kernels means very little more than the presence or the absence of a dimple on a pretty girl.” Wallace and his wife live in the exclusive Wardman Park hotel, where they can look upon greenswards as rolling as those in their native lowa. Wallace walks to work and Anally has become familiar with the crannvs of the White House. After his first cabinet meeting with Mr. Roosevelt. he had to ask a policeman apologetically which door led outside. X>xt: Geore* P**k. chief *dmini*rator nf the farm net and Wallace'* number ime assistant, who won t nlav bride*. but who will attempt to prove for the benefit of all comers that the farm relief procram is headinc toward succea*. RECEIVERSHIP IS ASKED Action Is Filed Against Surgical Supplies Manufacturers. fit/ l nited Pirn* HAMMOND, Ind., June 22 Receivership action against the Frank fv Betz Company, Hammond surgical supplies manufacturers, was filed in Lake circuit court today by Mollie and Bridget Murtaugh, stockholders. The suit asked appointment of a receiver to prevent the management from liquidating assets “in an illegal manner." In a recent reorganization, John Murtaugh was replaced as president by James O. Dickson, former secretary-treasurer.
PRBRBt - HAS INDIOESriON/DUE TO HEAVy FOODjy YET THAT OLD PRENTISS Dr. A. BRUNO, f .! X f*C ,SE -^ E ADVISED PICKED ME TO OPEN OUR famous surgeon L ' ' FOREIGN " f ‘ h * American ** f^lp \ JT I Atvist tATINO FUtSH yUST* B4jILL see T WAT HE DOEstH|y ES < BUT DONT FOBGET IT \X/AS\f^“ e “ (nSJUST AS you SAy DOCTOR/jBI THE DOCTOR'S ADViCE ABOUT I oSC. A u HfFLEISCHMANNS YEAST W Et S biaA*tl’ft WmMk I D REALLY GAVE you THIS t
BV W. F.. M’KENNEY American Bridee NEVER give up on a hand. Don’t become careless because it looks as though you can not possibly make your contract. There may be a squeeze play or an end play which will develop that needed trick. Thp following is another of the interesting hands which was played In th® Ohio State Individual Contract Tournament. Many players would open the South hand. However, using the constructive one over one system, I do not, like to open with this type of hand. It is not necessary to fear that the hand will be passed out. If partner can not make a weak third hand bid with you holding this type of hand, it is just as well back in the deck. If you pass, North will open the bidding with one club. You then can make a constructive one over one force of one diamond. North will sign off with no trump. You now can show that you had practically an original bid by bidding two no trump in the face of your partner s sign-off bid. It takes a rather optimistic North player to go to three no trump. However, it can be made. East will open the king of spades, w hich North will allow to hold. East has to shift, and his best lead is the jack of hearts. North will win with the ace and lead the king of diamonds. a a tt WEST probably will hold off one round, but North will continue with the seven of diamonds, and West will be forced to win with the ace. West will return the nine of spades, and the trick is won in j dummy with the ace. Declarer now cashes the .three 1
Wallace
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Contract Bridge
AJ-7-4 ¥A-9-6 ♦ K-7 + Q-10-8-7-5 *9-6-2 NORTH! aK .q. ¥Q-7- fe 5 10-5 4-3 w (f> ¥ J-10-8 ♦ A-3 £ H ¥9-5-*J-9- Dealer 4.2 6-3 SOUTH jf, K-4 ♦ A-8-3 ¥ K-5 2 ♦ Q-J-10-8-6
good diamonds in dummy. West i will drop a heart, a spade and a club. Declarer will discard two clubs and a heart. East follows with two diamonds and then discards a heart. If East had thrown away a spade [ and kept a heart, the contract: could be defeated. But now, if the ■ declarer has watched the drop of the cards, he should lead the king of hearts from dummy, which pulls East's last heart, and now the eight of spades is played. East wins with the queen and then cashes his good ten of spades. The heart is discarded from dummy, and a club by the declarer. This 'leaves dummy with the ace and one club, and the declarer with the queen and ten of clubs. East has nothing but the king and one club, and in this manner the declarer wins the last two tricks. (CoDvrieht. 1933. bv NBA Service. Inc.) Villages in Egypt had neat, regular streets as far back -.as 4,000 B. C. when the people still were in the Stone Age, it appears from recent excavations.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
LABOR'S PLEAS PLACED BEFORE REVIVAL ‘BOSS' Protests Are Studied by Johnson; New Statement Is Likely. BY H. O. THOMPSON I'rlled Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, June 22. Organized labor's objections to some of the developments in administration of the national recovery act were brought to the attention of Administrator Hugh S. Johnson today with a request that arrangements be made for regular conferences between capital and labor on controversial aspects of the new law. Labor's attitude toward developments thus far in the national recovery program were crystalized at the first meeting of the labor advisory board, presided over by Dr. Leo wolman, chairman. Labor Secretary Frances Perkins and Edward F. McGrady, assistant administrator for labor, w r ere present. Wolman placed before his group some of the criticisms of the act as it has worked in its preliminary stages. Attention was directed particularly. to a bulletin issued by Johnson in which it was said that codes of fair competition for the various industries would, be subject to approval, even though such conditions might not have been reached by collective bargaining. Labor leaders felt that the right
of collective bargaining before the drawing up of trade agreements i should be recognized. The law specified that the agreements must give j to employes the collective bargain-' ing privileges, but does not state i that the agreements themselves J must be reached by this method. In order to assure employes of i what labor leaders' consider their! just due in administration of the | act, they proposed an arrangement for regular conferences between labor and capital. Johnson was called in by the advisory board to discuss this phase of the question. A clarification of the collective bargaining question was suggested and it was understood Johnson is considering a statement on this point. The advisory board also discussed a plan for presenting labor suggestions in the hearings next week on the proposed forty-hour week agreement for the cotton textile industry. 165,000 VISIT CAPITOL Louisiana's New 513,000,000 State Building Draws Many. R.u T'nittd Pro* BATON BOURGE. La., June 22. Miss Helen Wurzlow, hostess at i Louisiana's new $13,000,000 capitol. estimates that 168.000 persons have visited the building during the past year.
rW.W.W.W.J WHERE QUALITY MDSE. COSTS LESS XXXmtMtt * * I free parking Tickets to LJccjt-Jj jjjsSSSf /I l^j s V° 0 jyfy|^S *, | ’SSjbf jjfc jj f, q 0 @l| PURSES . . Every Size Mto 42 \ i S' fabrieoid, pouch F® and smarter summer .-tresses at lower V I i Hfl or envelope. Fit- "J g prices, just see these charming new j 1 h, \ SLIPS ....... PIQUE DRESSES >' PS /lw SEERSUCKER FROCKS U > GLOVES . . PRINTED FROCKS, ETC. $ V M 356 PAIR! NEW WHITE MESH AND 4 VwjHa V I Sport Sandals I Values! h White and Pastel * Shades 11 \ \ __ J rl. About the smartest fashions of the season Iff BH llß.Raiie-a All Cillr A at an unheard of low price. Mesh shoes are WL.JBk MgkJBH |jß UdUgß Hll'dllß wl v v C; 5 A white, with leather soles, .3-oyelct style. an- BB UACTITIIV r. 2 * * */•** \ pastel shades. White, H **w#®*fcA* X i npT TVlfUfif THIS $49.50-j-piece ■ PJ UuLA T-liina> WALNUT VENEER 9 Sale of So Soft PI |sJ| Bedroom Suite I T Tfo?j c | ” $ 29-l|^~.| m *f*r, Bavement. I F* wll ShS6T Pf I H and VOILES m SALE! MEN'S COOL SUMMER |a N V> AIJTG Sanf °ri2ed M dL aaJL JL Hr Won’t Shrink! /Y//dp jjr Child’s Seersucker I U Extra Well SEERSUCKERS, m nn OVERALLS U fPW T f' ore , J WHITE DUCKS. $4 ZH //////Wm- e t- PI hvr*) and Perfect p tN CHECKS. V l' 4- /////X£3S M STRIPES, ETC. ■ Pair /////jfwm SK"v OV® , / P '-oel and ••.•mf'.riable. Every ■•itie tor Men White Linene J ‘ Ashirts-shorts % "-x- 4%g± Q tmsk/< J window jjj FOR 45 YEARS A HOME-OWNED INDIANAPOLIS STORE -
LAKES-TO-GULF WATER ROUTE FORMALLY OPEN $100,000,000 Chicago-to-New Orleans Channel Is Dedicated. By l nited Prrns CHICAGO. June 22. The new lakes to gulf waterway system, connecting New York, Chicago and New Orleans over a $100,000,000 channel traversing industrial centers, midwestern farm lands, and southern cotton fields, was opened here today with colorful ceremonies. As the first string of barges to come northward over the new waterway chugged into Chicago, national officials and representatives of the twenty-two states which will profit by the river system assembled at historic Michigan avenue bridge for dedicatory ceremonies. Pageants depicting frontier days.
addresses by state and federal auI thorities. gun salutes and a parade of flag draped vessels through the meuth of the Chicago river marked the epic event linking fresh water of Lake Michigan with southern salt water from the gulf. Mayor Semmes Walmsiey of New Orleans who accompanied the first barge on the northward trip, j brought a container of jiulf water which he blended with lake water in a ceremony with Mayer Edward Kelley of Chicago War Secretary Georg® H Dern ! was the principal speaker, making ' his address from the training chip Wilmette, anchored at the moutn of the river. Nearby is the *=ite of old Ft. Dearborn and the John Kinzie home, where the first white child was born in Chicago. Speaker Henry T. Rainey. Major General Lytle Erown, chief of United States army engineers; Governor Henry Horner of Illinois. Mayor Kelley, Mayor Walmsiey, and commercial and industrial leaders were scheduled for addresses following Dern. Aged Man Dies of Injuries R;/ f nitrti Pus* MARION. Ind., June 22.—Injuries i received in an automobile accident ! June 17 were fatal Wednesday to 1 Frank Alley. 77.
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CHAUTAUQUA TO BE STAGED AT WINONA Six Weeks' Program Slated: Camps Will Meet. WINONA LAKE. Ind . June 22 The thirty-ninth six weeks summer Chautauqua program will be opened next week at Winona lake. A number of groups are In session now at the lake, including th® Winona lake summer school of Christian education.
Bridge W Prizes Expert suggestion* by L. STRAUSS A UO —“The Mon Over One System.” NEW BILL FOLDS NN' i t h Modern Ideas 811.00
