Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 37, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 June 1933 — Page 6
PAGE 6
HITLER STRIKES CRUSHING BLOW AT SOCIALISTS Outlaws Party in Latest Edict; Thousands Flee From Berlin. BY PAUL KECBKEMETI I’nlW Pret* fitaff Correspondent BERLIN, June 23.—Socialists Joined Communists in hiding throughout the Reich today as Nazi storm troopers and local authorities began rigid enforcement of the cabinet decree outlawing the Socialist party, the second largest in Germany. The decree, one of the most sweeping ever issued, deprived all Socialists elected by the people, of their offices; confiscated the party's property, and prohibited Socialist newspapapers or Socialist meetings. The Socialists hold 121 seats in the reichstag and many in state diets, all of which now are eliminated. The decree and the order outlawing the Communist party deprives 30 per cent of the German electorate of direct representation. The decree charged the Socialists with preparing for “high treason" by maintaining connections with leaders who fled to Prague, Czechoslovakia, since the rise to power or Chancellor Adolf Hitler. Public employes and workers in public plants were forbidden to adhere to the Socialist party, and it was said that in the future Socialists and Communists would be regarded as identical.
MOTION PICTURES “I'VE SEEN white men turn yJL flv yellow with fear, yellow men ffljf turn twhite with horror as \VK ■ things, stranger than you ever IB ■ dreamed, , happened . . . down H there on the waterfront!” lit COVER THE 1 V WATER ! R ON TANARUS/ M CLAUDETTE COLBERT J*f| ERNEST TORRENCE % J|| UNITED jg" **' ' . \ £IC TURF j ’ li.-ftr; I \ I r i Extra Hits / |^r : \ f x / PITTS-TODD f V Comedy Fttnfest V ' /< '\\ J * ••ONE TRACKJIINnS” V lj \ MICKEY MOUSE y &J(i / CattMii Comte I |*S> < l• 1 *• ► t -*4 "YE OLttr.N PAYS” „ lllnp t , , ' j Henrst-Metro Jtewo t /.J. ' ' ' ‘•j- '■
N _°^_ Hailed as the Finest Perform- JsMp ’* ance of the Screen's Master Actor I— Dims the Splendor ■HP of "Disraeli" and *The Millionaire"! {Hr | ArukH*l 7HI WORKING 1 and man Fired with the zest of ik youih,’'! ringing with the B ' jllli joy of living, brimming BL -jEBBk with cheerful, healthy, ' surprising entertainmentt A Warner Bros, picture BETTE DAVjS _ HHIIHIH Bobby Jones Golf Reel, “The Grip” Leon Belasco Band—News—Cartoon
f- V4’i, yJ '' f to them '- r * WAS A GAME WITHOUT RULES^B I , . PLAYED ANYWHERE. . M/VK 7/M£/ J? fewiVou fytdfu&dtiu WITH '"LaZ^. WARNER BAXTER EUSSA LANDI _ -txsi.str a&faMmV*? ) AND MS SWEETHEART TOO .. £/ Me
WHERE ITALIAN PLANES WILL REST
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The map shows the location of Lake Geneva, Wis., about eightyfive miles northwest of Chicago, where twenty-four Italian seaplanes which will fly from Rome to the world fair, will anchor nights. In event of a storm on Lake Michigan, they will land on Lake Geneva on arrival. Above, the hotel where the fliers will be quartered. Below, one of twenty-four buoys to which the planes will be anchored.
ORDINATION OF PRIEST IS SET Rites for Father Norton to Be Held Saturday at Cathedral. Ordination ceremonies for the Rev. James E. Norton of .the congregation of the Holy Cross will be held in SS. Peter and Paul cathedral. 1339 North Meridian street. Saturday. June 24. The Most Rev.
Joseph Chartrand, Dishop of the diocese, will officiate. Father Norton will celebrate his first solemn high mass at the cathedral Sun day, with the Rev. Francis Kull of Cambridge City, deacon, and the Rev. George Dunn cf Indimapolis, sub-deacon. Born in Indianapolis, Father Norton entered the congregation
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Rev. Norton
of the Holy Cross at Notre Dame after his graduation from Cathedral high school. He studied theology at Holy Cross college, Washington, D. C. He is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. William Norton,. 238 Hendricks place. A reception for the newly ordained priest will be given at the home of his brother, Joseph Norton, 944 North Denny street, Sunday night. TWO FOR ONE! A Saturday Times Want Ad gets buyers for the advertiser on Saturday and Sunday . . . two days at one day’s cost.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
'BRAIN TRUST' CHIEF TU JAR LONDONPARLEY Moley Expected to Offer Definite Views on Money Issue. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMS Scripps-Howard Forelcn Editor WASHINGTON, June 23.—When Assistant Secretary of State Raymond Moley arrives in London a week hence, the world economic conference is expected either to take a different tack or else agree
to a long recess. Mr. Moley sailed at noon Tuesday on the Manhattan. Rightly or wrongly, Europeans believe Mr. Moley speaks with more authority than his nominal chief, Secretary of State Cordell Hull. They regard him as the mouthpiece of President Roosevelt himself, and in
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his conferences abroad he is expected to do some pretty plain talking. Among other things Moley is expected to settle, once for all, the quarrel over currency stabiization, by stating categorically that the United States is not yet ready, and to suggest that there are other things the conference can do pending developments on this side of the Atlantic. Moley, it is believed, will point out to both British and French delegates that at the time the agenda committee was planning the course of the conference, it definitely was agreed that each country necessarily would be the best judge of when stabilization could be brought about. “The time when it will be possible for a particular nation to return to the gold standard and the exchange
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parity at which such return safely can be made," the committee observed, “necessarily will depend upon the conditions in that country as well as those abroad. And these questions can be determined only by the proper authorities in each country separately.” This, Moley may tell the London conferees, was said by the committee several months before the United States left the gold standard. At that time the countries off gold —including Britain apparently wholeheartedly approved. rfow that the United States is off gold, and for the moment finds it inconvenient to stabilize, the other nations have no just cause for complaint. , That Moley and Hull do not see world problems eye to eye is an open secret. The assistant is not particularly optimistic over the outcome of the London conference. If it achieves certain very limited objectives, in his opinion, it will be lucky. The secretary hopes it can succeed all the way. In the secretary’s opinion, most of the major ills of the world are traceable to trade barriers, which have caused surpluses to pile up, prices to fall, buying power to shrink, and jobs to disappear. The assistant secretary holds that the cures for our ills lie mostly
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Moley
within ourselves; that only a small percentage of our trade is foreign trade; in other words, that our domestic policy is paramount. machTne~owners~~ban and Slot Derice Group Names J. M. Dailey President at Session. Owners of vending machines In whose operation there is no element of chance, have elected J. M. Daily, Indianapolis, president of the Automatic Merchandising Association of Indiana. Others chosen at the annual meeting at the Washington are E. H. Smith, vice-president, and Martin F. Matz, secretary-treasurer.
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WAR BASIC CAUSE OF CRASH. SPEAKER SAYS Excesses Brought Economic Disaster, Engineers Told. By Untied Press WEST LAFAYETTE. June 23 Overproduction and increased efficiency did not cause the depression. Charles E. Seitz, president of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers, told members of the or-
“I am so happythe last pimple is gone n —because pimples tend to thrive micro-organisms (pimple germs) will when normal resistance is lacking, be strengthened. your first thought should be to build up your blood structure... the way Then wh y P S.S.—the to do this is by increasing the red- P roven tonic for decades. Proved ef-bkx>d-cells and their hemoglobin con- fectlve b r extensive scientific retent ... this will permit a greater sear( 'h and by millions of happy oxygen intake—from the lungs—into us ere. You. too, may have a clear the blood and tissues—including the skin. Get S.S.S. at any drug stores skin ... nourishment will be better The big 20 oz. size Is more economtconverted into energy and tissue re- cal and is good for a two weeks' pair ... body cells, which fight against treatment. CTb S.S.S. Ca builds sturdy Y health
TensTE 23, 1933
ganiaztion at the annual meeting at Purdue university Thursday. Production of basic commodities per capita has been only .64 per cent since 1916. compared with 1.73 averaged annually for seventy-five years before the World war, lie said. "Excesses derived as a natural outcome of war were the real cause of the depression,’ he said. Return to prosperity can be made quickest through an energetic* home building program. William Boss, member of the University of Minnesota faculty, said at the meeting.
