Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 50, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 July 1933 Edition 02 — Page 3

jfftY 8, 1933.

RISE OF PRICES TOO FAST, CAPITAL FEARS; PAY MUST ' KEEP PACE, OFFICIAL VIEW

Collapse May Result If Market Is Glutted, Johnson Says. (Continued From Page One) while wages and consumer buying catch up. Washington officials are deadly in earnest in this. A glutted mar- ( ket or prices out of reach are regarded in the* administration as dangerous. Those who contribute to such conditions are regarded as menacing general recovery. Stabilization Is Problem Farm prices are most out of line. They are about 45 per cent below 1926 Foods, textiles, and fuel are about 35 per cent off. Building materials, chemicals and house fur- i nishings are off about one-fourth from 1926. Hides and leather products suf- j sered least, being about 15 per cent] below r . In the eventual stabilization I of prices, one subject is to correct! these inequalities insofar as pos- j sible. How prices will be stabilized when they reach the desired level and kept from going very far or falling very far below, with crops heavy j one year and short the next, with some industries going up or down as new devices shift trade —as happened w’hen radios struck a blow at phonographs—are questions to be considered later. BY H. O. THOMPSON Pres* Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July B.—A desire to avoid labor disturbances is one of the reasons behind the pressure exerted to bring industries within the national recovery act as speedily as possible, it was learned today. Dr. Alexander Sachs, head of the Industrial administration’s research department, cites the shopmen’s strike of 1922 as an example of the type of labor disputes likely to arise when a nation is groping its way out of hard times. Bringing industries under codes of fair competition would avert this danger, since the codes must guarantee the right of collective bargaining. After a “Square Deal” Long delays in making the codes hperative w'ould increase the probability of clashes between capital and labor, according to the feeling entertained by those associated with the recovery movement. Administrator Hugh Johnson emphasized that the government intends to see that all labor, organized and unorganized, “gets a square deal.” But he reiterated that the industrial administration does not propose to act as an agency to promote unionization of labor. Both Statements Wrong Johnson said literature purporting to come from labor unions had intimated or openly stated that the government planned to unionize all labor. Similar statements from industrial concerns have intimated that workers would have to join company unions to benefit under the act. “Both statements are incorrect,” Johnson declared, “and such erroneous statements of the act and its administration tend to foment misunderstanding and discord.”

City Cliurches

Merle Sidener, leader and teacher of the Christian Men Builders' class of the Third Christian church, will give the second of a series of patriotic addresses Sunday morning His subject will be “Uncle Sam's Constitution.” Dick Harold, radio entertainer, will play the accordion and singing by the glee club will be a feature of the meeting which will be broadcast over Station WFBM. The Rev. Reuben H. Mueller, minister of the First Evangelical church, 3707 East New York street, will preach on the subject "Beside the Sea," Sunday morning. In the evening he has chosen for his topic, "Birds of a Feather. ’ Three sermons will mark services in the Centenary Christian church Sunday when the Rev. R. T. Gwyn will preach at 8 a. m. on “The Bible—a B-Hive;" at 10:45 а. m. on "Who Is On the Lord's Side?” and in the evening his subject will be "A Man Who Played the Fool.” First Baptist church will observe i “Melvina Sollman day" following services at the church Sunday. Miss Melvina Sollman. who represents the Lincoln Park Baptist church of Cincinnati, 0., as a missionary at. Swatow, China, will j preach a farewell message and leave for the Far East Wednesday. | She has been connected with the Women’s Bible Training school at Swatow for thirty-one years. The Rev. Wilbur D. Grose, pastor of the Fifty-first Street Methodist Episcopal church will preach the 1 next of a series of sermons on "Hero | Stories" from the Bible at the church Sunday. A unified worship service is to be held in the auditorium, with the Junior, intermediate and adult groups participating. Children of the primary classes have their program separately. Oakwood park assembly of the Indiana conference. Evangelical church, will be held at Oakwood park, Syracuse, Ind., July 29 to Aug. б, inclusive. The program will include, minister's conferences, evangelistic senices, vacation church school for children, school of leadership, young people'! convention and a boys’ and girls’ camp conference. Forty-first annual convention of the Woman's Missionary Society will be held at Oakwood park July 31 to Aug. 6, inclusive. Mrs. L. E.) Smith, 5814 Broadway, is treasurer of th# organization. Men*! Bible class of the First Baptist church will hold its annual picnic Saturday, July 22. The program will be arranged by A. W < Wilsofi, L. E. Hall, K. H. Huber mri-Porrest Carter.

SUICIDE EFFORT FAILS Woman Is Found Unconscious After Inhaling Gas From Stove Attempting suicide by inhaling gas from a stove, Miss Doris Blake, 24, of 6724 Julian avenue, was found unconscious on the floor of her home Friday nignt and taken to j ctiy hospital. Her condition is not serious. HULL PLEADS FOR ACTION AT WORLD PARLEY Chief of U. S. Delegates Issues Call for World Nations to Unite. (Continued From Page One) superficially examined these problems.” His statement came after a day in which he had conferred with the leaders of several other delegations. ‘Gold Bloc’ Is Organized BY RICHARD 11. McMILLAN Fnited Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, July B.—Seven gold standard nations of Europe, holding half the world’s gold, today reached complete agreement to form a definite gold bloc until monetary normalcy has been restored. The nations —France, Italy, Belgium, Holland, Switzerland, Poland and Czechoslovakia—are pledged under the agreement to do nothing j to prevent normal movement of gold between themselves for the balance of payments. French financial experts anticipate that nongold nations including Great Britain. United States, Japan, Argentina,, Brazil, Chile, South Africa, Australia. Canada, India New Zealand and Ireland—would form a counter bloc, rallying perhaps tw r enty-five nations for a united defense of monetary interests. General principles of the gold bloc formed today at a meeting held at the Bank of France were laid down as follows: 1. To maintain equilibrium of the balance of payments. 2. To do nothing to harm free movement of gold and the normal functioning of the gold standard. 3. To seek a credit policy to permit business tt> resume a normal credit basis. 4. To do nothing concerning moneys without consulting other bloc nations.

BREWERY FIRES UNDER PROBE Al Feeney Orders Several to Appear Before Him Monday. (Continued From Page One) held up papers of incorporation and Fry refused a permit. At the brewery today, officials said that the international company would operate the plant solely, henceforth. Its officials asserted they had bought the building from John Beyer of Southport. Several weeks ago, an investigation was made by The Times of charges that 75-cents-a-day wages were being paid in rehabilitation of the brewery. Officers in the proposed corporation admitted that men were being paid as low as $1 a day for clean-up work. Incorporation papers for the International Company were filed Friday with the secretary of state, listing 800.000 shares of stock of a par value of $1 a share. Papers were filed by Norman E. Patrick, 1220 North New Jersey street, an attorney, incorporators are Spahr, 5125 North Meridian street; Louis C. Reifis, 1423 South East street; Martin Carr, 644 Eastern avenue; William D. Gilson, 1019 North Tuxedo street; Anton Kainz, Barton hotel, and Paul S. Kerfoot, St. Paul. Minn. THROW ALKY FROM CAR Five-Gallon Can Tossed From Auto During Police Chase. A grip containing a five-gallon can of alcohol was reported thrown from a small coupe pursued by police after the door of another automobile had been torn off at Twentieth street and Martindale avenue Friday night. The police lost the coupe at Columbia and Twenty-third streets just after the driver had thrown the suitcase containing the alcohol into the street. A man and woman were reported to be in the coupe.

lTttflfiU-firefitc Haiieck, American poet, Lorn. 1559 JohnD.&Kke fdlor Torn, without a silver spoon I mTus moutK. lslsvßoyalists restore Bourßons in France 1935 "Wets working to restore bourbcns in US.

ULTRA-VIOLET RAYS PROVE WORTH

Finsen, the Grim Dane, Triumphs Over Disease, Then Dies

Dramatic have been the battles of medicine against the mysterious—against the unseen foes of the race. Wiliam Engie. Times Special writer, recounts some of these thrilling conquests in a senes of articles, of which this is the second. By WILLIAM ENGLE, Times Special Writer NEW YORK, July B.—“ Children Bask in Violet Rays”— •Photos Made in Dark with BlackViolet Light”—“Cows Get UltraViolet Bath—Your Milk’s Irradiated.” 1 The Grim Dane, Niels Ryberg Finsen, if he were back now r and heeding headlines, might smile. He smiled in his time over other turns of fortune no less grotesque. Smiled even when they told him he was doomed, and said “would like to see my own autospy.” So today’s news might amuse him, since it w r as he who was expelled from school “for small ability,” jeered as a “fanatic,” and he who became father of the ultra-violet. With ultra-violet radiation from a lamp—the counterpart of the sun’s invisible radiation—they are curing skin tuberculosis now. They are curing rickets. They are treating a score of other diseases and finding favorable results. Finsen, the Dane, showed the way. But before he did that he set out to prove that sunlight had properties both curative and irritating. Keep the ultra-violet rays away from smallpox patients, he said, and their blisters would not become infected. That talk, the savants of Blegdan hospital, in Copenhagen, thought, was preposterous. a a BUT in the fall of that year, 1894, smallpox as an epidemic swept over Copenhagen, and Finsen had his chance. He put patients in rooms screened with heavy red curtains. He shut out the ultra-violet. With red blankets he kept infection out of the victims’ blisters. Still, this was a negative result. Shutting out light hardly proved that letting in light could in other cases be beneficial. Yet that was exactly what Finsen was contending. The unseen, ultra-violet rays, he believed, could be as helpful in some diseases as they were irritating in the smallpox wards. He tried to convince the stricken Danish engineer Mogensen. To doctor after doctor Mogensen had gone, and still his skin tuberculosis was spreading. He was so desperate that at last he fell in with Finsen’s absurd idea. He would try sunlight, he said. But in Denmark in November there is not much sunlight. Finsen said, “Never mind.” “I will make a sun for you,” he said. It was crude, that first artificial star, that shone in Denmark —a carbon arc light not much different from the Copenhagen street lamps, only stronger. But it truly was a star, a sun, and, shining, it bathed Mogensen’s poor face in rays so deeply violet that they were beyond the eye’s seeing. a u u ' I ’•HROUGH all the next month, A two hours day, he let the eerie, visible hue, xue, and the

SECURITIES SALES REGULATIONS STRICT Rules for Protection of Investors Outlined. By Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, July B.—Regulations even more thorough and comprehensive than were prescribed in the securities act, just promulgated by the federal trade commission, gave promise today 'of protection for future purchasers of stocks and bonds. "Business may find it burdensome to supply all the information for which we ask,” Baldwin B. Bane, chairman of the trade commission committee which formulated the regulations, said today, "but honest business should welcome the most stringent enforcement of this nature. The act is intended to—and should—protect honest financing from the competition of dishonest and fraudulent financing heretofore suffered.” The commission has ruled that business must supply data concerning all states in which it operates, as a basis for co-operation with state blue sky commissions. Any litigation pending against a company must be made known. In some cases prospectuses might have to contain 500 pages if all this information were to be laid before prospective buyers, and so the commission has ruled that summaries only need be presented in prospec'tures. ST. JOHN’S PARISH TO HOLD OUTING SUNDAY Former Members Invited to Picnic in Merver’s Grove. Men of St. John's Roman Catholic parish will be hosts at a picnic Sunday, to which all present and former members of the parish are invited. The outing will be held at Merver’s grove, rain or shine. The picnic site is at the end of the pavement on West Tenth street. While the outing is not regarded as a homecoming or reunion, special efforts have been made to get many former members to attend. Tickets are being sold which entitle buyers to all features of the picnic, including refreshments, lunch and entertainment. FARM PLAN APPROVED State Hog and Corn Growers Agree to Reduction Program. Resolution approving the agriculture adjustment act provision for reducing hog and corn production to raise prices was adopted at a meeting of more than seventy hog and corn growers of the state Friday at the Claypool. The group named a committee, headed by William H. Settle, Indiana farm bureau president, to attend a national meeting of corn belt state representatives at Des Moines, la., July 18.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES 1

8" body, it works a mysterious transthen there vitamins there HraL * ! fortifies growing teeth against \ ll rickets. „ ifiF ing them of one of their comAy T 111 | monest ailments weak bone J||! not any more topple over with trying new' ways to make a Imparting health to a tvke in a mfl fj| 8 9 light, mighty in size and in lower. Axel Reyn, took to the idea, aificance; it wrought strange and then in Finsen institute. Reyn : fl S I W fl! & es and won the Nobel prize devised two great carbon arc |&& §p fff it |f ; |l Y 7j§> i put sick Niels Finsen into the lamps that irradiated patients § |l| §§ IP sft I fl M mtm jf IPpllllPi! IS cyclopedias. from head to foot. | I|| I|| ||| yf y; ||| iff IgPIBpT WfP I § tt a a Naked, eight people tried it. sat 1 8 111 Ji \ iP IH H! lie ill ISI f > <’’ • had 40 000 ranrilo nnwpr nr an in the lamns’ blue elare manv ™ YfL—..t 4 .

Dr. Harvey C. Rentschler invisible violet play upon him, hoping, despairing, hoping. Then the change came. Then the spot on his face began to grow 7 smaller. He, with fortitude, and Finsen, with fanaticism, clung to the idea now. They went on with the treatments, and Mogensen, with an incurable skin tuberculosis, was cured. The medicos hailed Finsen. Finsen institute was founded. Finsen was famous. But he was disappointed. It took too long to cure skin tuberculosis that way. The way was too uncertain. He had to have a stronger light. Night and day he worked on that. How to get a light that would be powerful enough in ultra-violet and yet not burn the patient to a blister? How? Well, by trying new ways to make a lamp. That way came the Finsen light, forerunner of the utra-violet lamps (some of them even stronger in ultra-violet than the noon-high sun) that Westinghouse and General Electric are ready to put into homes anywhere today. It was a mighty thing, the Finsen light, mighty in size and in significance; it wrought strange cures and won the Nobel prize and put sick Niels Finsen into the encyclopedias. a a a IT had 40,000 candle power, or 40 times more than the ordinary arc street lamp. It burned a specially made carbon. The light was so intense that the stricken ones who sought its rays could not look at it -with their naked eyes and wore blue glasses. It was not hot, though. Finsen made that blazing sun’s rays shine through quartz lenses. He cooled the lenses with flowing water. He prevented all but the ultraviolet and blue rays from passing through, and he cured lupus ulcers —tubercular ulcers of the skin — that had been called beyond any cure. Still not contented with his work, unmindful of a vast acclaim,

Rhythm! That’s What You Need to Learn Swimming

It Takes Co-Ordination If You Hope to Be Proficient. BY HELEN LINDSAY You’ve got to have rhythm if you expect to learn to swim. But don’t let that discourage you. Earl Montgomery, swimming instructor in The Times-Broad Ripple pool free swimming course, says everyone has it. In ten years of experience as a swimming instructor, he never has round any person who couldn’t learn. Friday I was introduced to the intricacies of the arm stroke of the crawl. It’s probably the most difficult of the six lessons in the course. As the right arm reaches forward, the left arm is brought back, lifted from the w’ater, with the elbow flexed, and then brought far in front. The same movements then are made, reversing the arms. That may not sound so difficult, but when it is accompanied by rhythmic kicking of the feet, in regular "waltz time,” three kicks to each arm stroke, complications develop. That's why it’s called "the six-beat flutter.” Teacher Is Mind Reader There are just too many things to think about. Montgomery, by the way, is somewhat of a mind reader. At least he is in the water. After each attempt to master the rhythm of the crawi, he would comment on its success or failure. “That time you didn’t think about your feet; you were too interested in getting your arms moving right,” he said. "Then at the third stroke, you remembered your kick.” I must have looked puzzled. One hardly expects a swimming instructor to be psychic. But Montgomery gave a logical explanation of his occult powers. "I can tell when you suddenly remember that you are supposed to kick,” he explained. “Your feet, which have been trailing along carelessly, suddenly begin to kick as they are supposed to. Not Black Magic “Then, when you have been concentrating on them, you suddenly remember that your arms must be brought out of the water, and for a few minutes they are used in the proper manner.” I'll have to admit I was a little disappointed. What had seemed like the mystery of black magic was just the wisdom of an accomplished and observing teacher. When you clip your third coupon out of The Times, which entitles you to the lesson on combining the kick and the arm movements, take my advice. Forget your inhibitions (if you have any left) and get ready to perform to imaginary waltz time. As I said before, you've just gotta have rhythm. The swimming course will open Monday, for readers of The-Times.

Imparting health to a tyke in a New York hospital. he wondered what he might be able to do with light baths, instead of with the intense concentration of light of the great lamp upon a circumscribed surface. Still not contented and wondering, he died before he could find out. Years passed before his follower, Axel Reyn, took to the idea, and then in Finsen institute. Reyn devised two great carbon arc lamps that irradiated patients from head to foot. Naked, eight people tried it, sat in the lamps’ blue glare many days—saw their bodies grow tanned, saw their skin tuberculosis dry up, vanish. THAT was because ultra-violet rays kill some germs. Westinghouse has moving pictures now which show the actual germ destruction under the invisible light from its tungsten lamps. The cells, within a few minutes after the light falls on them, seem to grow paralyzed, then blow up. The lights are being used, too, experimentally in treating pulmonary tuberculosis. But how the ultra-violet can help that deepseated threat, how it can penetrate not only through the .skin, but down into the lungs, the sci-

Learn to Swim This clipping entitles holder to a free swimming lesson in The Indianapolis Times-Broad Ripple Learn to Swim class. Learn to swim week is July 10 to 15. This does not include admission to the pool. The price will be 25 cents for adults and 10 cents to children.

Coupons clipped from the paper will entitle you to free instruction, under the direction of Montgomery, and fourteen trained assistants. Only paid admission to the pool is necessary. Classes will be held at 9:30 in the morning, 3:30 in the afternoon and at 7:30 at night. They will be for both adults and children. Special diving instruction will be under direction .of Arno Wade. PICNIC TO BE HELD Psi Sigma Pi Fraternity to Hold Outing Sunday. Public picnic will be held all day Sunday by Psi Sigma Pi fraternity at the Bulgarian picnic ground

Forty-eighth street and Kessler boulevard. The program will include a treasure hunt for girls and various games for children. Music will be provided by a seven-piece orchestra. Speakers will be George Todd president of the fraternity; Thomas Kaston, president of the Syria n- American

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Brotherhood, and Charles Kafoure-, president of the Knights of St. George.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Earl Katterhenry, 3041 Ruckle street. Chevrolet coupe, 47-637, from California and Chesapeake streets. George B. Cushman. 1363 Blaine avenue. Marmon sedan. 46-821, from West and Maryland streets. Emil Sturm. 1924 East Maryland street. Pord coupe. 61-651, from McClure bathing beach. James C. Todd. 326 North Ar’ington avenue, Chrysler sedan. 115-950. from Pennsylvania and Georgia streets.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Grace B McOriff. 4185 Carrollton avenue. Chevrolet sedan, found at Illinois and Market streets. Johnson Chevrolet Company. Chevrolet coupe, found at 1300 North Illinois street. Bert Phillips. Ft. Harrison, Rockne coupe, found at Millersville road and Key- ’ stone avenue, stripped of front fenders, j headlights, front bumper, left running board, left door and floor mat. Louis Tomelson, 1205 South Randolph street. Chevrolet sedan, found at 3039 ■ Central avenue. ' 1

Turning an unmanageable tiger in the Fleischhacker zoo, San Francisco, into an agreeable pet with ray treatments.

entists do not know. They have no proof that it does. But they do know, though, that in some experiments groups of children, each in approximately the same stage of tubercuosis, v have differed in reaction —one group receiving ultra-violet from lamps, the other, living otherwise the same life, receiving none. The groups that got the lamps’ violet showed better chances of recovery. In a field where the rays are needed not as germ killers, but as bone builders, their use is developed even more spectacularly. When ultra-violet enters the

STATE POLICE RADIO CHAIN DRIVE OPENED Donation of Funds to Build System Sought. Creation of county committees of bankers and others to canvass for funds to finance a state-wide police radio system was started today. The movement grew out of a committee meeting held at the Columbia Club Friday afternoon under auspices of the Indiana Bankers Association. Al Feeney, state safety director, outlined the need for a state-wide police radio hook-up as a “challenge to gangdom.” He told of the radio already in operation by the state force in the Calumet district and plans for Indianapolis installation. It was decided to appoint county committees to aid in fund raising, since no appropriation has been made by the state. Groups represented at the meeting included the bankers, Indiana State Chamber of Commerce, Indiana Farm Bureau, Inc., and Associated Employers of Indianapolis. GROUP TO BE NAMED Agricultural Act Committee for County Will Be Appointed. Personnel of a committee to direct administration of the national agricultural act will be announced next week by Horace E. Abbott, county agricultural agent, he said today. The committee will consist of one person from each township in the county. The act provides for curtailment of wheat acreage and payment of allotments under the wheat processing act. REUNION TO BE HELD Former Residents of Rush, Fayette Counties to Gather Here. Thirty-fifth annual reunion of former residents of Rush and Fayette counties will be held Sunday afternoon, July 16, at Brookside park. Speaker will be Samuel L. Trabue, former mayor of Rushville. Music will be given by the Women’s Fayette Club of Indianapolis. William E. Jeffrey is president and Charles W. Hackleman secretary of the reunion association. OBSERVE INDIANA WEEK Thompson Chain of Restaurants to Feature Products on Menus. Observance of Indiana week the Thompson chain of restaurants will begin Monday, it was announced today by Sampson Shaffer, local manager. Indiana decorations will be placed in restaurants and products of the Hoosier state featured on menus. Governor Paul V. McNutt and Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan have been asked to participate in an opening day. program.

Todd

body, it works a mysterious transformation called ergosterol. and then there are vitamins there that were not there before. o u a ONE of them, \ktamin D, absorbed in the body, puts strength in growing bone. It fortifies growing teeth against germ invasion. It prevents or cures the crippling bone disease, rickets. Farmers are turning the sun lamps on their chickens and curing them of one of their commonest ailments weak bone structure; irradiated chickens do not any more topple over with rickets. . The lamps shine on children in hospital wards and school rooms. Cows, as the headlines a little while ago proclaimed, did get an ultra-violet bath. The milk folks have worked wonders with it. They are irradiating the cows’ udders, and the milk grow’s strong, straight bones in children. Milk from rightly irradiated cows, the laboratory tests are showing, can either prevent or cure rickets in boys and girls. tt tt o FAR afield they have gone since the dour Finsen thought of the unseen light only as a protector or builed r of the body tissue. Here is what they are doing with it today in industry: Curing leather, aging wine, sterilizing and increasing vitamin strength in miik, testing sun-fast qualities of varnishes and paints, testing and curing rubber, bleaching oils, waxes, linen goods and toilet powders. And commercially, they are: Irradiating food products to preserve them or increase the vita-

min content—protecting checks by invisible ink that fluoresces under the ultra-violet rays—testing beverages for impurities through the response of chemicals to the light. And in the wide-open spaces they are: Irradiating green vegetables to speed up vitamin B—curing farm creatures of bone ills—making tropical plants grow in for andsnow climate—hurrying up tremendously many green things sprouting from the earth. That long-gone Finsen of Copenhagen would be pleased now. But still wondering.

SHOWDOWN OF PRICES OF STEEL RAILS SEEN Facts to Be Shown at Forthcoming Hearing on Industry Code. By Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, July 3. The showdown on maintenance of steel rail prices may come when General Hugh Johnson holds hearings on the forthcoming code of fair practices for the steel industry. For these hearings he will be supplied with all the information gathered by the department of justice in its investigation of this price pegging which has existed over a long period of years. Attorney-General Homer Cummings also has announced that the facts likewise will be available to Joseph Eastman, federal co-ordina-tor of railroads, who termed the steel rail price maintenance “stupidity” in a recent decision as an interstate commerce commissioner. Although there was a small decrease in these prices about a year ago, steel rail costs have been pegged at a practically stationary figure, while all other commodities have fluctuated sharply. In reply to an Inquiry, Cummings said that the steel rail price investigation, which was begun by his Republican predecessor after complaints by Senator James Couzens (Rep., Mich.), had slowed up. I. U. DEAN IS NAMED Miss Florence Bond to Head Women During Summer Session. By Timph Special BLOOMINGTON, July B.—Miss Florence Bond will be acting dean of women at Indiana university from July 12 until the end of the summer session. Dr. Agnes E. Wells, dean of women at the university, will leave next week for Chicago to attend A Century of Progress exposition, following which she will go to her home in the Adirondacks in Upper Jay, Essex county, N. Y., for the remainder of the summer. Miss Bond is social director of Memorial hall, I. U. dormitory for women.

FIRST IN INDIANA The statute authorizing the incorporation of trust companies in our State was enacted in March. 1H93.. The Indiana Trust Company was incorporated in May. 1893, the first one in Indiana.. It is complete in all departments of savings and trust business. May we serve you ? THE INDIANA TRUST s c r;; L s $2,000,000.00 GROUND FLOOR SAFE DEPOSIT VAULT

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INDIANA HOME LOAN OFFICIALS AREJELECTED Van Nuys Chooses Appraisers and Attorneys for 92 Counties. BY WALKER STONE , Time* Special Writer WASHINGTON. July B—Senator Frederick Van Nuys today announced the names of the men he has recommended -for appointment as home loan attorneys and appraisers in the ninety-two Indiana counties. It is understood that tentative approval has been given by the federal home loan bank board to all of Senator Van Nuy s recommendations. In all counties except Marion, the attorneys and appraisers were chosen by the senator in collaboration with the Indiana members of the house oi representatives. Appointment of a state manager was not announced. Several men are being considered for the berth. Adolph Seidensticker. Indianapolis lawver. is the personal choice of Senator Van Nuys for the position of home loan attorney for Marion county, and Frank Viehmann, Indianapolis real estate man, likewise was picked personally bv the senator to be home loan appraiser for Marion county. Rebuke To Ludlow Senator Van Nuys is in Michigan on a vacation, but at his office today' it was said that the senator made the Marion county selections without consulting Representative Louis Ludlow or Representative William H. Larabee. because Indianapolis is the senator's home city. However, the senator's action generally is construed as a rebuke to Representative Ludlow, who represents the western half of Marion county, and whose votes in the recent special session of congress against certain administration measures displeased the senator and other leaders of the Indiana Democratic organization. Representative Larabee represents Hancock and Madison counties and the eastern half of Marion county. Representative Larabee’s wishes were consulted in the appointments in Hancock and Madison counties. In releasing the list of names, it was said at Senator Van Nuys’ office that the senator “wanted to express his appreciation of the co-operation of Indiana congressmen.” Some Not Qualified A few of the recommendations of house members were eliminated. Some of these nominations, it is believed, were not satisfactory to the senator and the party organization, and others, it is known, were rejected by the Federal Home Loan Bank board as being not qualified for the positions. The county home loan appraisers and attorneys will be paid on a fee basis. The present plan is to allow a fee of $5 for each appraisal to both the county appraiser and attorney, the fee to be paid by the home owner who applies for a loan. Applications for loans under the home owners loan law will not be considered on homes valued in excess of $20,000, and loans will K3 made only to home owners in distress and unable to finance their mortgages elsewhere. It is estimated that for a period of two or three years, the Marion county appraiser and attorney will earn fees averaging in the neighborhood of S3OO to S4OO a month. In many of the rural counties, it is estimated, fees to attorneys and appraisers will average less than S2O a month.

ECONOMICAL CRUISES A day ...a w*k... or longer To Hie Chicago World*! Fair ... fa Duluth... Buffalo (Niagara Falls)

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Great Lake* Transit Corporation 8 S. Octorara, SS. Juniata, S .S. Tioneata sail* Ing frequently between Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, Mackinac Island, Sault Ste Houghton, Duluth, Chicago, Milwaukee. Automobile* Carried Between All Porta For full information* apply any Tourist or Railroad Agent.

Phone As Late As 10 P. M. A Times want Ad starts in the very FIRST EDITION PUBLISHED in the morning and appears in every edition on ttw same day. TWA Rl. 5551