Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 61, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 July 1933 — Page 4

PAGE 4

STAR PUBLICIST MAY PUT ‘NIRA' IN DICTIONARY Horner Expects to Build It Up as the Nation's Household Word. B <1 Thrift £[.r< WASHINGTON, July 21 —Charles Francis Horner, former head of the Liberty Loan speakers' bureau, Chautauqua executive and professional pleaser of the public, now Is head publicist of the national industrial recovery administration. He expec ts to loose such a blast of publicity that "na'ional industrial recovery administration will become a household phrase, and ''Nira'' a household word Even now the sloganeers are thinking at top speed as if in a collective trance, producing catch words to make Nira stick in the public mind The poster men are slinging paint. Their first creation is a beauty. It is done in red. white and blue, with an eagle. Nira and the phrase 'We do our part" superimposed on a background of smoking chimneys and grinding wheels. Tills poster—and others— will be placed in every shop window, every factory door, and every home where Nira is exerting influence. The man who gets a job through Nira will get a poster to display. So will the man who raises wages. Even the housewife who pays full prices for Nira-approved shirtwaists will get a Nira poster to put in her parlor window. The Nira speech-making foundry is wrecking typewriters. Authors are pounding out speeches by the armload for all occasions. Now ready are speech No. 13. suitable for Boy Scout meetings; speech No 14. suitable for ladles' aid societies, and speech No. 15. suitable for church picnics. The men who will say these

■ Copyright. 1923, B. J. BtynoldaTobaccoCompany . jjaiin < ±Wmm .. EsSß® gyfi W£mM wmm>. . f \-r , •;.- * '.. ' • ; { v ;@S* ■•-•’ - „vfr:’ y >':. ••* .'■?/. -..■ ’.* <••*■>: - -—**y- ißjmßfe.jA*m JB§WBO^^Sb >.j|^a' -BbL.- M §&!§& --llßFflalgßSsflßbL.. }'",< ,g j| , tj , J|>§| ‘g| *''B .: ; "' B. ~ ; A i •V § W&$8& H 18. JBr'PB 1 1 Mj ... BfiproKjHH .. , *Bljr >3jiSjt ' ??■% ■•■ -I -jjkl. .;•? !<* VjWßrajP ‘-■ ■-•■?'• Sj-i w../.’. f- • Z. . <> { ..*;/ v& -. .s&>,. aMgggMk •?s** • •BHNffNF iBPSPBBf .jyMBBBr * .31:*1 fflHr rS^F p ffcrfiiiUßUi 1 111 1 ml l l 't' 1 ' “’' WUS* ';' v •ABOVEippp •". ' ;iS *f MILDNESS COMEIS FIRST ■ ■ seems to say, "Have • ABOVE —ARTHUR J. NEC, of Fast Orange. N. J., pulls In • RIGHT—A DAY’S SPORT is more enjoyable with plentv of ’'‘^SSil a nut' one ! Few men knew the importance of healthy nerves Camels along, because vou can smoke all you want —and still he It < iMkiljifcjr MiJ&MS£Ng&lMgtfos§£[ , v x It/ better than Art Neu aloe*-, lit t' national champion in dry-fly ready for more when evening comes! Camel's costlier tobaccos ' #it-'fK ■ g , < ’W ''%M ■'"’'vj-f-?*'. casting tor accuracy. Just as ,i stunt, Mr. Neu has frequently never get on vour nerves...never tire your taste! Camels are f ' .. . '■'^tfffjj^^. flicked the ash otf a friend's cigarette with a fly at 35 feetl better for steady smoking. It is more fun to know! i Steady Smokers turn to Camels lp|Oj£4S| “Dry-fly fishing is a delicate art that takes the best ' '■ 1 4 IHBI I | (I |*: "v %/M^ a man’s got in steadiness of hand and eye. To win ~, -• ’■ Mm^ the championship in accuracy at casting a dry fly, ~ "V ij- m ynnr rillj TH l/UDU/ 1 had to have healthy nerves. And yet I smoke II jo IflUnt full lU B. nU W -j; steadily —all I want to —without disturbing mv f G Jf.mS , , , - nerves. That s because 1 prefer Camels. There is expensive tobaccos than any . ff no question but that they are milder. And their other popular brand. The more v , rich, inviting flavor seems to say, ‘Have another.* ” " f vBBk you smoke them, the more you’ll rp . ~ T *i § xt ... „ , Al like them. Costlier tobaccos do Turn to Camels. Like Mr. >eu vou will find that l AJHH _ ... v taste better* Camels are milder...that their flavor suits your taste jmr B^BSj ...that steady smoking never jangles your nerves.

BOX CAR VILLAGE—WHERE THE RENT'S $3 A MONTH

One of New York's most noval communities, not many minutes from Times Square, is the Box Car Village in upper Manhattan, where fifty men are living happily, paying S3 a month rent or $6 a week for board and shelter. The village, operated by two

speeches, the four-minute men, are buying cough drops and practicing before their mirrors. Horner doesn't know how' many such speechmakers there will be. but he says there will be as many as once interrupted

women. Is shown in a general view above. The interior of a typical box car. which is equipped to sleep four men. is pictured below. At the left the village chef, Frank Flaske. prepares supper for the inhabitants.

movie programs with Liberty bond ; pleas. So much for the official part of publicizing Nira. Horner has unofficial helpers throughout Washingl ton who are doing their bit free.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

They are the punsters who still insist among other things that Nira is getting Nira and Nira. Trinidad's famous lake of natural asphalt is 114 acres in extent.

LIBERAL CODE I IS SOUGHT BY COALMINERS Unbelievable Conditions of Peonage and Extortion Are Revealed. BY KERMIT MFARLAND •Ooovrixht. 1933 bv ScrioDs-Ho ard NrwaDBDCrt.) PITTSBURGH. July 21. —Bituminous coal miners in the Pittsburgh district—and throughout the entire soft coal regions—are hoping and praying for adoption of the coal code worked out jointly by the Central Coal Associates and the United Mine Workers, to save them from almost unbelievable conditions of peonage, extortion and starvation pay. Th’is code, representing operators who produce 28 per cent of the nations tonnage in thirteen states, was not participated in by the Mellon and Rockefeller interests. Need for the protective provisions of the code prepared jointly by operators and union officials is revealed by a startling survey of western Pennsylvania fields, just completed by the Pittsburgh Press. Among the evils revealed by the survey were the.following: Manipulation of relief funds by coal company officials, who are members of local relief boards and who are in a position to dominate the actions of unemployed or partly employed families through control of state and federal aid. Exorbitant prices charged by company stores, at which miners are compelled to trade. Complete suppression of free I speech and civil liberties in company towns. Hundreds of pay statements ! showing a system of “balanced pay | envelopes"; that is, pay envelopes in ! which deductions made by the company exactly balance the amount of j wages due the workers. Favment of miners in scrip, which. !in some cases, was not even honi ored by company stores. A system of refusal to pay miners

HOW COST OF BREAD INGREDIENTS ROSE

FEBRUARY • 19V5 OULY ,19 35 ; © ® 9 i MM.K.OPV / _\ YEAST YEAST A. \ MILK DgY; J 5 25 10 FLOUR F 2°ol* , ! 1.19$ 2 02 t sugar. SUGAR •05 ' — l I—l 1 — 1 06 LARD SUBSTITUTE. iRS SUBSTITUTE. J_l J 5 TOTAL -1 84<t TOTAL- 2-79 * i

How prices of ingredients used in making a typical one-pound loaf of white bread have changed from February to July on thus year is illustrated graphically in this chart based on statistics compiled b\ the United Slates department of agriculture before the processing tax on wheat went into effect. It is estimated the wheat tax will increase the cost of flour to bakers by less than one-half a cent a pound loaf.

for many hours of "dead work"; that is. for hauling, timbering, layingtrack and otner labor neeesssary before coal can be removed. The code which the miners hope will be adopted provides: A basic wage of $5 a day for underground workers; S4 75 for helpers and other inside laborers and J 4 a a day for surface workers. Collective bargaining through any union the miners choose. Hours to be settled by the United States recovery administrator The union sought thirty hours a week: the operators sought 32; the government's decision will be accepted.* Right of the workers to have check weighman of their own choosing. Prohibition of discounts from pay which would have the effect of lowering wages. Employes, other than maintenance and supervisory men. need not live in company houses. No employe shall be compelled to trade at a company store. Thieves Loot Peddler's Cart Vegetables valued kt more than $25 were stolen from a truck owned by Dave Miller, 513 East St. Clair street, peddler, while it was parked in th? alley behind his home Thursday.

Application Deadline Near Deadline for filing applications for the Acton post mastership is at the closing hour of business Aug. 4. according to the civil service commission at Washington, where applications must be filed.

m® m' - •: i—in I V* '■ * 1 ■J / / '-A y 43.p| ECE /9/bridal gold set This Genuine 43-Pc. “Bridal Gold” Set consists of 6 cups ... 6 saucers ... 6 cereal bowls ... t> bread and butter plates... 6 dinner plates... 1 meat platter... 1 vegetable dish... 1 sugar b0w1... 1 cream pitcher... 2 salt and pepper shakers... 1 80-oz. beverage pitcher and 6 tall glasses. “Kay’s Vanity” Diamond Bridal Pair This Diamond pair looks Both Rings for Only many times its price. The _ Diamond Solitaire is daintily /t g/t§ IS pierced and the 18-kt. White \ ggi jgif In Gold Wedding Band com- y ®| eE pletes the set. B| Jy Pay 50c Weekly! din 43-PC. “BRIDAL GOLD” SET FREE! 0j An outstanding Udi-*’ wa'-h value. Slender, graceful and acI curate. W. K^^ington^St^ fell J Directly Opposite Indiana Theatre *==

JULY 21, 1933

BOETCHER MAY RETAIN POST IN COUNTY COUNCIL Appointment to Works Board May Not End Service as President. Possibility that Walter C Boetcher. newly appointed member of the city works board, might retain his presidency of the Marion county council was indicated today. Consideration of the council was given to a ruling several years ago that elect“d officials need not r*>- | sign to accept appointive posts Matter of the ruling was brought up when Boeteher submitted his resignation The council deferred action until an opinion is received from Charles Clark, county attor- • ney. A memorial stone set up to a Roman soldier by his heir" about 100 j A. D recently was found near the ’ English town of Chester.