Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 85, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 August 1933 — Page 2

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RIGID BEER LAW ENFORCEMENT, AIM OF STATE Indiana Officials and Local Executives Expected to Co-Operate. Indiana will enforce whatever Is left of its beer control law. it appeared today. State officials are taking the matter up with local authorities and expect to co-operate with them in putting across a rigid enforcement program. Ai Feeney, state s&fey director, held a conference with city and county officials and police at Ft Wayne Thursday night to decide on a program of co-operation with state police, while Fred Bechdolt, attorney for the excise department, addressed a meeting of similar Character in Lake county. Three-Point Program In both of these spots draught ber was sold freely before It was "Ifgahzfd" by Governor Paul V. McNutt's sanction. A three-point program of enforcement has been agreed upon as follows: 1. Arrest and prosecution of persons selling beer without state license. 2. Arrest and prosecution of licensed beer dealers caught handling “hard liquor." 3. Strict supervision of licensed establishments and revocation of licenses of saloons. Draught beer is expected to allay much of the “heat" over the beer law, but the Importers' profits still are a focal point of attack. Law Called Vicious It generally is charged that these are political favorites, who contribute nothing and collect huge profits. They have been cast in the role of tax collectors, but it also is charged that this amounts to "tax farming,” long since abandoned in all countries except China as thoroughly vicious. That the law could be “modified" to eliminate the importers also 1s contended, since the following major modifications already have been made: It no longer Is necessary to serve food with beer, as the law provided. Urge Importers’ Elimination Beer can be sold in country restaurants and road houses, although the law provided that it be sold only in restaurants in duly incorporated cities and towns. Draught beer can be sold, although the law provided it be sold only in bottles. This point was brought up repeatedly during the bill’s passage, and Governor McNutt was adamant regarding it. He has changed it now* and if he can do that he can eliminate the political importers also and collect the tax direct. It is contended. J SOCIALIST TO SPEAK ‘Version of New Deal’ to Be Topic of Address Tonight. Eward Henry, chairman of the Unemployed Council. League No. 1, will speak on “A Socialist’s Version

of the New Deal,” at the meeting tonight of the northweste r n branch of the Socialist party at Eugene street and Northwestern avenue. Henry is a member of the county central committee of the Socialist party, a member of the Indiana Council on International Relations. and was

Henry

secretary of the state Socialist party in 1932 He has been a Socialist worker for thirtytwo years. MASTER BARBERS ELECT H. L. Honeywell Is Named Head at Thursday Night Meeting. H. L. Honeywell was elected president of the Indianapolis Master Barbers' Association at a meeting THhursday in the K. of P. building. Other officers named are: William Bums, vice-president; H. R. Wagoner. secretary-treasurer, and Roy E. Wyatt, L. H. Lambird, Harry Mullen, W. E. Williams. W. O. Tudor, Thomas Hibson, and Homer F. Branaman directors. Closer co-operation in carrying out NRA regulations is planned by the association. An advertising campaign is to be begun. PEACE CARAVAN HERE Member* of Pilgrimage to Address Audience at Church Tonight. Speaking in the interest of world peace, members of a caravan sent through the country by the American Friends service committee of the Friends church will address an audience at All Souls Unitarian church tonight at 8 o'clock. The local meeting is sponsored by the Charming Club of All Souls Church. The peace caravan coming to Indianapolis is headed by Miss Betty Muther. n|bS 2 IN HIS MELONS Brothers Accused ©! Theft from Patch by South Side Man. Alvin Hadley. 20. and Orval Hadley, 18, brothers of Maywood, were under arrest today, following their capture by John Greenwald, 1260 Smith Tibbs avenue, who charged they had been stealing watermelons from his patch. Oreenwald said the two youths flad as he ordered them to halt and that he fired two shots to bring them to a stop. They are charged with petit larceny. gang thefts halted Chicken Stealing Ring Is Broken With Arrest of Trio. By'Cnitrd PrrtM PRINCETON. Ind Aug 18 Dissolution of a chicken stealing gafig that has been active in Gibson oounty for several weeks was predicted here today with the arrest of Paul Montgomery, Glen Austin and Alex Armstrong. Montgomery and Austin have •(fifesseti numtrcus chicken thefts, ucty officials said.

Gals Need Height If They’re to Wear the Latest Fashions

Velvet Guild Director. Back From Paris, Says Short Ones Are Out of Luck. BV ALICE HUGHES Timet Special Writer NEW YORK. Aug. 18—Velvet House has been bathed and shined from steps to roof. Its mistress. Mrs. June Hamilton Rhodes, director of Velvet Guild, is back home from Paris, fresh from the French style openings. ’This is a season when a gal needs height to wear good clothes." she declares. How you going to switch a train or flap a mermaid fin with any kind of grand gesture if you're only 5 feet tall?" Mrs. Rhodes regarded herself ruefully, her eve brightening as it rested on her Dilkusha travel suit, whose two shades of green, aloes and olive, reached a bright height in her Talbot ribbed velvet hat shaped like an Alpine mountain climbers toppiece. "The fashion openings were something grand. Better than usual, because most of them had unity. They were built around some central theme. Lanvin's collection was built around silver lame. Mainbocher Goes Broadway “Mainbocher went Broadway on us. He glorified the show girl ala Ziegfeld with more than a dash of Shubert. and he went further West than Mae West herself. He dressed his models in slit skirts, with cutout effects. “They hunched their shoulders and swung their hips like a frontline chorus. Mainbocher is an American, you know, and he went native. His stuff is good, but a little more flashy than usual. Maybe that's what they want. Who knows? “Most impressive to me was the Worth opening, when Marjorie Howard, until recently Parish fashion editor of Harper’s Bazaar, who Just has been decorated with the French Legion of Honor, was given a mess of red roses by Worth. Wide Shoulders Gone “As far as American tastes go. I think Molyneux showed the best clothes. His things are tailored and smart; simple and wearable. He went on no Lady Lou debauch and he let Edwardian styles lie in their graves. Simple, nice things. “Not a sign of black sarin showed up in the Paris openings. No wide shoulders. No big drooping hats with a feather in front to keep blowing away from four nose and mouth. Lots of metal cloths; velvets with the new Lastex shirrings; lots of nice, conservative clothes a lady can wear. "Like the Augustabernard things, the Lelong and Patou clothes. Julienne caused a stir with her fourcolored shoes in silk or leather strips. Worth's models wore them and I think we’ll all be stepping "ound in them this winter. "The maddest things I saw were the arm-pit length black velvet

There Must Bea REASON Why Such Great Crowds are Coming to Ayres Downstairs Store! Perhaps It’s the Wonderful Assortments of Fall Apparel —and the Convenience of Doing ALL Their Shopping on This One Great Selling Floor! (We Close at 1 o Clock on Saturday) Start Building Your lAII FttU Wardrobe on ■ W ■ tVm A BLACK COATS J \1P r ' T Trimmed With the If l/VILWv K ( I Long-Haired Furs That With Crisp, Crackling "" —Rise High and Wide WHITE Contrasts BLACK SATIN About Your Shoulders! EB| v : cC QC Berets for Fall cOQ Jt* V Are Soft and ' the other somber ajAr\ n I • Wolf • Fox of the Gibson Girl era. will be outstand- M W I n SB! ii ing fashions for daytime dresses. Buts w OKUnK # UOg 1 Somberness will be combined ■ Choow , c „„ , usnri _ "lth vivid, startling. DRAMATIC COL- HHB ous long-haired fur ... to form a perfect frame OR CONTRASTS. White contrasts will _ , „ , , , , A your face. You'll be a picture of loveliness: HHBBBB ' l Pqf | fnllnwerl hv reel* <rrpen< hrifrht Forget all former opinions about berets. Fall Such furs as fox. Manchurian Wolf < dogi, wolf, H 1 ) 11 | ' htalt 1933 berets are NEW and INDIVIDUAL and just .kunk-are the kind that stand u P HicH^im \ / / about the SMARTEST things that ever “happened” Wl ® E ~ i " *• *pindorfui manner of the \ \ | / . I j SATINS FAILLE WEAVES in the millinery world! You’ll find them draped in * *** ° r m **”' women an J* 1010 " \\l I A \ SHEERS CANTON CREPES the most surprising and becoming ways—full crush- Other Fur Trimming*: j i \ TV Ur Mimm: ers_some with visors—and some with an oriental Caracul Marmink ’ Lapin 1 J Ntze* tor M tsses ana Yomen influence. M e are particularly recommending berets Beaverette (rabbit) ij • —Downstairs at Acres. in gleaming black satin! —Downstairs at Ayres. —Downstairs at Ayres. I AYRES DOWNSTAIRS STORE 1

' -j June i===7 t*. director of the 1-llSf- ‘ -WwaM DH \ el\et Guild J jHpjPj hark from Kill" .5? 'V/'9L n’t'' *T ran*.

Relative of Valentino Is Master Chef in Old South

Cousin of Former Star on Screen Spends Life at Trade. By United Free* BATON ROUGE, La.. Aug. 18 Antino Guglielmo, whose are finds expression in culinary creations, and whose one ambition is to excel in that line as an illustrious cousin excelled in film love scenes, is chef at the Italian Garden here. Guglielmos first cousin was Rudolf Valentino, over whose death thousands of young girls and women wept seven years ago. gloves whose cuff Is a wide frond of black ostrich. Very effective for doing a snake dance. “The NRA business is being watched carefully by the French. They are delighted that Americans : bought so heavily at this season's | openings. They all regard President Roosevelt as some sort of savior." I

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Boyhood playmates in the little village of Castellaneta, near Naples. In the Provegia di Lecce, one turned to acting, the other to pies. | Leaving home for Paris at the age iof 23, Rudolf took up dancing lessons, and Antino studied the art lof cooking under famous Parisian chefs. Antino came to America first, and after years of creating tasty 1 masterpieces, became assistant chef !at the Astor in New York. Later, he served with other important hotels in large cities. Four years after his arrival here, Antino renewed his associations with his famous cousin, who had then embarked upon his meteoric rise to fame as the screen's most ardent and artistic lover. And when Valentine died in New York, the two were together—the one the screen's greatest lover, the other a baker of masterful pies.

GARMENT TRADE IN CHICAGO IS FACINGSTRIKE Nearly 10.000 Workers Likely to Walk Out; Ask Shorter Hours, More Pay. By fatted Prree CHICAGO. Aug. 18 —A strike of nearly 10.000 garment workers was anticipated here today, although a definite date for the walkout had not been announced. A decision to strike for shorter hours and higher wages was reached Thursday night by officials of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers' Union. Bernard Shane, general organizer for the union, said 10,000 workers probably would participate. Factory officials feared the walkout would paralyze production. Union officials said they had hoped to comply with President Roosevelt's plea for a moratorium on strikes, but because employers had failed to listen to their requests. they were forced to walk out. 60,000 Out in New York By United Pm* NEW YORK. Aug. 18. Sixty thousand dressmakers continued on strike today while another dressmaking union prepared to join the general walk-out which all efforts of NRA officials have failed to settle. Harry Greenberg, manager of the Ladies’ Tailors and Customs Dressmakers’ Union, declared his organization planned to strike. Greenberg charged fashionable Fifth avenue shops with obtaining NRA insignia under false pretenses. Mine Strike Spreads By United Preee TAMAQUA. Pac., Aug. 18.—An “outlaw" strike of anthracite miners in the Panther creek valley spread today to include 15,000 men. The strikers, demanding equalization of work, closed the alliance colliery of the Lehigh Navigation Coal Company, enlisting another 1,000 miners. Ten thousand of the strikers then marched toward Hazelton to picket the Cranberry mine. They planned also to concentrate on the Giant Locust Summit breaker, near Mahonoy City. Arrest Girl Pickets By United Preee PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 18.—Twenty girls, on strike at the plant of the Eclipse Shirt Company, were arrested oday after attacking police with umbrellas. The disturbance started when strike breakers attempted to enter the plant. The pickets, mostly girls, charged the nonunion workers and beat patrolmen when they sought to protect the men and women seeking to enter the factory.

\\ hose Brown Derby? w What Indianapolis man will be crowned with the BROWN DERBY at the Indiana State Fair on Sept. 7? * What man will win the plaque that goes with the derby? Clip this coupon and mail or bring to The Indianapolis Times. Just write your choice on the dotted line. Vote early and often. OFFICIAL BROWN DERBY BALLOT To the Editor Times: Please crown with the Brown Derby as Indianapolis' most distinguished citizen.

Price Control Board Is Latest Move of NRA

All Industries Would Be Checked for Exorbitant Profits. BY H. O. THOMPSON United Prei Staff Corrwpondent iCoovrieht. 1933. bv United Pres*) WASHINGTON, Aug. 18 —Strong support for creation of a price control board to regulate price advances and guard against profiteering, developed in the Roosevelt administration today. Control of prices has become one of the mo6t critical problems facing the national recovery administration. The controversy which resulted in the withdrawal of Professor William F. Ogburn, prominent economist, from the consumers advisory board has accentuated this situation. Ogburn warned that lack of statistical data might hamper the NRA program. He declared the present NRA consumers agencies were inadequate to protect the public. Advisers to Administrator Hugh S. Johnson have stressed the argument that fundamental purposes of the recovery act will be nullified If wages do not Increase more than prices. In other words, mass purchasing power will not be improved if all the increases in wages have to be used to meet increased prices. Supporters of the price control board plan point out that an agency of this character could kpep an adequate check on all Industries and determine when price increases were justified by increased costs resulting from presidential re-employ-ment agreements on NRA codes. Signers of the agreements pledge themselves not to raise prices ex-

cept as necessitated by actual cost advances. The price control machinery might be set up as a joint agency of the NRA and the agricultural adjustment administration through their respective consumers’ boards. Dr. Frederick Howe. AAA consumers' counsel, is an executive officer of the NRA consumers' board and the two groups have been attempting to co-ordinate their activities. The AAA board deals only with foodstuffs and a few other commodities affected by the farm relief program. The work of the NRA consumers’ board has been practically at a standstill since the Ogburn controversy began. A movement is under way to make Dr. Howe, w’ho has had notable success in the AAA, more active in the NRA. A price control board, whether set up through the consumers' boards or as a separate agency, would be able to ascertain what proportion of increased prices went to wages and salaries, what part to meet increased costs of raw materials, what part to farmers for their products. If it were found that jumps In prices were more than enough to take care of these items, the firm or industry would be proceeded against on the ground that it was attempting to exact an exorbitant profit. AUTO INJUR lES FATA L Plainfield Man Die* a* Result of Automobile Mishap. By United Preen PLAINFIELD. Ind.. Aug. 18.—Injuries suffered by Eugene E. Watson, 60. in an automobile accident Tuesday caused his death Thursday night.

.AUG. 18, 1933

WRECKAGE MAY FORECAST FATE OF AMUNDSEN Unconfirmed Reports Possibly Will Clear Up Mystery of Lost Explorer. By United Free* OSLO. Norway, Aug 18. Government Investigation was ordered today of unconfirmed reports that fishermen had found wreckage of the seaplane in which Roald Amundsen, discoverer of the South Pole, disappeared while flying to the rescue of the dirigible Italia, wrecked in the Arctic in 1928 The reports said the wreckage had been found between Bear island and Tromsoe. whence the Amundsen party set out June 18. 1928 If the reports are substantiated the government will send the Arctic ship Fridtjof Nansen to Bear island Amundsen. Commandant Rene Gilbaud of the French navy. Lieutenant Lief Dietrichsen and three others sot out in a French navy seaplane to rescue the crew of the Italia, which General Umberto Mobile of Italy took to the Arctic. The two-motor"d Farman seaplane never was heard from. Three years after Its disappearance Paul Mochanoff. Russian meteorologist, said he believed he had photographed the wreckage from the dirigible Grap Zeppelin south of Novava Zembla off the Russian northern coast. Bear island is half way between Scandinavia and Spitzbergen. and on the Amundsen route toward the Italia. Hope to Soive Mystery By t'nitrd Preee HAVANA, Aug. 18—Fishermen of the village of Jaimanita. near the rocky, deserted Cape San Antonio, were reported without confirmation today to have found a skull, an airplane w'heeel, two lanterns and a life belt. Searchers have gone to investigate the report, which. If true, might tell the fate of the Cuban aviator. Ponce De Lech, who disappeared two years ago.

PROPOSE CHEESE POOL TO LIFT PRICE LEVEL' Administration Aid Is Offered in Emergency Measure. By I'nilrd Prat* r WASHINGTON. Aug. 18.—Farm relief officials and dairy leaders today were perfecting plans for a $30,000,000 pool to buy up surplus butter and cheese as an emergency means of improving prices. The agricultural adjustment, administration agreed to set up the fund, on condition that the dairy industry itself would reimburse the government later. A one cent levy on each pound of butter produced was proposed as one means of raising the money. Details of tax arrangement were uncertain.