Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 114, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 September 1933 — Page 4

PAGE 4

‘SOCIALISM' CRY AS NRA TURNS TO PRICESTUDY Administration Takes View Control Does Not Mean Fixing. 'Coovrieht 1933. bv United Press! WASHINGTON. Sept. 21—Price fixing in the national recovery program tends toward state Socialism, it was charged today as price regulation features of the proposed NRA code for the retail trades became the center of debate over price control measures. Opponents of price fixing declared that it could not be operated successfully except where state Socialism was an avowed objective. NRA officials who prepared the revised retail code maintained it was intended to regulate or control prices, but not to fix them to any rigid formula. Fixing and Control Differ Present discussions of prices tend to include any form of price regulation under the broad term of ' price fixing.” in reality, there are significant differences. Under strict price fixing the price of each article in the retail trade would be set by fiat. In the retail code as it is now constituted there are no such provisions. The code does not guarantee a 10 per cent profit to the • retailer nor does it prevent him from charging more than the wholesale price plus 10 per cent. The ultimate price will be determined by the same factors as at present, except that ruthless price cutting for competitive purposes will not be allowed. Exceptions Provided The exceptions to the stop-loss provision includes highly perishable merchandise, imperfect or damaged merchandise sold as such, bona fide dlscontinuLif lines advertised and sold as such, merchandise sold upon liquidation and merchandise sold or donated for charitable purposes. The drug code, companion piece to the retail agreement and similar in most provisions, prohibits selling of standard trade marked drug products whose retail prices are indicated on the goods themselves at more than a discount of 21 per cent. CLERMONT GROUP TO HOLD HOME-COMING Oct. 1 Set as Date for Fifteenth Annual State Event. The Clermont Home Coming Association will hold its fifteenth annual meeting Oct. 1 in the Clermont Christian church. A basket dinner will be served in the church dining rooms. Officers arranging the program include Eunice A Jones. Acton, president; Ernest Chambers, Lebanon, vicepreslQent; Alva Gulley, Indianapolis, secretary, and Esther Morgan Israels, Indianapolis, treasurer. Committee assisting them is composed of Hubert Burgoyne, Brownsburg; Mrs. H. Brown and Harry Miller, Clermont, and Mrs. Eliza Ballard, Speedway City. U. S. ALLOTS MILLIONS FOR HOUSING OF ARMY $54,709,358 to Go for Building at Thirty-two Posts in Nation. By I'nited Press WASHINGTON. Sept. 21.—Public Works Administrator Harold L. Ickes announced today the allotment of $54,709,358 from the public works fund to the war department for army housing construction. Os the allotment $53,573,397 went for new improvements and salvage work on thirty-two posts. An allotment of $1,135,961 was made to complete construction now under way at thirty-one posts. The allotment to the various posts included: Rock Island (111.) arsenal, $13,438. Ft. Benjamin Harrison, $7,677. BASEBALL TALES TOLD Observer of Game for Forty-five Years Speaks at Liars Lunchc m. “Some Baseball Observations and Stories.” was the topic of Edward Kepner, who has followed baseball more than forty-five years, in an address to fellow members of the Lions Club at the weekly luncheon in the Washington Wednesday.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Peoples Outfitting Company. G M C truck. T 990. from Perkins Trucking Company garage at 421 West Merrill street. Prank Moore 1 West Twenty-eighth street. Apartment 106. Plymouth coupe, 110-21*. from in front of 1 West Twentyeighth street. William Crawford. 609 West St Clair street. Buick coach. 6745. from West and Ninth streets. Oscsr Nolan. 48 West Thirtieth street. De Soto coupe. 86-553, from 3373 Manor court. Bright Motor Car Company. Bright. Ind.. Studebaker coupe. M 631, from Cleveland

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to Frank Ellis. 1034 Hadley street, Plymouth coupe, found at Hiawatha and Michigan streets.

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Miss 1933 Eats, Poses, Eats, Poses Etc.

BY A. J. LIEBLING Tlron Special Writer NEW YORK. Sept. 21— Marion Bergeron of West Haven, Conn., who is 16 and has a tumed-up nose and a jolly suggestion of a double chin, j checked into the Hotel New Yorker yesterday and ate a protracted meal, interspersed with photographs. It was after the first series of photographs, posed in street clothes, that Miss Bergerson, who is the officially selected Atlantic City “Miss America,” announced that she was hungry. One of the dozen or so members of her entourage was sent to apprize the management, and a photographer suggested that while she was waiting “Miss America’ - give them another pose “like on a steamship," exposing a knee. Arina nd F. Jones of Atlantic City, her attorney' entered an objection. So “Miss America” changed into an orange bathing suit, cut low in back, and posed in that. A waiter arrived and she went into the next room to drink some tomato juice. When she returned, the photographers demanded that she po6e wearing the crown symbolizing her achievement. Mrs. Elmer Bergeron, “Miss America’s” mother, said she had forgotten to pack the crown, so Robert Sylvania, an Atlantic City policeman traveling with the party, was dispatched to a theatrical costumer on Forty-fourth street for a substitute diadem. “Miss America” adjourned for consomme. Abe Weintraub, the official photographer of the beauty pageant, took over the burden of entertainment. “I have photographed this kid 500 times at least,” Weintraub stated. “And with me, you know, is not like with you boys. When I shoot I get paid for each picture. “I took twenty-five pictures alone of her with a Ford car the company gave her. So they wanted her to pose with a Lincoln she said ‘Sure, if you give me a Lincoln.’ She is not so dumb.” “Miss America” returned in blue pajamas. This was her best number. She is a whitish blond, rosy, a

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Marion Bergeron, 16, a Connecticut policeman’s daughter, polices her nose a bit in her New York hotel as she admires the face, etc., etc., that won her title of “Miss America of 1933” at the recent Atlantic City beauty pageant.

bit of a future Mae West in figure, a jolly-looking girl. She has wellarched brows and long lashes. The upper portion of her face catches the eye. “What is your ambition?” she was asked. “She wants to get rich,” Weintraub answered. “Everybody wants to get rich.” She posed in the pajamas. One of the photographers re-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

turned after a feverish telephone session with his city desk. “I took ten hundred poses of this dame already, and now my boss wants a picture of her drinking coffee. Like she was getting up in the morning and having breakfast. Get the .idea?” “I can not give you such a pose,” said “Miss America,” after she came back from the fruit salad, “because I always drink cocoa.”

CYCLIST LOSES FOOT IN 3-WAY TRAFFICCRASH Amputation Follows Mishap Involving Motorcycle, Auto and Truck. A motorcycle, passenger auto and truck figured in an accident Wednesday night on Road 67 between Oaklandon and McCordsville in which Chartes E. Korey, Brooklyn, N. Y., the cyclist, suffered injuries resulting in the amputation of a foot. Korey, with Mrs. Korey riding in a side car, overturned as a car driven by B. L. Smith, McCordsville, started to pass a truck owned by the Trans-American Freight Lines, 300 North Senate avenue, according to state police. The Koreys told police they had $46 in the motorcycle, but this was believed lost in the accident and picked up by a witness. Mrs. Korey was left with only 3 cents. Korey’s foot was amputated at city hospital after he and his wife were given first aid at Ft. Benjamin Harrison hospital. Dispensers Mass Meeting Called A mass meeting of all hotel and restaurant employes and beverage dispensers will be held at 2:30 Saturday afternoon in the office of Veterans of Foreign Wars, 143 East Olive street.

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A new deal in love—

- \ li^B^Elii^iti?

—that’s what, this girl demanded. She’s Joan Waring, the forgotten sweetheart in Mary Raymond’s new romance, “Forgotten Sweetheart.” Watch for first chapter Thura, Sept. 28, in Indianapolis Times. i's r

Austria Steered Into Fascism by Dollfuss

Full Control in Hands, of Chancellor With Three Factions Clashing. By United Free* VIENNA, Sept. 21, Chancelloi Engelbert Dollfuss. invested by Presdent Wilhelm Miklas with dictatorial powers, guided Austria toward a Fascist state today. Empowered to assume the entire state executive power with any sort of cabinet he chose, the little chancellor took full control over all military and police forces and formed a new cabinet after forcing the resignation of his old one. Success of the chancellor's move was problematical, torn as the nation Is among three inimical political factions. The Nazis, their leaders outlawed and working against Dollfuss from Germany, want a Nazi state along German lines. The Heimwehr faction, now supporting Dollfuss, is for a Fascist state on Italian lines. The Socialists, vital force in the country, threaten a general strike and armed resistance if either demand is met. The transition of Austria into what Dollfuss is believed to plan as a modified Fascist dictatorship is a showdown that long has been deferred. Dollfuss went to President Miklas

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Chancellor Dollfuss and offered his resignation. Miklas refused to accept it. “You must rule," he said.

SEPT. 21,1933

‘BROKE,’ PLEA OF STUDEBAKER, ONCEJEALTHY Member of Noted Family at South Bend Files Bankruptcy Papers. By United Pres* SOUTH BEND. Ind., Sept. 21Colonel George Milburn Studebaker, son of Clement Studebaker, one of the five brothers who founded the Studebaker industry, filed a petition in voluntary bankruptcy In federal court here Wednesday. He listed, liabilities of $2,400,000 and assets of $4,540. Colonel Studebaker’s wealth once was estimated at $35,000,000. His home here was valued at $500,000. He suffered heavy financial losses in the crash of the stock market and the Insull utility empire.

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