Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 148, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1933 — Page 5
OCT. 31, 1933
NRA ENTERING SECOND PHASE, SAYS EDUCATOR Recovery Program Results Are Discussed by Dr. Pilchers. With the corporate state idea vanishing: because of inability of the trade associations to function as expected, the NRA has entered the second phase of its history, Dr. D. J. Pilcher. De Pauw university economics professor, asserted today. The NRA as a partnership between industry and government was accepted silently by the public and quickly entered into by the industrialist*, encouraged bv the fading promise that the industrial group could wave aside the highly objectionable anti-trust laws. Dr. Pilcher said. This linking of industry and government, the essential makeup of present-day European corporate states, was not acceptable to all, notwithstanding the “soothing, comforting statements of Donald Richburg that the country was passing through a revolution and that there was no reason to fear violence," he continued. Dr. Pilcher attributes non-realiza-tion of the economic hypothesis that increased wages and employment and reduction of hours will increase purchasing power, to the failure of the administration to note the significance of personal traits and a few fundamental economic principles. "The new policy of the new deal consists of two parts: Reorganization and enforcement,’’ he stated. “The newly created federal price policy board tends to unify the objectives of the NRA. It will ask : that completed codes revise price- ! fixing clauses.”
ADDING SECURITY In exceptional cases, building and loan stock has been accepted by an association to partially reduce the principal of a mortgage. This is done only when, at the discretion of the ©board of directors, it is deemed necessary to increase the safety of a loan by reducing the amount of investor’s funds represented in that mortgage. Your association’s first responsibility is the protection of your money by maintaining the security back Hold your “Pass Book.” / THE MARION COUNTY —league of BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATIONS / f#33, A. \ urindle. diii, lnd
Girl Scouts to Study Homemaking Tomorrow
Mrs. E. S. Pearce to Have Charge of Domestic Activities. Mrs E S. Pearce, council member of the Girl Scouts, has been designated chairman for “homemaking day” of Girl Scout week, to be held tomorrow. Domestic activities will be stressed and badges will be offered in this field for housekeeper, handy woman. dressmaker, needle woman and laundress The girls will help their mothers in home management on this day and the older girls v ill take over the management of the home. Mrs. J. R Farrell, home economic adviser of Banner-Whitehill, will give a homemaking demonstration at 3 30 p. m. in the auditorium of the store, to which 300 Girl Scouts have been invited. Joan Dugan of Troop 46 will give a reading on homemaking and Mrs. Robert Blake, accompanied by her Girl Scout daughter, Jane, will sing.
MISSING CITY GIRL REVEALED AS BRIDE Elopement With Kentuckian Learned by Parents. Word has been received here that Miss Evelyn Sutherland, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick E. Sutherland, 1035 North Beville avenue, who has been missing since Friday, has eloped with a man from her former home at Holton, Ky. Miss Sutherland, Technical high student, has been sought by city and state police.
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Mrs. E. S. Pearce
Tra-la-la-la! Pretty Posies Fooled by Heat Wave.
”/ r 'YH, the flowers that grow in '“Ghe spring, tra-la-!” hummed Mrs. Joseph A. Gilson, 5023 Carrollton avenue, as she rushed into the house today to tell her family that she had discovered violets growing in the back yard. ‘‘l’ve never heard of violets growing in October, have you?” Mrs. Gilson later asked The Times horticultural expert. He admitted that he hadn’t, but cited other freaks brought on by the unprecedented “heat wave,” which included an increase in beer salts in the city.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
JONES SLAYING SUSPECTS SEEK SPLIT_TRIALS Attorney Says Not More Than Two May Face Court at Once. Ira Holmes, Indianapolis defense attorney, has notified Judge Fred E. Hines of Hamilton circuit court, that seven men suspected of slaying Police Sergeant Lester Jones probably will not be tried at the ame time when their cases are called Nov. 13. Mr. Holmes informed the Noblesville court that he will file motions asking for separate trials and it is likely that not more than two ot them will be arraigned together for a hearing. The defendants are Fred Adams, George Schwartz, Ernest (Red) Giberson, Willard Kelly, Edward iFoggy) Dean, William Mason and Edward Miller. Sergeant Jones was killed during a holdup of the Peoples Motor Coach garage here last February.
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SARRAUT STRIVES TO ' KEEP GOLD STANDARD Program Will Be Opened in Line With French Policy. Bv T'nitry Prmi PARIS. Oct. 3.—Despite the surprise created by President Roosevelt's monetary and gold policies, the government of Premier Albert
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| Sarraut will inaugurate a bona fide program to keep France on the gold standards, it was learned today. The government already has strongly committed itself on this policy with the other European nai tions still on gold, it was learned. A long steel cable, drawn at high speed and fed continually with wet sand, cuts through solid rock in a new type of quarry saw.
CITY. DISTRICT SCOUT COUNCILS TO CONVENE Plans for Next Year to Be Heard at Session Thursday. First meeting of the official board of the Indianapolis and central Indiana council of Boy Scouts of America will be held Thursday noon
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at the Lincoln. Committee reports will be heard and plans made for the coming year. Motorist Dies of Injuries MT. VERNON. Ind . Oct. 31— A 4 fractured skull suffered by Hilton Scheller. 25. when he lost control of his automobile and it crashed across a ditch, caused his death in a hospital here today.
