Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 157, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 November 1933 — Page 4
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70 VOLUNTEER SPEAKERS JOIN SEAL CAMPAIGN City, County to Be Covered in Battle Against Tuberculosis. Seventy speakers, representing many organizations, will carry word to every part of the city and Marion county of the unusual need for a successful Christmas Seal sale this year to curtail and cur® tuberculosis. A number of the campaigners attended a luncheon today at the Lincoln, where Grier M. Shotwell. member of the board of directors of the Marion County Tuberculosis Association, gave instructins to the speakers. The speakers’ bureau executive committee for the tuberculosis association. named by Dr E M. Amos, president of the association, include Mr. Shotwell. Mrs Robert Winslow. Miss Helen Coffey and Mrs. W L. Appel. Services Are Donated Among the volunteer speakers who have donated their services for the December seal sale campaign are: Dr. E. O. Asher, Murray A Auerbach, J)r E M. Amos. Dr E F. Boggs. Flvod Burns. Robert Brockenburr, Howard Caughran, Lloyd Clavcombe, Dr. Stanley Coulter, Russell J. Dean. Addison M. Dowling. Kenneth P Pry, Michael Foley, Dr. Earl S Gilchrist. Edward W. Harris, William H. Harrison. Harvey Hartsock. Laurens Henderson. Robert Hendrickson. Dr. Russell Henrv, Joseph E. Hartman. J. Clyde Hoffman Jr , Henley T. Hottell, Dr. Wayne O. Hill. Emsley Johnson, Roy Johnson. Leo Kaminsky and Herman W. Kothe. Harold Kpaling. John Lauck Jr.. Dr. James Mcßride. Cassatt Martz, Dr. C. J. Mclntyre. Howard Nyhart, John Niblack, Telford Orbison. William T. Pearcv, Hazen B Pike. Captain Otto Ray, John Rorap. Dr. R A. Solomon, Dr. James H Stygall. Dr. Andrew Sudah, Judson i Stark. Howard Travis, Urban Wilde,' Delbert. O. Wilmeth, Harry Yockey, Edward W Wilson and William Snethen. Other Speakers Named John Wright. Dr. Thurman E. Rice, John F Watkins. Rabbi Silas Charry. Frank Fairchild, Dr. John B Ferguson, the Rev. August Fussenegger, Donald Lafuze, George Lehman, Gordon Meeker, the Rev. j Richard C. Stuckmeyer. Rev. Henry Herod. Dr. Homer Wales Mrs. W L. Appel. Mrs. C. Severin Buschmann, Mrs Russell S. Williams. Mrs. Sam Meyers, Mrs. Charles H. Smith. Mrs. E. C. Atkins. Mrs. Fred G. Balz. Miss Helen Coffey, Miss Louise Dumas and Miss Flora A Dutcher. Mrs. Alexander Jameson. Mrs. H. H Hornbrook. Mrs. Meredith Nicholson Jr., Mrs. Addison Parry. Mrs. A. C. Rs&mussen. Mrs. G. M. Shotwell, Mrs. Frank S. Tomlin, Mrs. Charles Weiss. Dr. Mary West- j fall. Mrs. Robert Winslow. Mrs. Gaylord Wood. Garrett M. Bates and Judge Wilfred Bradshaw. While digging for fossils in England, geologists unearthed anew seam of coal, two miles in area and estimated to contain 20,000.000 tons. Maya civilization lasted at least 2 300 years, according to archeologists who say there is that much d'fference between the building of the earliest and latest temples.
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KTOIFS’ RHVIJE TO BE PRESENTED
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Pictured above are some of the cast of the "Kiddies Revue of 1933,’’ which will be presented at the Tabernacle Presbvtrian church tonight. Left to right are Jane Osborn. Annabelle Spiegel. Marjory Foltz. Mary Christine Gardner and Corinne Pate. Back row, left to right. Emma L. Davidson, Betty Jane Carll, Barbara Winslow and Marion Osborn. More than fifty children will' take part m the performance, which is sponsored by the recreational department of the church. Arrangements have been made to accommodate 1.000 spectators.
Strachey Sees Fear of Japanese Back of Pact
Believes Parley Intended to Restrain Nipponese From , Aggression. BY HELEN LINDSAY Time* Staff Writer "Recongition of Russia by the United States Is one of the most important steps the United States can take.” said John Strachey, Town Hall lecturer, in an interview this morning, preceding his talk at English's. "President Roosevelt surely would not have made such overtures to Litvinoff. had he not intended recognition of Russia,” Mr. Strachey asserted. "It is essential that Russia and the United States unite against the aggressive attitude of Japan. I feel sure that this is the paramount reason for the conferences with Litvinoff now. rather than the trade relationships which, of course, are important.” Able as Diplomat Mr. Strachey believes that Japan will be dangerous, if her activities are not held in check by Russia, backed by the United States. "No other man in Russia is so able to deal with these diplomatic relations as Litvinoff.” he said. "I do not know whether it generally is known in the United States, but he is the most finished diplomat in Russia. He has attended every firstclass conference since the conference of Rapallo, in 1921. when the treaty between Russia and Germany was signed." Russia is much more concerned over the possibility of trouble with Japan than war with Germany, Mr. Strachey believes. Married English Woman "While Russia, of course, views with alarm the rearmament policies of Germany, and realizes that, if not curbed, they will mean war
as serious as the World war; she also knows that, with Poland lying between Germany and Russia, the immediate danger to Russia is not from Germany,” he said. Maxim Litvinoff is married to an English woman, the daughter of Sir Sidney Low. Before the revolution, they lived in simple fashion S in London, where Mr. Strachey and I Litvinoff were' intimate friends. “I visited them in Moscow in 1928, and later in 1931," Mr. Strachey said. "Contrary to the current belief that Litvinoff is a wealthy man, they live in very simple fashion there. Litvinoff Lives Simply "Their home was in a workmen’s apartment, in a newly built block of 1.000 apartments. The apartment occupied by the Litvinoff family was one of four rooms, sparsely furnished. It was what you here in America would call, I believe, a walk-up' apartment, and the name of Litvinoff appeared at the entrance listed as the other residents were. “They have two children, who attend an ordinary public school in Moscow. When I knew them in London, before the revolution, Lit- [ vinoff s wife was employed in a large insurance office. In Moscow she also was employed, translating Russian articles into English, and i earning more than her husband.” Wife Is Able Writer Mrs. Litvinoff, while mildly interested in political affairs, is mc* concerned with her work as a writer. According to Mr. Strachey, she is an able writer, having written several literary criticisms, and one or two detective stories. Mr. Strachey is an Englishman. He was educated at Eton and at i Magdalen college. Oxford. His po- ! litical leanings are radical, and he j is a professed Communist. From 1929 to 1931 he was a Labor party member of parliament, and since that time, has devoted his time to writing.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES -
VOTE FUND SUIT AGAINST COUNTY COUNCIUIKELY Friendly - Action May Be Taken to Force Appropriation. Declaring "the right to vote is the people's only weapon against dictatorship." Don Irwin. Republican state chairman, in a statement from Elkhart, Ind., today, offered assistance to any community in upholdin gthe permanent registra*ion of voter's law. The statement was issued in connection with a recent ruling of Attorney-General Philip Lutz, Jr., that elections will be invalidated next year, unless county officials carry out provisions of the law. Marion county was one' of the counties in the state which failed to provide in its 1934 budget for equipment and services in establishing the permanent registration. “To the end that not a single voter in Indiana shall lose his or her vote, the Republican party organization stands ready to give aid. without cost, to officials in counties, cities or other governmental units (hat need volunteer helpers to qualify every voter,” the statement declared. Possibility of a friendly suit for declaratory judgment in order to force the Marion county council to appropriate $104,000 for the establishment of a system of registration of voters, was forecast by Democratic Marion county officials. County Clerk Glenn Ralston said he would seek legal advice and also attempt to find a room in the courthouse to house the proposed department for the registration of voters. A saving of $250 a month in rental is possible, if room can be found in the courthouse for the bureau’s quarters.
LIBRARY EXHIBITS BOOKCOLIECTION Observe Week by Display of Rare Old Volumes. Interesting collections of old and new books are on display at the Central library for observance of “book week,” Nov. 12 to 18. By way of contrast, old children's books are placed in the same case with beautiful modern versions and editions of the same books. A first edition of Alcott’s “Eight Cousins,” published in 1875, is balanced by its 1932 counterpart, A little papercovered "Mother Goose—Old Style” rests beside a large attractive “Mother Goose,” illustrated by E. Boyd Smith. A special number of studio "Children’s Books of Yesterday” is also shown. Parents, children and every one interested in the best in children’s books are invited to visit the library during "book W'eek.” The aeronautics branch of the department of commerce has been reorganized so that it now comprises two major divisions instead of three, as before. The divisions are air navigation and air regulation.
Forced to Deliver Booze in Baby Cart, Says Wife
Old World Betrothal Ends in Divorce # Court; ' Wed at 15. An old world betrothal and marriage, sigiH unseen, was bent on the rack of the new world’s divorce court toaay in superior court tw T o. $ And in the bending Mrs. Vissle Kakasuleff of Bulgarian ancestry charged her husband, Steve Kakasuleff of R. R. 17, Box 205, with forcing her to deliver bootleg liquor in a baby carriage. In turn her husband in a crosscomplaint alleged she was wasteful of food and invariably quarreled with him on Fridays with the regularity that fish is served in restaurants. Mrs, Kakasuleff testified she was btrothed and married to her husband without her consent. She said she refused to sign the marriage license on July 29, 1924. She declared she was 15 when wed and tnat her parents merely selected Steve for her husband in the same manner in which weddings are arranged in Bulgaria, without giving her a choice in the matter. Her husband testified that five years after their wedding she told him she did not love him. Mrs. Kakasuleff countered with: “I never loved him.’’ Judge Joseph R. Williams took the divorce action under advisement to determine the disposition of the custody of the two children.
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SLATED FOR POST
Mrs. C arl Wood Mrs. Carl Wood, wife of a city lawyer, will be named as trustee of the Sunnvside sanatorium to fill the post vacated by Mrs. Arvilla Ault. This change in the sanatorium board of trustees was admitted today by county commissioners. “No official action has been taken as yet, but I understand that Mrs. Wood will take the place. Mrs. Ault's four-year term on the board will end soon.” said Ernest Marker, commissioner. Other members of the Sunnyside board are Dr. A. L. Marshall, Irving W. Lemaux and Dr. E. M. Amos.
EQUAL RIGHTS, HITLER DEMAND ‘Peace With Honor or No Conference.’ Nazi Chief Tells Millions. By United Pre BERLIN. Nov. 10. Chancellor Adolf Hitler, addressing millions of his countrymen in a gigantically conceived loud speaker hookup, demanded peace with honor and equality today, and shouted of his withdrawal from the disarmament conference: “Germans are not bootblacks for other nations! Either equal rights or no conference!” Traffic throughout the country, and pedestrians on streets, halted for one minute as Hitler began speaking at a factory near Berlin, to a visible audience of workmen. Loud speakers in factories, shops, office buildings and schools all over the country, and 3.000 loud speakers here in streets and subway and railway stations relayed the chancellor's speech. “We do not meddle in other people’s affairs,” shouted Hitler. “Others should leave us alone.” “International conflicts are fostered by a small group of intellectuals who can be at home anywhere,” he said at one point. His visible audience shouted back : “Jews!” “The sins of fifteen years can not be made gcod in a few months,” said Hitler, appa:en'ly referring to past Germany governments as well as to treatment of Germany by other nations. “If one generation is insufficient, then the next must be trained for it.”
SLAIN IN ROBBERY
Seized by a fleeing robber for a shield while he waged a gun duel with police, Miss Edna Kingsley, 26 (above), Toledo (O.) stenographer, was slain by a bullqf, from the bandit's pistol as she struggled to escape. The robber, Donald J Elliott, 20. was and charged with murder.
INTERNATIONAL SESSION IS SET FOR CHEMISTS Scientists Will Discuss New Facts on Atom at Meeting. /y/ Sritni i Srrrire WASHINGTON, Nov. 10.— Chemists of many lands are to meet next spring in the first World Chemical Congress to be held since the World war. The first of the two meetings, the third Chemical and Tecnnical International Congress of Agriculturad Industries, will meet in Paris beginning March 26. and the second, the ninth International Congress of Pure and Applied Chemistry, will open its sessions in Madrid on April 5. These meetings will mark the fortieth anniversary of the first international congress of chemistry ever held, which was organized in Paris in 1894. The last preceding world chemical congress was held m Washington in 1912. Plans for the double chemical congress were described before the meeting here of the Association of Official Agricultural Chemists by Dr. Atherton Seidell, who recently returned from France.
STATE COMPANY 1 WORKING THREE DAY Heavy Volume of Orders Is Reported by Firm at South Bend. ft y Tim cm s per ini SOUTH BEND, Nov. 10—The South Bend Tool and Die CeAnpanv is working three shifts a day with 175 men, five times the force employed at this time last year. Heavy volume of orders stacked up in elude a large order from the Bendix Aviation Corporation, and i others from stove, pump and beer | barrel companies.
DRY CHIEF SEES ‘ERA OF CHAOS' Dr. Crain Decries Doom of Prohibition: Attacks Beer Law. “An era of chaos.” That is what confronts the American people with repudiation of the fighteenth amendment, according to Dr. James A. Crain, director of the National Prohibition Emergency Commission. Like Napoleon after Waterloo, Dr. Crain sat in his Irvington office today and bewailed the fate which has overtaken the disciples of dryness. “I am quite sure that we are in for an era of chaos,” said Dr. Crain. "There is a virgin market of 30.000,000, persons who never knew the old days. The brewers and distillers aren’t going to be willing to give up that market easilyl to any system of control suggested.” The Indiana beer law also came in for a generous share of Dr. Crain's disgust with the present liquor setup. “The Indiana law,” he said, “is the most unscientific and most open to possibilities of dishonesty and graft of any in the United States. I can’t see how any system that provides for county wholesalers could have been devised with any idea in my mind save political graft.” Dr. Crain denied that “prohibition” is the issue any more. Liquor control now is the big problem, he asserted, for many years to come. “Every dry.” said Dr. Crain, “is under obligation to examine every proposal carefully and without prejudice and work for the best he can get.”
A Special Selling of New OVERCOATS If you want a good Overcoat, new and fresh, made under New Conditions, if you want a deep fleece ' that is soft and light in weight-but that can stand punishment— If you want an Overcoat that fits—that hangs properly, if you want the including plenty of best possible value in the popular oxford <.rays, aii priced field—it s only reasonable men can he fitted. 7 and natural to come to Strauss for it—to the ' Home of the Overcoat " featured at $19.75. L. STRAUSS & CO. “THE HOME OF THE OVERCOAT"
STAR AT 11
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Cameras will grind for anew screen juvenile when George Breakston, 11-year-old “discovery,” goes into action. George, shown here reading the script for his first part in Hollywood, was given a contract after his mother objected, then yielded. She is a hat designer in the film capital.
RED CROSS AID PLEA IS ISSUED Cites Record of Group to Stress Work During Depression. Citing the record of the American Red Cross and stressing particularly work done as relief during the depression. Governor Paul V. McNutt today called upon all citizens to support the annual Red Cross drive. In a proclamation, he sets out the period from Armistice day to Thanksgiving as the official time for the Red Crass roll call. CAPTIVE -SEAL BLIND By United Prrxa BOSTON, Nov. 10.—Big Mike, reputedly the oldest captive seal in the world, now is totally blind. The hardy sea lion, for twenty-one years a resident of the City Point aquarium, is otherwise in good health however, and director William O'Brien believes the patriarch will survive several more years. A Cleveland judge recently sentenced six youths simultaneously for the same murder; it was the first time in the history of Cuyahoga county, Ohio, that such a sentence had been made.
NOV. 10, 1933
GOLD PROGRAM SHOWS RESULTS, SAY ADVOCATES Dollar Tumbles on Foreign Market: Commodities and Stocks Rise. B’i t nitrd Pr. * WASHINGTON. Nov. 10. —Advocates of the Roosevelt administration's new dollar depreciation felt today that their plan had begun to show results. They pointed to a fail of the dollar to record low levels in terms of loreign currencies and to accompanying gains in sock and commodity markets. , There was no way of telling to what extent the gains were directly due to the government's new effort to lift prices by depreciating the dollar through purchases of gold at home and abroad. But in any event the movements of the dollar and the markets were in line with the administration's aims. Skid Causes Concern Among the factions that opposed the new gold policy, the dollar's downhill skid caused growing concern. Tha possibility of retaliatory action by foreign governments to keep this country from gaining too much of a trade advantage through a cheap dollar was discussed. A slump in government bonds also was noted with anxiety in some treasury circles. Seven federal issues now are below par. When Jhe government inaugurated its gold buying program on Oct. 25 the dollar stood at $.78 to the British pound sterling. That is. a person converting, dollars into pounds could get one pound for earh $4 78 in American funds. When both countries were on the gold standard, the ratio was fixed at $4,866. 1926 Level Is Goal Since Oct. 25, the foreign exchange value of the dollar has dropped steadily, to the accompaniment of successive advances in the price offered here for gold. The decline became abrupt yesterday and at the opening today', the dollar was quoted at $5.11 to the pound. Similar declines occurred in terms of other foreign currencies. As measured in domestic commodity prices—which are the real concern of the administration—the dollar has not fallen nearly so much. The President’s aim is to restore prices to somewhere around the 1926 level. In other words, to cheapen the dollar so that it will buy no more than in 1926. London taxicabs must be able to turn around in a 25-foot wide road without reversing; an average medium or full-sized car requires a 40foot road to do so.
