Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 251, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 February 1934 — Page 2

PAGE 2

HOME SHOW'S EXHIBITORS TO MEET jT CLUB Board of Directors to Hold Luncheon Tomorrow: Evans to Preside. Exhibitors in the thirteenth annua! Home Complete Exposition, which will be held April 8 to 14 in the Manufacturers building of the fairground, will be entertained by the board of directors at a luncheon tomorrow noon in the Columbia Club Walter M Evans, president of the board, will introduce members of the committee and the heads of the various divisions of the show. Plans for the show will be fully outlined, and suggestions for the use of exhibit space given. Edward James of Burns and James, architects for the show, will explain plans for the 1934 model house and show drawings of the exterior. Plans for the gardens will be explained by Lawrence V. Sheridan, landscape architect, who is designing that part of the show’. Representatives of exhibiting firms will be introduced by Robert L. Mason, a member of the board of directors, who has been in charge of the space distribution. Mrs. Alex Metzger, chairman of the saddle club committee, will explain the plan for the model saddle barn, which will form the entranceway to the show, and Mrs. Eugene Foley, chairman of the amateur gardens committee, will explain the part that local garden clubs will have in the show. WALTER R. DORSETT ANNOUNCES CANDIDACY Seeks Republican Nomination for City Councilman. Walter R. Dorsett, city councilman during the administration of former Mayor John L Duvall, yesterday announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for city councilman from the First district. His program includes reduction of city tax levy, independence from any group or factions, restoration of Frank Owen to the accident prevention bureau, increasing policeman's and firemans pay and furnish uniforms from the budget, and receiving all bids for city purchases from local firms. The candidate lives at 1349 North LaSalle street, is married and a , member of the Masonic lodge. I. U. EXTENSION CLASS TO HEAR CITY ARTIST Oakley Richey, Herron Instructor, Will Lecture Tonight. “Use of Color in the Home” will be the topic of Oakley Richey, instructor at John Herron Art institute, in the exterior center. 122 East Michigan street, at 8 tonight. Mr. Richey replaces Mrs. George Calvert in the lectures on interior decorating at the Indiana university extension division. Mr. Richey, wdth the art institute nine years, painted the murals in the Connersville high school, and in the Morton school in West Lafayette. In April an exhibit of his paintings w’ill be shown at the art institute. NRA ANTHRACITE CODE AGREEMENT DISCUSSED Operators, Miners’ Officials and Authorities to Meet, By United Preet WASHINGTON. Feb. 28.—Anthracite operators forming the industry's code committee will meet again today w’ith NRA authorities and United Mine Workers’ officials j in one more effort to agree on the j w’ork-week and control of producing j and marketing practices. After several hour's discussion of controversial points yesterday, the operators group adjourned, expressing a hope that negotiations were nearing conclusion after months of conferences and hearings. Arrested for Shooting in City While searching the alleys for a prowler, who had stolen gasoline from the parked automobile of Roy Buchanan, 108 South Oriental street, police heard a shot fired. They arrested Clayton Woods. 19. of 139 South Oriental street, on charges of vagrancy’, varrying concealed weapons and shooting in the city limits.

§Eyes Examined at Kay s. Now my Headaches disappeared."

Table of Special Articles . . . REDUCED for CLEARANCE New Stock Is Coming In—We Need the Space The Junior League Shop 158 East 14th St.

Medical School to Honor Dr. William N. Wishard

Senior Class Giving Dinner for Veteran Physician at Hospital. Honoring Dr. William N. Wishard. who was graduated sixty years ago from the Indiana university school of medicine, the senior class of the medical school will give a dinner tonight in the Riley hospital. Prominent physicians who have been associated with Dr. Wishard in student and professional life will bo guests, in addition to officials of Indiana university. Much of Dr Wishard's sixty years of service have been in public and institutional work. He was superintendent of the city hospital m 1879, when there was no general hospital in the entire state. He was instrumental in launching a movement, through the Flower Mission at the Old Plymouth Congregational church, to provide a women’s and children's hospital and a course of training for nurses. Dr. Wishard is the son of Dr. W. H Wishard. who made the first formal effort to obtain a general state hospital. He introduced a resolution in the session of the Indiana State

America Must Choose Tariff Cut Needed to Increase Foreign Trade t Radical Levy Lowering May Necessitate Planned Retirement of Certain U. S. Industries.

This is the ninth of a series of ar tides written for the Foreign Policy Association and the World Peace Foundation. „ BY HENRY A. WALLACE Secretary of Agriculture APPROACH TO A WORLD NEIGHBORHOOD TRADITIONALLY, the Democratic party is the party of low tariffs. Actually, Democratic administrations have never made changes in the tariff structure great enough to increase foreign purchasing power to the extent demanded by the present world dilemma. If we are going to increase foreign purchasing power enough to sell abroad our normal surpluses of cotton, wheat and tobacco at a decent price, we shall have to accept nearly a billion dollars more goods from abroad than we did in 1929. We shall have to get that much more in oraer to service the debts that are coming to us from abroad and have enough left over to pay a fair price for what we send abroad.

This w’ill involve a radical reduction in tariffs. That might seriously hurt certain industries, and a few kinds of agricultural businesses, such as sugar beet growing and flax growing. It might also cause pain for a while to wool growers, and to farmers who supply material for various edible oils. I think we ought to face that fact. If we are going to lower tariffs radically, there may have to be some definite planning whereby certain industries or businesses will have to be retired. The government might have to help furnish means for the orderly retirement of such businesses, and even select those which are thus to be retired. Closing down some of the factories would be of grave national concern, not only because of the resulting unemployment, but also because some types of factories are needed in time of war. It would seem, therefore, that international planning must include a complete survey, item by item, of all the products that enter into our annual output, and a conscious decision as to which kind of products we might receive in large quantities from abroad, in time of peace, without jeopardizing those industries which we absolutely require in time of war. ana WE begin here to touch on one of the most potent arguments invoked in this country against international trading and world-wide dealings of any sort. We are instinctively suspicious of “entangling alliances” in matters of trade and of w’orld government alike. We are afraid of the dogfight which international trade in the past has very often been. We picture international trade as even more cut-throat, remorseless and unscrupulous than the most piratical performances of our home barons of commerce and finance in New York and Chicago. I doubt if international trade, at its worst, is any worse than that. I see the seeds of w r ar alike in “laissez-faire” accumulating pressing surpluses at home, and in seeking by hook or crook to thrust such surpluses abroad. Whether such a system is permitted freely

JIB Hh J|lUf 188 S§kl

Dr. W. N. Wishard

Medical Association in 1868, recommending such a hospital. Dr. William N. Wishard’s son, Dr. W. N. Wishard Jr., now is a practicing physician in Indianapolis.

to secrete and discharge its own poison within national borders or about the world at large, the pressure of ungoverned surpluses seems to me an equal stimulant to ruination and slaughter, before and during w’ars. Some say that world trade leads to w’orld-mindedness, w’orld sympathies, world peace. Others say that world trade just gets you out among strangers who trm you, and step on your feet, and have you fighting before you know’ it. nan ALL such talk seems to me, if weighed in the balance, to come to nothing either way. The real question is how the trading is done. If it is done blindly in response to expansive greed, without planning or governance, it is likely to get you into serious trouble, whether you are trading at home or abroad. A clean-cut program of planned international trade or barter would be far less likely to get us into war, I think, than the attempts to function internationally as sellers, yet nationalistically as buyers, inaugurated under Presidents Harding and Coolidge, and followed by President Hoover. Such tactics pursued in the past by older nations led -O bloody foreclosure proceedings, at the point of guns. Not dissimilar current programs in other countries have created a danerous degree of tension throughout the civilized world, and there are many who think that sooner or later the pressure will be bound to blow itself off in another orgy of human killing. We have b’own off pressure that way very often in the past. Tomorrow—War or Peace?

CITY MAN. RAILROADER 32 YEARS, WILL RETIRE William J. Frost Is Honored by Missouri Pacific Club. After thirty-two years of active j duty for the Missouri Pacific lines, William J. Frost. 5871 Julian avenue, assistant general agent in Indianapolis. will retire from service tomorrow. Members of the Passenger Traffic Club paid tribute to his long railroad career last night at a dinner. A gold service button was given him last week by L. W. Baldwin, president of the railroad. Mr. Frost joined the Missouri Pa- j cific lines in 1902. EASTERN"CITY ICEBOUND Immediate Relief Imperative at Norwich, Conn. By In \ted Press NORWICH, Conn.. Feb, 28.—Continued blockage of the Thames river | by ice resulted today in "acute distress” to the city of Norwich and "immediate relief is imperative,” Charles E. Smith, secretary of the i chamber of commerce telegraphed the eastern area headquarters of the coast guard. DAMROSCH WINS AWARD Conductor Honored by National Education Association. By United Press i CLEVELAND. Feb. 28—Walter Damrosch's projection of inspired i music to 6.000.000 school children in j his weekly broadcasts, today had brought him the annual American { Educational award. The citation was made last night ! by the associated exhibitors of the National Education Association, in • conference here. 'Children’s Coughs Need Creomulsion Always get the best, fastest and surest treatment for your child’s 1 cough or cold. Prudent mothers more and more are turning to Creomulsion for any cough or cold I that starts. Creomulsion emulsifies creosote with six other important medicinal elements which soothe and heal the inflamed membranes. It is not a cheap remedy, but contains no narcotics and is certain relief. Get a bottle from your druggist right now and have it ready for instant use. —Advertisement.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TTMES

1300 EXPECTED AT COMMUNITY | FUND MEETING Fourteenth Annual Meeting to Be Addressed by Owen Lovejoy. Three hundred persons will ati tend the fourteenth annual meeting of the Indianapolis Community Fund at 6:30 tonight in the Riley room of the Claypool. An address on ‘ Social Work Looks Ahead,” by Owen R. Lovejoy, of New York, and naming of the 1934 honorary member of the Community Fund, will feature the session. Mr. Lovejoy is secretary of the ! New York Children’s Aid Society and is a past president of both the National Conference of Social Work and the American Association of Social Workers.

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Peters' Senate Campaign to Embrace 53 Counties

Launches Fight Tomorrow With Address Over Station WKBF. A radio address over station WKBF will open the state speaking campaign of R. Earl Peters, candidate for nomination as United States senator on the Democratic ticket, at 6:15 tomorrow night. Mr. Peters plans to speak in fifty-three counties on his tour. The schedule is as follows: March 6—Greencastle. afternoon: Crawfordsville, night. March T—Delphi, afternoon: Lafayette, night. Radio talk over station WBAA Lafayette. klarch B—Winamac. afternoon; Logansport, night. March 9 —Rochester, afternoon; Plymouth, night. March 12—La Porte afternoon, broadcast over station WRAF; Michigan City, night. March 13—South Bend, night. Radio broadcast, station WSBT. March 14—Elkhart, afternoon; Goshen, night. March 15 —Wabash, afternoon; Huntington. night. March 18—Monroeville, night banquet. March 20—Muncie, night, radio broadcast. station WLBC.

March 21—Winchester, afternoon: Richmond night. March 22—La Porte. Democratic rallv. March 23 Frankfort, afternoon: Kokomo, night. March 28—Rushville, afternoon; Connersville. night. March 29. —Shelbyvilie. afternoon: Newcastle. night March 30—Franklin, afternoon: Martinsville. night. April 4—Gary, night; radio broadcast station WIND. April s—Hammond. afternoon: East Chicago, night. April 6—Valparaiso, afternoon; Knox, night. April 11—Greenfield, afternoon: Anderson. night. April 12 Bloomington, afternoon; Bpencer. night April 13.—Linton, afternoon: Washington. night. • April 18.-—Brazil, afternoon: Terre Haute, night: radio broadcast, station WBOW. April 19—Boonviile. afternoon, Evansville night; radio broadcast. stattion W’GBF April 20—Jasper. afternoon: French Lick, night. April 21 —New Albany, afternoon; Jeffersonville. night. April 26—Ft. Wayne, radio address, station WOWO: Bluffton, afternoon; Decatur. night. April 27—Auburn, afternoon; Kendalville, Albion, night. May 2—Gary, radio broadcast station WIND. May 3—South Bend, afternoon; radio broadcast station WSBT; Elkhart, night May 4—lndianapolis; radio broadcast Station' WKBF.

AIR SERVICE TO CONTINUE HERE American Airways Not to Drop Schedule. Says Traffic Manager. American Airways will continue operating all former services through Indianapolis, despite loss of air mail contracts, it was announced today by Ted Griffin, local traffic manager. Mr. Griffin said that while two of the company's six night flights, on a night schedule, do not carry passengers, continued operation of all runs is necessary to handle the rapidly expanding express and package service. American Airways departure schedules effective are: 9:50 a. m., Cincinanti, Charleston and Washington: 1:12 p. m„ Chicago and northwest: 5:23 p. m., Chicago and northwest; 5:42 p. m„ Cincinnati; 3:35 a. m„ express only, Cincinnati and southwest; 4:15

FEB. 28, 193 T

a. m.. express only, Chicago and northwest. Schedules of TranscontinentalWestern Air temporarily have been cut to two flights daily, one departing at 1:07 p. m. for Columbus, Pittsburgh and Newark, and the other at 4:04 p. m. for St. Louis, I Kansas City and the west. SCOUT TROOP TO MEET Executive to Talk at \ irtory Dinner Tomorrow. A description of the International Boy Scout Jamboree in Europe last summer will be given tomorrow night by F. O. Belzer. Boy Scout ■ executive, in a talk on “World-Wide Values of Scouting.” at the NorthI wood Christian church. A dinner will be held to eelebrate the victory of Troop No. 78 in winning the city-wide Boy Scout championship. Awards will be presented to Scoutmaster Glenn Findley and members of the troop. Phildren’s Colds . Yield quicker to double action of ' ex''X