Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 257, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 March 1934 — Page 6

PAGE 6

WHITER ADMITS NUISANCE VALUE OF ROBINSON Republicans Never Defend Indiana's Senator, Says Tucker. “Ours Is a noble heritage!" What Hoosier hasn't heard Senator Arthur R. Robinson declaim that phrase? It is one of those which causes Ray Tucker. Washington staff writer for Collier's magazine, to confer the title of “Copy-book Senator’’ on him in the issue of March 10. Throughout the article, Mr. Tucker diagnoses Senator Robinson s personality and career. He introduces that favorite phrase of the now senior senator from Indiana with the following description: Speeches May Be Bizarre “His speeches may sound bizarre in the senate, but he knows what tune to dance to and what hands to shake in the backwoods districts. He draws large crowds of the curious when he kicks his way through the leaves and dust of country lanes behind the local fife-and-drum corps and he pleases the vanity of the home folks when he gives out the news that Ours is a noble heritage’—which is his patent medicine prescription for beginning and ending campaign talks.” Senators Snicker in Seats How Senator Robinson rates at Washigton is set out by Mr. Tucker saying: “The senate's attitude toward him would have withered a sensitive man long ago. It laughed in his face when he tried to blame the Wilson administration for the oil scandals, and when he held John J. Raskob responsible for the boom and crash, but he actually enjoyed the excitement he created. “Snickering in their seats, Republicans never defend him when Democrats cuff him around, and nobody dreams of suggesting that his detractors be called to order for obviously unparliamentary remarks. The Democrats concede, ruefully, that he has a great nuisance value. “He is. without doubt, the lonesomcst figure on Capitol Hill. When other senators clump out of a committee or caucus room arm in arm, joking and jabbering, Robinson slips along last and alone. Even on the floor, sitting or speaking, he is ringed by loneliness. Borah Enjoys Performance “His halting reading of speeches ! filled with housemaids’ jargon sets I his listeners howling. Once he hits i upon a phrase which impresses him as especially moving, such as Ours ; is a noble heritage,' he masticates it j as if it were a favorite dish, pausing j each time so that the senate, too. may taste this delicacy he has concocted." A real orator. Senator Borah, never misses these performances and looks upon them as splendid amusement. Mr. Tucker writes.

How Common “Acid Stomach” Makes Itself Known to You ••■•■•■■■■a * * I • The Signs of Acid Stomach j Nervousness Auto-intoxication Feeling of Weakness j Neuralgia Nausea ' Sleeplessness Indigestion Frequent Headaches Mouth Acidity Loss of Appetite Sour Stomach What to Do For It ■ ' p PHILIPS TAKE 2 teaspoonfuls of Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia in f(Z))" 3 '' a glass of water every morning when you get up. Take another teaspoonful thirty minutes after eating. And "ijc- another before you go to bed ; : OR-Take the new Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tablets I j one tablet for each teaspoonful as directed above. If you have Acid Stomach, you can After-meal pains and discomfort easily trace it. I'he symptoms go. You feel freedom from dull above, headaches, stomach pains headaches. That “afternoon fag after eat me “gas,” “upsets” are -—you think is depletion or nerves the usual indications. disappears. You feel like another Now —to get rid of it. all you person. People are doing this need do is follow these directions: doctors advocating it, everywhere. TAKE: 2 teaspoonfuls of Phillips’ But when you buy, be sure to get Milk of Magnesia in a glass of the BEAL article—Genuine PHlLwater every morning when you get LIPS’ Milk of Magnesia—the kind up Take another teaspoonful thirty doctors endorse. ask for it minutes after eating. And another by the name PHILLIPS’, before you go to bed. Or —you can take Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia _ TABLET FORM Tablets; substituting one tablet for ALSO I each teaspoonful of the liquid and Each tinv tablet is the —■* ppt tho same res,lit. dnSH. /CjfSj Try It—You Will Be Amazed! riumpV Milk of Trv this and. chances are. it will make a great difference in vour life. T>l •I 1 • * <J— For this small dosage of Phillips’ member n.r.a. Milk of Magnesia acts to neutralize X ITIT nF \t A fIXF ST A. stomach acids causing distress. MILK Ut COLDS M BY THE TESTED HILL’S METHOD If you want quick relief from a cold, go back to first principles and use something you know does the business—don’t start "trying” a lot of fancy ideas or remedies. Get Hill’s Cascara Quinine. A scientific formula made to do ONE THING WELL: to knock a cold in a jiffy, not to cure a hundred different things. Take two tablets now. Then follow directions on box. Drink lots of water, too—that’s all. Soon those mean, aching pains in head and body begin to go; the cold breaks up; poisons leave your system and you feel like a new person. If it doesn’t do that, your money back. Get a box now for a few cents. Way it works will surprise you. So demand the GENUINE HILL’S CASCARA QUININE in the red tin box.

Full Internationalism Is Frankly Impossible

Somewhere Between These Improbable Extremes Lies Proper Clear-Cut Middle Course.

This it the thirteenth of a series of articles written for the Forelrn Policy Association ind the World Pesce Foundation. BY HENRY A. WALLACE Secretary of Agriculture MIDDLE GROUND—NEW DEALING WITH THE WORLD COMING finally to consider a planned middle course in world trade, it would be sensible for us to pause a moment and more closely define our terms. There can be in practice today no such thing as an unmixed nationalist policy, or an unmixed internationalism. In using the term nationalism in this presentation of the American dilemma, I have meant simply to indicate the world trend toward a complete nationalist self-containment. By use of the term internationalism I have meant the opposite trend, toward wider and larger trade, the world over.

No matter how fervently nationalist or free-trade in principle our planned future policy may be, the jostle of world circumstances will be almost certain to take us across middle ground- With the modern world as it is, absolutely frep trade is a dream probably never to be realized; and so is a completely independent national economy. Somewhere between these improbable extremes lies the proper course: and that is the course we are following now. But the trouble is that we have at present no markers set up to guide on. With great spirit, but with no commonly understood destination, we are veering off this way and that as obstacles arise. We are temporizing until we have established a definite marker which most of our people will be willing to accept as our destination for generations to come. nan T CAN NOT too strongly emphasize this peculiar disadvantage of a middle course. The phrase “middle ground" suggests continual compromise. It offers refuge for indecision. It can be made a persuasive excuse for first giving in to this interest and then to that one. To be crowded now toward lower tariffs and then toward higher ones is not to follow a planned middle course. The result indeed is to lose the advantages, psychological and otherwise, of a clear-cut course toward either extremity, and to take on the handicaps of both. A middle course need not be indefinite. It can be clear-cut and uncompromising, if we choose to make it so. To begin with, we can set up tentative markers and discuss the gain and the cost of a resolute march along that line. And as a result of our discussion we can far more definitely reset the markers in accord with the common will for the long pullThe widest range of alternatives between nationalism and internationalism I have roughly stated thus: If we continue toward nationalism we must be prepared to make permanent the withdrawal from cultivation of over fifty million acres of fairly good farmland. and face the consequences of all the social and economic dislocations which are bound to ensue. If, on the other hand, we ehocse not to put our agriculture

America Must Choos

under so high a degree of interior tension and discipline, we must drastically lower tariffs and reorganize industry, so that we can receive from abroad another billion dollars worth of goods each year. a a a THE planned middle course I propose as a basis for present discussion is one precisely halfway between these two extremes: A line of march along which we would lower tariffs enough to bring in another halfbillion dollars w’orth of goods annually, and permanently retract of our good agricultural land some twenty-five million acres. To depict the pain this course would cause industry on the one hand, and agriculture on the other, would be but to restate in less demanding terms, facts and speculations developed in previous sections of this pamphlet, in respect to the price of unmodified isolation, on the one hand, and of an unmodified drive for world markets, on the other. The fact that agriculture would suffer far the more under isolation, and that industry would bear the brun + of changes necessary to widespread renewal of world trade, may here, however, be briefly reiterated; for here is a fact suggesting that a planned middle course is the fairest and wisest for all concerned. Whatever course we choose, I should like here to emphasize that—agriculture, finance, labor—every man and every woman in this country have a common stake in seeing that we go back to simple horse-trading common sense in our dealings with other countries, and lay off all such intricate paper deals and debts as put us w'here we were on March 4, last. It would pay us all to become more import-minded. Let us get it straight in our heads that we should not make loans abroad until we have first achieved a lowering of tariffs that will permit the repayment of our loans. This, in essence, should be our New Deal method of dealing abroad. Again and again, we shall be tempted under stress to postpone the New Deal method—goods for goods—and take another flier on the Old Deal loan method, a contortion based on the oldtime mercantile dream of selling limitless quantities of goods indefinitely, and buying hardly anything. Tomorrow—Deciding What to Sacrifice.

ESTERLINE TALKS AT FATHER-SON AFFAIR Banquet at Y. M. C. A. Is Sponsored by Hi-Y Clubs. Experience is the best teacher, and the youth of our land should learn the ways of the world by this method. J. W. Esterline asserted last night at a father-and-son banquet in the Y. M. C. A. The event was sponsored by eight Hi-Y clubs in and near Indianapolis. More than one hundred persons attended the meeting. Other speakers were Irwin Schwomeyer of Manual Training high school and Vernon D. Parker, boys’ work secrettary. The dinner was preceded by games and sports entertainment.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Richard E. Johnson, 1202 Orange street, Pontiac sedan. 22-686, from Woodlawn avenue and Laurel street, Walter Cannon. 528 North Dearborn street, Ford roadster, 124-844. from in front of 528 North Dearborn street. Hopson Wilson. 946 North Meridian street, DeSoto coupe. 446-356. from Ohio and Meridian streets. Lena Wright. 920 Division street. Chevrolet coupe. 27-421. from in front of 920 Division street.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Ernest Stewart. 324 West Twenty-first street. Pontiac coupe. Glenn E Newton. 1533 Franklin street. Columbus. Ind.. Ford sedan found in front of 38 Kentucky avenue. C. W Holstein. 3331 North' Meridian street. Chevrolet coupe, found ar Twelfth and Pennsylvania streets. Graham-Paige sedan, two sets of license plates. 16-442 and 133-767. title issued to Bedford Nugent Company. Evansville, found at 17 North Blackford street. M. H. King. 3207 Central avenue. Ford roadster, found at Market and Alabama streets. William Schneider, 1514 Wade street. DeSoto sedan, found at Morris street and the county line road, stripped of battery, two horns and a flash light. Leo Cohen. 2091 East Washington street. Buick sedan found at Mitchell. Ind.

STOP THAT ITCH In One Minute D. D. D. Prescription Speeds Relief

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Hanning Bros. Open Sund.n V M mHS/3BtSWsSsF Paio t n K rrsge Bldg. Hash. & Penn. Sts V 1/ INDIANA'S LARUtST XJ ” [X DENTAL ORGANIZATION

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

CONGRESS GETS WORD OF TIMES’ VETERAfffROBE Griswold Requests Inquiry Based on Reports of Estate Losses. The attention of the lower house of congress has been called td the investigation of The Times concerning alleged mismanagement of veterans’ estates at Marion, lnd., it was revealed today with publication of the current issue of the Congressional Record. Representative Glenn Griswold, Peru, denying that veterans’ legislation was used to corral votes, said, according to the Record: “In this country we have approximately 24,000 incompetent cases, wards of the veterans’ bureau, helpless men with dead minds in living bodies. “I want to call attention to a case where, according to a leading Indianapolis newspaper’s investigation, wards were deprived of $317,000 by one institution which was guardian for less than one hundred of these wards. The officers of this institution formed a real estate company with the same officers as those of the institution as officers of the real estate company, and then sold real estate bonds to the wards when the taxes had been delinquent on the real estate for two years, and the guardian’s report was approved by the Veterans’ Administration.” Mr. Griswold accused the Veterans’ Administration of failing to make a proper investigation of alleged mismanagement of these estates. He asked that impartial Investigators conduct an inquiry.

KIN OF ROCKEFELLER LISTED AS SOCIALIST Millionaire Grandson's Wife Refuses Comment. By United Press NEW YORK, March 7.—Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, third, wife of the edest son of John D. Rockefeller Jr., is enrolled as a member of the Socialist party. This was revealed by the official enrollment lists which also showed her husband enrolled as a Republican. Mrs. Rockefeller, who is the former Blanchette Hooker of Greenwich, Conn., would not comment. Party leaders were too surprised to comment. The Rockefellers were fnarried in 1932, a year after Mrs. Rockefeller was graduated from Vassar college. She is actively interested in social and welfare projects.

Every Other Dance a I WALTZ TONIGHT I RED HUFFORD tfej AND HIS ORCHESTRA % I 25c Before 9:00 ■ iNDiANAROOF

MOTION PICTURES pfTT4TI I'*e Talk P'") T *?° 6

* THE CURTAIN RISES Bp ANNA STEN appears from New Russia to thrill America, Bringing a fresh and exciting art • / ; To a role of strange fascinations .. . NANA .. .’giving her the . Inspiration of Zola’s heroine. The story suggested by ~ r % Incidents in the novel. A production that required Two years of patient work, M> ‘ y ; A fortune in painstaking preparation. mk ‘ r% * \ ANNA STEN in NANA | With Lionel Atwill, Richard Bennett, Jg I Mae Clarke, Phillips Holmes, JHHHb HIP” 8 * Directed by Dorothy Arzner, KBBSiK ML- Jpy p ffll Released through United Artists Friday! Ml 1

PRESIDENT RECEIVES HONORARY DEGREE

President Roosevelt rounded out his first year of office by receiving an honorary degree of doctor of laws at exercises at American university at Washington. D. C., at which Dr. Joseph M. M. Gray (right) was installed as Chancellor. Here Dr. Gray shakes hands with the President as Captain Walter Vernou, White House naval aide, looks on.

WHITTLED WOODEN PISTOL IS SENT TO GOVENOR M’NUTT

A nicely whittled wood pistol, covered with shoe blacking after the manner of the one made by John Dillinger and used in his escape from the Crown Point jail, was received in the morning mail yesterday by Governor Paul V. McNutt. It carried a tag showing that it was mailed at Akron, Ind., but there was no address of the sender. The tag was addressed: “For A1 Feeney, chief of state police, in care of Governor Paul V. McNutt.” PRAISE SCHOOL HEAD George S- Wilson, Retiring, Is Lauded by Blind Teachers. Teachers at the state school for the blind gave a letter of appreciation today to George S. Wilson, retiring superintendent, who has been with the institution thirty-five years. He has been succeeded by Robert Lambert.

De Biase’s Exclusive Night Club 116 E. Maryland Dine and Dance Johnny Bank's “Hot Shots” 45c—Cover Charge—4sc Rl. 5050

MOTION PICTURES DOORS OPEN 11 A M jf^ OKI PERSON! m KATE Smith and her COMPANY of SO In | “SWANEE MUSIC REVUE” 11 to 1 j I Screen: Laughs! Action! 25c and : JOAN BLONCELL 11 0 e ! GLENDA FARRELL | PAT O’BRIEN 40c I (n After 6 "I'VE GOT YOUR NUMBER '

CITY WOMAN IS CHEATED Metal Polish Bought From Salesman Proves to Be Water, She Says. A door-to-door salesman gave such a convincing demonstration of the efficacy of the metal polish he was selling that Mrs. N. JS. Day, 1134 North Arsenal avenue, bought two bottles yesterday. After the salesman left, Mrs. Day discovered the bottles contained only water. She notified police.

AMUSEMENTS If m STAG 6-! m tl A RtPEAL REVUE ;g | —ON SCREEN— I ■i Edw. Everett Horton Edna May Oliver Effl | ‘The Poor Rich’ § The screen's newest comedy ::: team in the screen's newest ;+£ ronirdy srream! :IT

MOTION PICTURES | Last 2 Days Vam.o n. NOVARRO Jette MCDONALD 'U, CAT AND THE FIDDLE 0 EXTRA JLAUKEL-lIAKPY COMEDY

All Seats ■ After 1 P. M. Bj P-alenny . 20r I u | ,T -!n !• lonr^2s<^^^

FEDERAL FINANCING PROGRAM EXPLAINED State Farm Bureau Group Hears Official. The financing program inaugurated by the federal government to promote co-operative groups was explained yesterday to members of the Indiana Farm bureau co-oper-ative association at the annual meeting in the Claypool hotel. The local co-operative association was congratulated for its 1933 record of $2,224,000 in business transactions as revealed in the report of Everett G. Jeans, secretary-treas-urer. John E. Brown, president of the Louisville bank for co-operatives, asserted that the principles of co-op-erative marketing and purchasing has proved to be sound during depression years. Election of directors will take place at the meeting today. Cucumbers have been cultivated in India for more than three thousand years.

It Looks BETTER # z/) UpT 1 7 If r IT IS BETTER ! 9 S CROSLEY Much better—so% more >*— 1 - _. _ storage capacity. Every Ml *99 ;. J No Money Down Model shown, $135. *| 5Q A DAY New Meter Plan OPEN EVENINGS CTADrC 225 E. Wash. St. C/ I R * opp. Courthouse RADIO AND ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION

i^bassn6®[ llMi NEIGHBORHOOD TH EATE Rf >

NORTH SIDE n vrnn Illinois at 34th K I I /. Double Feature Warren William “BEDSIDE” “BLOOD MONEY” TALBOTT Nile* i Double Feature “WILD BOYS OF THE ROAD” “SHOULD LADIES BEHAVE" . r | 19tb and College Stratford Wv.SK “SHRIEK IN THE NIGHT” l f A Noble at Mass. MKlil/A Family Nile R Gertrude Astor “SHIP OF WANTED MEN” GARRICK ■fe-g" “PRIZEFIGHTER AND THE LADY" “THE LAST TRAIL” 30tb & Northwestern K n X Irene Dunne Walter Huston “ANN VICKERS” I |VF/\ll t\l 42nd at College UPTOWN Do^' n f Lyon*'* “WOMEN IN HIS LIFE” “WORLD CHANGES" pm i 4 ■ St. Clair, Ft. Wajnc ST. CLAIR D " F ou n T “IF I WERE FREE" SENSATION HUNTERS” r . „ . 23.-,1 Station St HR P X M Double Feature L/l\L<ni'l Lionel Barrvmore “ONE MAN’S JOURNEY” ’ THIS DAY AND AGE” rj A DIM/’ Double Feature LA a\ XVll' vT Richard Dix “ACE OF ACES" Ed Wynne “THE CHIEF" EAST SIDE _ 1352 E Wash. STRAND wvsfs? “LADIES MUST BEHAVE” “CAPTURED’ ■ Dearborn at Kith P|V(I I Marie Dressier INI Y Wallace Beery "DINNER AT EIGHT” IRVING C h as* *F a rn*U “GIRL WITHOUT A ROOM” HAMILTON eatiire UntUlGI Marion Davies “GOING HOLLYWOOD’ ' "STRAIGHTAWAY” TACOMA . “ SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION

MARCH 7, 1934

lOv*ri wiillion people use ShALTEX. tha modem bandage, because it will not stick tr> skin or hair. No pins No tying. Neat " atet^ Sanitary. Flexible. IV. 2* * G4ir Hizus. Keooni men fled and oil lrusr courier*. _ _ _ - - JEBSSEXtI

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EAST SIDE Paramount New £uV SPECIAL FEATURE ATTRACTION gl is _ , 1500 Roosevelt - ” HOIIyWOOd •“ Feature "WOMEN IN HIS LIFE " “.V.YRT AND MARGE" EMERSON 4620 E. Tenth St. SPECIAL FEATURE ATTRACTION __ tuxedo r SPECIAL FEATURE ATTRACTION PARKER r. ioth st. SPECIAL FEATURE ATTRACTION SOUTH SIDE ORIENTAL “AS HUSBANDS GO” “EXTRA 4 CARTOON COMEDY” SANDERS Ann Harding “RIGHT TO ROMANCE” ‘TORCH SINGER” FOUNTAIN SQUARE Double Feature Joan Blondel! GOODBYE AGAIN” “SENSATIONIDII'NTERS” GRANADA "liUlPlfSjr" BY A CANDLE LIGHT” “SITTING PRETTY” _ |. 1429 S Meridian Koosevelt • f>v ure John Boles “BACK STREET” “A MAN'S CASTLE” AVALON p&TfKX. taviaavwiv Lillian Harvey "MY LIPS BETRAY” “TAKE A CHANCE” LINCOLN S East at Lincoln SPECIAL FEATURE ATTRACTION VVFSI SIDE BELMONT “ Sr" -opuw. ■vSr.Tf?""’" “MYRT AND MAEOE” HA ICV *<• W Mirh. ' Ll/\iOI Family Nite Leila IVvams “SING SINNER SING grp A rpww **®2 ' mth 84."" OlAl£j Will Roger. Zasa Pitts “MB. SKIICH”