Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 282, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1934 — Page 5

APRIL 5, 1934

WIRT CHARGES SEEN AS ISSUE IN PRIMARIES Noted Editor Joins Gary Educator in Attacking Brain Trust. By l titled Prrtt WASHINGTON, April s.—Red plot charges have hauled the brain trust today alongside the air mail, U*-riff ana NRA as top issues of the congressional campaign which opens next Tuesday in state-wide Illinois primaries. Stock exchange and securities legislation, the AAA and other administration projects intimately associated with the Roosevelt intellectuals will be targets in the brain trust barrrage. Dr. William A. Wirt’s statement that brain trusters deliberately were leading the country toward complete social and economic revolution Popped the famous advisory organization back into the prominence of dinner table conversation. The house soon will investigate the charges of the Gary <lnd.) school superintendent. Both house and senate resound with debate of the Wirt expose. Tost Takes I p Cry The Saturday Evening Post steps abreast of Dr. Wirt this week with an editorial call for a strong and intelligent opposition party to head the country away from Soviet Russian collectivism. The editorial is a follow-up of an early winter plea for a ney party or re-birth of the Republican organization as a haven of liberal constitutionalists. Editor George Horace Lorimer attacks the brain trust, thus: "It is impossible to escape the conclusion that today we are having government by amateurs—college boys, irrespective of their age —who have recently taken some hearty swigs of Russian vodka. We can not solve our problems with discredited European ideology and Marxian philosophy. “The country moves farther and farther toward the left, for the implication if not the intention of proposal after proposal that is put forward by the party in power takes us closer and closer to collectivism, makes it harder and harder to retreat to Americanism, and predicates. logically and inexorably, something very close to the Russian system.” Tugwell Book Under Fire Brain trust books are protested in congress, notably “Our American Society,” of which Rexford G. Tugwell, assistant secretary of agriculture, is a co-author. The judgment of Tugwell and his collaborator. Professor Howard C. Hill, University of Chicago, is that: “The experiments commenced in 1933 in the United States are worth while beginnings. They are not economic planning, but they afford new opportunities for working out plans.” Democratic ranks are forming for a counter-attack against the brain trust raiders. Unless all signs are mistaken a Democratic effort is in the making to trace the antibrain trust campaign to Wall Street and specifically to opposition to the administration’s proposed stock exchange control bill.

Indianapolis Tomorrow

Optimist Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. Aitru'a Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. Sahara Grotto, luncheon. Grotto Club. * Sigma Chi, luncheon, Board of Trade. Phi Delta Theta, luncheon, Columbia Club. Harvard Club, luncheon, Lincoln. Delta Tau Delta, luncheon, Columbia Club. Reserve Officers’ Association, luncheon, Board of Trade. Stamp Club, 8 p. m., Lockerbie. Disciples of Christ, annual Men’s meeting. Central Christian church. Brokers’ Association, dinner. Washington. Osteopathic Association, dinner. Washington. Home Show. 8 p. m., Indiana state fairground.

Exceptional Values For Your Carden f CbfK . . JX-v Up r p || | ''•DA V 011 dprive B Id V? | J V m “ ■ pleasure when m m m m plant start to ▲ ■■■ ■ ■ J jURj | A Thought the things vou /./ I \ * 1 need i Here are 11/ I IT j" j* All/ \J manv* f g tt a ?d e h n While you are downtown bring along a list Jf Wm fJ W 0 \[/ .*.••• *, J/\, J \L —.- needs to be found of those small everyday house cleaning # 1/ M / \\V I lI A-S \ll W A_ _ Items you are going to need. We will be jj/Ui LJ yT \\Jra a r Perennials and Rock Garden Plants, 10c able to supply them at prices you can be W \ \ll 1 f Lawn and Grass Seed 10c Pkg. | sure are the lowest. * Vegetable and Flower Seeds. 5c Pkg. I L 1... Flower Bulbs 10c fc*avlieb llOSc ■ Ami u ('omplrta lin* of tranaplantinc and ■■ ■ A II f • | i garden tools each. HV H b V I A L ! ■ -.jAfn**®*! . . Full faslA-tued chiffon hoslw l 1 4-Piece green glass mixing I vry rrauit foot—reinforced 1 lied and a bargain at even bowl set ... set 25c * highPr price - Shadcs are: tyST/ gemvar S3 l * Manoa I ■ Plain white cups ... each 'II- I • Taupesan ! ’ RBCt • n d Others Vv)\ Aunt Mary’s in. —si.e* *vi Famous Fudge IUC pound *" 10 Fr ‘ MmSmgm MH—— W—^—Ml— J Close Out Men's Wash /^w [/ * 7 mi ~,cr A "**'••* 101 c 2,400 Ties 10c // jOOp * A I Suburban \ onr " nl ' v ’" I D °" l mi " ili ‘ s b,,rsa ' n - I// This w a I £. row l s ?*■ JC. C. Murphy Cos. I K "S" n st s or 6 J J \Murph y y 5c TO SIOO ST ore V,nd Save Corner Market and lUinois

Indiana News in Brief n n n nun u u m Interesting Stories About Events in Lives of Hoosiers Written and Assembled for Quick and Easy Reading

Ity T ime* Special MARION April s.—Marion plant of the Snider Preserve Company, closed since 1931, will be operated during the canning season, paying 5200,000 to tomato and sweet corn growers and providing employment for four hundred persons. Grant county growers will supply the factory. Contracts are being signed for the tomato yield from 1.C09 acres and 1,500 acres of com. In addition to full operation during the canning season, there will be production later of tomato juice, chili sauce, soup, pork and beans. In this work, 150 persoas will be employed. n a a ana

Receiver for Hospital By Timet Special KOKOMO. April 5 —Glen R. Hillis, Kokomo attorney, has been appointed receiver for the Kokomo Hospital Realty Company, which operated the fifty-bed Howard county hospital closed since failure of the county council to appropriate funds for its use. Mr. Hillls was appointed on application of Charles and Vita R. Muir, stockholders in the $250,000 company. In the petition for appointment of a receiver, it was insufficient insurance is carried on the hospital building, and that the company is delinquent in payment of bonds and interest. a tt tt Alumni to Vote ; By Timet Special BLOOMINGTON, April s.—Candidates for alumni trustee of Indiana university, to be voted on during the June commencement period, are Ora L. Wildermuth, Gary, and John S. Taylor, Sullivan, both lawyers.

SERVICE OXFORD! The Service has a great reputation. Men speak of it as “The greatest value that walks in shoe leather”— But above and beyond value—is the comfort that it gives—and the style that It has. Shown in tan and blackin a variety of lasts and leathers for men and younger „ men, for street, q r business and college ... 4.%/D L. STRAUSS & COMPANY

A3ks Eviction Aid By Timet Special EDINBURG, April 5. Town board of Edinburg has taken under advisement the suggestion of J. F. Miller, an attorney, that rescind an order which prevented the town marshal from serving papers in eviction cases. Because the marshal can not act, Mr. Miller said property owners were put to unnecessary expense in having a sheriff or deputy serve papers. tt st tt Educator Does By Timet Special FRANKFORT. April s.—Samuel P. Kyger. 75, teacher in schools here and elsewhere in Clinton county for forty-six years, is dead in Auburndale, Fla. One of Frankfort’s schools bears his name. u a a Child Rescued By United Prrts WARSAW. Ind., April s.*—Attracted by frantic cries fer help, Robert Gage, South Bend motorist, stopped his car on State highway 15 near

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here, dove into the swollen waters of Tippecanoe river and rescued Aileen Campbell, 3, from drowning The tot slipped into the stream as she walked with her sister and grandmother along the river bank. She was unconscious when Mr. Gage reached her. tt tt *f Escapes Suffocation By United Prett WINAMAC, Ind., April 5. A 7-year-old boy was revived here yesterday after being buried in a sewer excavation near his home. The child, Herbert Lebo, was unconscious when a rescue squad dug him out from under two feet of dirt and barely escaped suffocation. SHEET METAL FIRMS FORM ORGANIZATION E. L. Carr Named First President; Code to Be Studied. Organization of a Sheet Metal, Warm Air Heating and Roofing Construction Association of Indianapolis was effected last night at a dinner meeting in the Architects and Builders building. Officers elected were E. L. Carr, president: J. E. Mattingly, vicepresident; E. R. Mullin, secretary, and H. D. Clark, treasurer. The association will consider the code proposed for the industry at its next meeting. The work done by the human heart in one day is equal to lifting 124 tons a foot high.

HOME SHOW TO OPEN TOMORROW AT FAIRGROUND Model House Nearly Ready; Miniature Auto to Be Exhibited. Plans for the thirteenth annual home exposition, which will open ; tomorrow at the Indiana state fair- ’ ground, will be given final consider- ; ation tonight. Interior decorators still are at j woik on the model house and bzi cause of its nature, the garden exhibit will not be finished unt 1 a few minutes before the gates open at 6. Among the exhibits for children will be one in which “Cannon Ball” Baker will display a miniature, but real automobile in a model garage. A log cabin, 100 years old, has been imported from Brown county i by the state conservation depart- | ment, and will be displayed in a natural setting. The Indiana artists’ exhibit, ar- I

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ranged by J. R. Fenstermaker, shows thirty groupings of furniture from L. S. Ayres & Cos. around oil paintings. This exhibit also will include a display by the Indianapolis Camera Club. A model house has been built and

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will be exhibited by W. Binder of the Indiana Ornamental Iron Company.

At Sander & Keeker’s HOUSE PAINT The Highest Quality Paint We Can Buy jj An Excep- VI for j! Suburban ; ■ Day PER mWmm GALLON In 5 Gallon Containers, $2.39 Per Gallon Sells Regularly for 53.50 Per Gallon This is the same high quality paint Sander & Recker decorators have been using for years

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The show will be open every week day from 11 a. m. until 10:30 p. m. and from 1 to 10:30 on Sunday.