Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 300, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 April 1934 — Page 4

PAGE 4

M'ADOO,GLASS PROVE HOSTILE TO ROOSEVELT Old Line Democrats Unable to Adjust Themselves to New Deal. BY THOM A L. STOKES TirnM Writer. WASHINGTON April 26 President Roosevelt today finds himself embarrassed by two prominent and Influential members of his own political household as he faces a major test with the big financial and business interests over the stock market regulation bill. Senator Carter Glass of Virginia, a frequently acid critic of the new deal, led the revolt in the senate banking committee which upset well-laid plans of the administration. Joining him in modifying the measure was Senator William Gibbs McAdoo. who has bolted the administration on several occasions, most notably when he voted to override Mr. Roosevelts veto of the veterans bill. President Roosevelt revealed his displeasure at their successful coup by demanding of his congressional leaders that they regain at least part of the losses even if it takes a knock-down-and-drag-out fight on the senate floor. - Defection of the two senators constitutes a peculiar threat to administration objectives, not only on this Mil but on others, because of the influence these veterans carry in party councils and because of their prestige as former treasury secretaries in the Wilson administration. “Old-Fashioned'’ Rcirmerats r . Whether consciously or not. they are regarded as having played into the hands of the enemy—at least by ahministraiton leaders—and tinic when Wall street is concentrating its assault on the administration program for stock market iltrulation. '•Each essentially is of the old order, particularly Senator Glass. They are apostles of what is sometimes called “old-fashioned Democracy,” by some seriously, by some in jest. They find it hard at their time in life—Mr. Glass is 74, Mr. McAdoo, 70—to accommodate themselves to the new order represented in the Roosevelt program. The Virginia senator is unyielding. occasionally bitter. His California colleague is more resilient and finds it easier to adjust himself. particularly where a poblem is highly colored with politics. This hf has demonstrated on several occasions. McAdoo More Adroit Senator Glass, with his snarling, caustic diatribes, has openly fought administration measures on the floor. Mr. McAdoo is more adroit. He makes very few speeches. But! a survey of his record will show that be voted for the soldier bonus, deserted tlie President on the veterans’ bill, supported the cocoanut oil tariff which President Roosevelt opposed, left the reservation on the stock market measure, and now is considering following California producers rather than the President on the reciprocal tarifff bill soon to come before the senate. • While in the common category of ttritics of some of the Roosevelt program, the two men are different m character and statecraft. Mr. Glass stands out as the father j of the federal reserve act, regarded j as one of the major achievements of ! Its kind in recent years, and has lived to see it first used as the instrument of the financial interests during Republican rule and now dominated by the Roosevelt policies. His advice has been valuable in shaping party policy for years—even now in the field of finance and br.nking, though he absolutely refused to follow the administrations monetary program. Virginia Independent The Virginia senator, indipendent, and with many enemies, has never, apparently, had presidential ambitions. Mr. McAdoo got a very tempting look into the promised land of presidential hopes in 1924 at Madison Square Garden, only to see it fad' away. Eight years later at Chicago he got his revenge upon Alfred E. Smith, who had blasted bis hopes at New York, and thereby played a great part in putting Roosevelt into the White House. The California senator is *he promoter type. He loves politics as a game. Like an old war-horse, he burned up at Chicago to save the day for Mr. Roosevelt, and accomplished the unusual by capturing a senatorial seat from California. President Roosevelt owes him much, as he owes Mr. Glass a good deal. The President has remembered him well in patronage to California; McAdoo men hold several key positions in Washington. Owes Debt to Both , Mr. McAdoo will carry with him Into history a few dramatic entrances and exits upon the political Mage—that bitter grip with Alfred E. Smith in Madison Square Garden when the hooded Ku-Klux ttlan was a power in politics, and that critical moment when he stood before the howling throngs at Chicago. smiling, and cast the die for Mr. Roosevelt against Mr. Smith, t His purely political career climaxes lus service as treasury secreSry and as director of railroads during the war, and his early Achievement, a daring young man from the south, as builder of the first tubes under the Hudson river. •Mr. Glass might have gone back into th# cabinet as treasury secretary In the Roosevelt administration. He tells in his biography m the congressional directory how he *as offered the portfolio and declined. But few doubt that he Would have retired even earlier than William H. Woodin. for he ould not have swallowed the Roosevelt monetary program, and be is not one who would have Acquiesced. He knew - what he was Aomg when he turned it down. He • free in the senate now to raise bis voice against the Roosevelt program fENT - MAKERS TO MEET Affecting Canvas Industry to Be Explained. j Explanation of the NRA code for she canvas indusrv were to be explained by W. H. Thorp of the Thorp Awning Shop, at a convention of the Indiana. Illinois and jfentucky Tent and Awning Association today. The convention will be | icid in the Lincoln.

CHILD HEALTH DAY PROGRAM ARRANGED

Left to Right—Grace Jones. Pete Fowler and Adu Hasenfratz

Child health day will be observed at 8 Tuesday night at the city hospital when one hundred children from the city recreation department classes, under the supervision of Mrs. Norma Koster, will entertain. Above are Grace Jones. Pete Fowler and Adu Hasenfratz, w r ho w'ill present a tap dance. Dinah,” in the Hallelujah chorus. Hostesses for the evening will be Mesdames Charles M. Meyers. Earl Wolf. John W. Carmack. Edward A. Brown. Merritt Woolf. J. S. Edwards, David Ross. Robert Elliott. Vivian Prochaska. George Kohlstaedt. Preston Rubush. William Hodgson and Walter Geisel and Miss Mary Sullivan. Girl Scouts will assist.

Indiana in Brief Lively Spots in the State’s Happenings Put Together ‘Short and Sweet/ 7?j/ Time Siiecial MUNCIE, April 26 —Preparations for capacity operation of the Standard Rock Wool Company plant at Yorktown, are being made bv Its new operators. H. M. Shirley and R. M. Allison, both of Muncie. They acquired the plant from C. F. Cox, Yorktown, jvho operated it for six years and who plans to retire. Mr. Shirley, who is president of the new company. Is a former district manager for the Borg-Warner Corporation, New York. Mr. Allison, vice-president, is service director for the Warner Gear Company. “With the building industry in general picking up. our outlook is more promising than it has been for some time.” according to Mr. Shirley. It is estimated that the company has sufficient raw' material in a quarry adjoining its plant to last for seventy-five years.

Razing Ice House Hil I imrs Sfici inl TIPTON. April 26.—A structure once the largest ice house on the Lake Erie Western Railroad is being razed at the yards of the Nickel Plate railroad a short distance west of here. Before ire manufacture became general, large amounts of Lake Erie ice were stored in the building and used during the hot season in refrigerating cars. n a u Fall: Still Fight H:i Inn ->< Sjirrinl ALEXANDRIA. April 26.—Police halted a fight between Peter Auler, 42. and Phil Auler. 33. brothers, after both fell k distance of ten feet from a bridge, landing on the ground. Officers said the brothers still were fighting when they arrived. The younger of the brothers was given treatment for cuts. u n u Veteran Engineer Dies Hit Timi x Siici-ifil NOBLESVILLE. April 26.—Funeral services were held yesterday for Bedford Russell. 86. who spent fifty-six years of his life as a locomotive engineer. a a u Beer Fight Lags Hit Tilin' <t S/irrirl NEWCASTLE. April 26.—Officials here are awaiting with interest the next move of the state excise department regarding the beer license of Joseph Roth. Following the slaying of James Poynter by Finis Reagan in the Roth beer dispensing place, the beer license was revoked. However, a decision in Henry circuit court here held that revocation was wrongful in that the beer regulation statute stipulates but two causes—failure to pay a license fee and violation of the beer act. State counsel said an appeal would be taken but permitted the deadline for such action to pass without filling a motion. MASONS~/SET_ MEETING Master Mason Degree to Ro Conferred on Class Saturday. Prospect lodge. Free and Accepted Masons, will confer the master mason degree on a class of candidates Saturday afternoon at 4. A banquet will be served at 6.30 with members of Monument lodge as guests. The visitors will confer the final sections of the degree after the dinner.

IHOW FAT I 0 ( IOSCPTOPCfI i6s

HEALTH VICTORS WILL BE NAMED Kindergarten Pupils to Be Honored for Proficiency in Rules. Culmination of health work ii the twenty-three Indianapolis free kindergartens will be reached dur-1 ing national Child Health Week.; beginning May 1. when children will be chosen for their proficiency in following health rules, the Marion county Medical Society announced. The society is sponsoring Child i Health Week celebration through its child welfare committee. Health charts have been kept by children during the kindergarten year and awards are made for each achievement. Formal presentation of awards will be made at the annual health roundup May 17 and 18 in Brookside park community house, according to Miss Grace Brown, superintendent of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Society. CITY ENGINEERS HEAR LECTURE ON PLANNING Consultant of State Board Addresses Group Today. Speaker at the luncheon-meeting of the Indianapolis Engineering Society today in the Board of Trade building will be Lawrence V. Sheridan, consultant to the Indiana State Planning Board. His subject will be “State Planning.”

Indianapolis Tomorrow

Exchange Club, luncheon. Washington. Optimist Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. Sahara Grotto, luncheon. Grotto ! Club. Harvard Club, luncheon, Lin- j coin. Reserve Officers’ Association, luncheon. Board of Trade. Delta Tau Delta, luncheon, Columbia Club. Phi Delta Theta .luncheon, Co- | lumbia Club. Civic Clubs Federation, 8 p. m., Washington. Royal Arcanum. 8 p. m., Washington. Indiana Canners’ Association, meeting, claypool.

FAT MARY LEARNS FROM SLENDER FRIEND HOW TO LOSE FAT You can eat your filL.yet grow thin Thanks to new scientific discoveries, a fat person can now lose a pound a day ... yet eat even more than now. Just Two Things To Do AH you do is take a teaspoonful of the new CouifrtSfJJADSaltsin a glass of water before breakfast, and maks two small changes in eating, as ex* plained in the Condensed JAD folder you get. The first day you lose 3 to 5 pounds moisture weight alone! Th system is cleaned of depleting poisons. Fat melts away, your youthful allur® returns, yet you need never know a hungry moment. Costs Only 2 i a Day Ask for the new economical Con* dfused JAD Salts at any drug store — and begin this quick method of reducing tomorrotc. The Condensed JAD Salts, remember, is urged as a poisonbanishing agent and to banish unhealthy bloating .. . not as a reducing one. ..

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

DIPLOMAS WILL BE AWARDED 30 New Augusta High School to Hold Commencement Monday Night. Thirty seniors will receive diplomas at the New Augusta high school commencement at 8 Monday night in the school gymnasium. The principal address will be delivered by Dr. E. E. Ramsey, head of the department of education at Indiana State Teachers college. Terre Haute. Music for the graduation ceremonies will be furnished by the Montani ensemble. The Rev. H. Grady Davis, pastor of the New Augusta Lutheran church, will speak to the seniors and their friends at the bacca-

ftrtlji'r W:l '' v - *'’• il ' jCunnp ftovm gntem&fe $9 Delivers the Outfit similar to the illustration, occasional chair, IW magazine basket, lamp, rug and your choice deposit will hold your selection for "later Three Piece Bedroom Suite Genuine Walnut Veneer $P H $6 j~) I ’ A three-room home outfit you will 1 ' '' S be proud to own, consisting of a MWrW * ' complete living room ensemble, a Large vanity, roomy chest and poster bed. similar walnut finish bedroom suite, and to the picture, beautifully finished in genuine w'al- beautiful dinette suite—buffet, exnut veneers. A suite built to give a lifetime of tension table and chairs, service and satisfaction. Gas Stoves and Ranges fllj A special selling of rebuilt gas stoves and ranges mßßiirxik”jlH —every stove greatly reduced for quick clearance. A few' models of exceptionally fine qualI ■ itv at slightly higher prices. A small deposit -yifcLn. ~ |1 | I will hold your selection for future delivery. Easy Terms B $24.75 9 13| I j Refrigerator (j J | j| 27-Inch Rugs, refrigerators, lino- Top Icing leums, etc., specially PFPPiriFP ATOP THROW RUGS meed for the house- KtrKIVjtKA ILJK cleaning season. We advise making an early se- q |- lection as we have but a ,7 j t limited quantity of some jy ~ items. Indiana 32-34. 36-South Illinois St.

laureate services at 8 Sunday night. The Dorothy Ryker trio will furnish the music. Alumni reunion will be teld Sat- : urday night. May 5. Members of this year's graduating class are: Buna Bain. Crystal Brandenburg, Thomas Bowden. Donald Connaroe. , Thelma Cranfill, Majorie Davis, j Marian Dobson, Donald Duncan, | Ruth Faulk, Evelyn Fink, Edward ja. Fults. Gertrude Golder, Harry ; Guion. Helen Hawkins, Charles Hightshue. Elizabeth Hollingsworth and Raymond Hollingsworth. Eleanor Kennedy, Ervin Kennedy, Laurel Kolp, Mary Lee Nichol. Laura Ann Power. Byron E. Repass. Susan Sheets. Leo Sparks. Mildred ; Stew art. Robert Tomlinson. Arden Ward. Emsley Wright and Laura Ann Garrison. If a huge cistern, large enough to I cover Trafalgar Square and as high : as Nelson's Column, were built as ! a water tank, London would empty 1 it twice daily.

Dead Doctor Heals Stomach Ailments A weird story is told of a wellknown specialist reaching from the grave to curb stomach suffering. Years ago this doctor created a prescription for stomach ulcers. ; acid stomach, gas pains, heartburn. ! indigestion, bloating, belching, and l other symptoms of excess acid. Then the good doctor died. But ! his name brought fame after death as one user told another. 54.169 grateful persons have writj ten telling of their recoveries. This ; ' prescription is now known to hundreds of thousands as the i Udga Treatment. All stomach sufferers may have a free sample by writing to Udga. Suite B. FootSchulze Bldg.. St. Paul. Minn. The , seven-day trial box of Udga Tablets 1 is sold under a money-back guarj antes of satisfaction by Hook's ' Drugs. Haag Drug. Company. Walgreen's and other good druggists.— ; Advertisement.

Friday Bargains A Bargain Sensation—- #£ SWAGGER yjgkSUITS IflpS J9B HH- iJL 'll Made to Retail at 510.85 Broken Sizes 14-44 jm You had better shop chrly for I fw these, because they're and educed j to less than half price for Neatly tailored | l vies, attractively full silk lined. Choice: Navy, Tan, Light Greys, Dark Greys and j y / Green. Sizes 14 to 44. ** Genuine | T j|SIL-0-ETTES £ r For Particular Women .j) I ■> | Fine rayon with cclanea? bras- J* ' m sirre top. French pantie, cuff^kjflPgp k , || and bloomer knee. Fine ravnn iSgttlgl I * | with “swamie” top, cuff and | r\ -'•a bloomer knee. 1 There Is No Substitute ||^s ! | dHb Full 2!4 Yards Long, Mew Spring mMmm Curtains ■iMWI Jl‘‘ , " n 'aun' , l e#|C W' t Lv%' I Ij Colors, Most * If ' t[v I ''-1 | Every Style Pr. I 3 IpJ/,' i 1 I’ ' New Cottage Sets—y If• \'jij Mew Pr scilla Ruffled Curtains New Bostonett Tailored Curtains yWiSD New Tailored French Marquisette Curtains 'TjNJ i^fW ! ew .^ a^ *" ace *^ eave ur * New Cushion Dot Ruffled CurNew French Marquisette Ruf* ~~*** mmm 1 ‘ ■' f!ed Curtains Sf;ir. Itiiscmont Save! 9x12-Foat Seamlass AXMINSTER RUGS Rk §4 m qc DOWN 4-Burner 5-Pc. Unfinished OIL STOVE BreakSast Sets $ 23' 95 , ... . ~ , Drop leaf table and 4With built-in lined oven, 1 , , k h • neatly trimmed in green smooth | mish> rea d y to enamel. paint. Star, ftuement -tar, E 24x43 Rag Rugs. Fringed Ends 22c Lamp Shades. In Assorted Styles 33c Bathroom Mirrors. 13x17. Fancy Frame 5Sc Boys’ and Girls’ Roller Skates 63c 14-In. Ball Bearing Solid Oak China Lawn Mower Closet *4 m s ls' 9S 4-Blade self adjusting Masslvc cMna clos6t wlll and sharpening steel match most new style oak blades. Will last for suites. years. Also solid oak r a r * star, Ba.rmen. Servers at only JpD.jD

APRIL 26,1934