Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 303, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1934 — Page 14
PAGE 14
WORLD-WIDE UNREST GREETS MAY DAY EVE Bloodshed Feared in Cuba, Spain, Austria: French Mobs Active. R, I'nifrd Press Fiots police raids and throats of **nkes fhrouch-out the world hera ;dd todav the eve of May day. Authorities awaited demonstrations of political extremists. Police. special semi-military units and yoldiers in many cities patrolled the streets. heavily armed. I r.ince. Spam. Austria and Cuba threatened to be the chief trouble ( r niers. Blood hed was expected in all fcur countries. Serious rioting occurred last night nf Mantes, Franc'*. Spanish left v !.? elements threatened a fortyr ,r hour general strike In Austi i ard Cuba, pclice rounded up Sr. ! sts and others. C' -br I'-ns in Russia will be off< Mav day is the gieat Comm:t;: * holiday, and all o\er Soviet I’ - there will be gala observSulV'^S. Mobs Seize French Town ft "In ilfH I’rtaa PARIS. Apriy 30 —Serious rioting si" today the approach of May Day. The cabinet called War Minister Philippic Petain into council to plan defense of government buidings. Enraged at the narrow defeat by n political maneuver, of a candidate representing the merged left wing p •. s including Socialists and C mn unists, mobs held control of t town of Mantes for five hours tin i: police reinforcements arrived h m Paris, twenty-five miles away. £ venteen thousand p>olice were r;.: ed to constant duty here in p t paration for mass demonstrations by Socialists and Communists. In the suburbs, unobtrusively crowded into barracks, were mobile guards in thousands, ready to speed to the center of the capital if the May Day demonstrators attempted to move on government buildings. Vienna Socialists Active ftf< i a. ’i I’rian ViENNA, April 30. Bombs and anon meus tiireat of blocdy rioting morrow, gave notice today that Socialists still were fighting. Poire spent the entire week end rounding up left wing elements. A thousand Socialists were held at I. z alone, where Chancellor Engf lb t Dollfuss addressed peasants and civil servants yesterday. A to.llb exploded near Franz Ham-nrr.-tcin, director of public security for upper Austria. Two gangs were caught placing bombs and three were found to be making bombs. FOOD SCIENTIST WILL OPEN LECTURE SERIES Dr. Stanford Kingsley Claunch, to Talk at Athenaeum. Pr. Stanford Kingsley Claunch. feed scientist and psychologist, will r '■n a series of lectures in the Athrrarum's auditorium at 8:15 tori -rh . The lectures will extend tlv ?■ gh May 4. The series is conducted under the a rep es of the American Health Foundation. Washington, D. C.. of which Dr. Claunch is first vicepresident. There is no admission charge to the lectures.
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Learn Botanical Names of Plants and Habits, Home Gardener Advised
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Background, or screen, planting of trees and shrubs. At left, dull and monotonous; at right, colorful and interesting.
Thorough Knowledge Reduces Possibility of Failure. This is the third of a series of articles b? Donald Gray, famous landscape consultant, on how to make a beautiful garden of your back vard. BY DONALD GRAY N'EA Service Consultant A GARDENER uses plants to create a picture just as an architect uses stone and lumber to make a house. The architect knows how high and wide his house must be and, when he finishes the building, the picture is complete. It is quite different with the gardener. He must know first the habits of the plants that he uses, how they will grow and what spaces they will require. Then he
CITY MAN SLAIN IN PISTOL DRILL Four of Party Held After Target Practice Ends in Fatality. Jacob Eckert. 67. of 1006 Pruitt street, was killed by a shot from a pistol with which he and several other men practiced shooting during a drinking party at nis home late yesterday. Police arrested David Bigsby, 25, \jegro. 1069 West Twenty-third street, who was charged with the shooting. Others held for questioning in connection with the fatal shooting were Mr. Eckert's son Lindsey of the same address; his grandson, Paul Eckert, 322 Millrace street, and Arthur Rhoades, 1216 Herbert street. All were guests at a drinking party at the slain man's home, according to the police. Paul Eckert told the police that Bigsby visited the house and displayed a revolver with which his grandfather and some of the guests shot at a tin can floating in Fall creek near the house. As he left the yard to enter the house, he said, he heard his grandfather cry, “you have shot me.” He returned to the yard and found the elderly man shot through the chest. Police, called to the scene, placed When Poisons Clog Kidneys and Irritate Bladder just” do" this Go to your druggist today and get this grand diuretic and stimulant — ask for Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules and start at once to flush kidneys of waste matter saturated with acids and poisons. That's the way to bring about healthy kidney activity and stop that bladder irritation, which often causes irregular and painful elimination as well as restless nights. Remember, the kidneys often need flushing as well as the bowels, and some symptoms of kidney weakness are: Getting up once or twice during the night—puffy eyes—cramps in leg—backache and moist palms. Rut he sttre and get GOLl> MEDAL Haarlem Oil (’apsides—the original and genuine—the price is small |35 cents), the good results will fulfill your, expectations.— Advertisement.
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buys little sprouts, puts them in the ground and waits years to see the picture appear. There may be many disappointments before he achieves results. Pests come along and kill a part of a plant, or the plant may refuse to live, and at best there is always some care to be given a living plant. These difficulties make gardening a chance of fortune, but when happy results are obtained, then it is a real achievement. u a Gardeners do not mind the griefs, but it is hopeless if, after caring for a plant for years, you discover finally that the plant has turned out be something entirely different from what you had expected. This is why you must know, at the time a plant goes into the ground, just what that plant ulti-
Bigsby and the others under arrest. All of those held were charged with vagrancy pending further investigation. WABASH ASKS STAMP TO MARK CENTENNIAL Hoosier Town, 100 Years Old, First to Have Electric Lights. By Timrs Special WASHINGTON. April 30.—Citizens of Wabash, Ind., want a stamp issued this year to honor the onehundredth anniversary of the town's founding and also to commemorate the fact that it was the first city in the world to have electric lights. In letters to Senators Frederick VanNuys and Arthur R. Robinson, they suggest that the postal department issue a stamp bearing a picture of the first arc light, which shone from the courthouse dome. The senators have presented the request to the postal department where James A. Farley, postmastergeneral, casts a cold eye upon anything calling for expenditures while he is trying to balance the department budget and live within its income. Little hope for the issue is held.
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mately will turn into, and that is also the reason w*hy you should learn the botanical names of plants instead of the common ones. These common names often apply to different plants in different sections, while the botanical names are the same the world over. Learn the real names of plants and follow a few rules in planting before planting. a a tt THREE are two methods of background planting. There is the layout that is stiff and monotonous, and there is the garden that presents a more interesting and pleasing appearance. To produce the interesting type of background, follow these rules: If the space is limited, choese shrubs that grow narrow. Avoid planting a row of the same kind —variation helps prevent monotony, but do not have one plant of one kind and one of another. Plant two, three or five together to get masses. To get an illusion of distance, choose plants with fine foliage, light green or preferably gray green in color. To create a frame for a particular view or as an accent, use a plant growing in a formal shape and one that has dark green foliage. Keep such plants at the sides of a garden, not in the center of the view. Learn the habits of plants and htne plant them where they will develop into the picture you want. NEXT—House foundation planting.
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MAIL AWARDS AWAIT REPORT BY AIREXPERT Technical Adviser Approves Equipment of Former Operators. By Scrippt-Hotcard Aetespaper Alliance WASHINGTON, April 30.—Technical reports, approving the equipment of some and postponing decisions on other bidders for temporary air mail contracts, were ready today in the United States aeronautics bureau as the house postal committee met to consider the senate's McKellar-Black bill. The reports were to be sent to the postoffice department by Director Eugene Vidal of the commerce department bureau, who declined to give names, but said they approved the equipment of all former air mail operators and asked further time to check some of the new low bidders “We expect to submit final reports on all the companies involved in the first bids this week," he said. Harllee Branch, second assistant postmaster-general, in charge of air mail operations, said his legal staff still was examining the bids of former operators to see if they reorganized to conform with specifications. “I am hopeful of making awards this week,” he said. The question before the postal committee is w r hether to accept the provisions of the McKellar-Black bill, passed Saturday in the senate, or to stick by the measure drafted by its chairman, Representative James M. ; Mead (Dem., N. Y.). If the senate bill is accepted and passed in its present form by the house some time would be saved by avoiding a row in conference. The chief points of difference between the Mead bill and the senate bill involve treatment of former
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IN ' • The Indianapolis Times (A Scripps-Hoivard Newspaper)
operators in future bidding; rates of mail pay. transfer of control to the I. C. C. and size and makeup of the special commission to study the aviation situation. The house bill would permit former to obtain air mail contracts immediately, but allows them six months to reorganize. The senate bill would not permit former operators to obtain immediate contracts, but would allow them six months to divorce themselves of any officers or directors who had participated in the alleged “collusive’ conference in May, 1930 when former Postmaster-General Walter F Brown is charged with fraudulently dividing up the air mail map. Sons of Veterans to Meet Sons of Union Veterans will meet tomorrow in the G. A. R. hall. William A. Hough will speak and Mrs. Roy Rondebush will direct the musical program.
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INDIANA ARTISTS CLUB WILL ELECT OFFICERS Organization to Meet Friday at Spink-Arms. Officers of the Indiana Artists' Club will be elected Friday night at
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