Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 16, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 May 1934 — Page 11

MAY 30, 1934'

STEEL, TEXTILE WALKOUTS MAY AFFECT 400,000 Labor Leaders Set June 10 Date; President, NRA Heads Confer. By United Press WASHINGTON, May 30.—Threat of two great industrial strikes overhung administration recovery plans today with walkouts projected in both the steel and textile industries. President Roosevelt and NRA officials were studying the situation closely. The President planned to announce a decision today on the revised steel code which it was hoped might have some effect on plans for a walkout of 100 .OOG workers June 10. The textile strike would affect 300,000 workers. Code changes were agreed upon by the industry at a New York meeting yesterday. The present agreement expires May 31. It was expected that notice would be taken in the new code of criticism of present features made by the federal trade commission. Donald R. Richberg. administration member of the code authority, said changes had been proposed “in the public interest.” Rights Denied, Is Claim Both the trade commission and the Darrow review board attacked the steel code as fostering monopoly and oppressing small interests. They especially criticising the price basing point feature. Mr. Richberg said that only j minor changes would be expected; in labor provisions. The strike has j been ordered due to charges by the American Federation of Labor of denial of collective bargaining rights. Senator Robert F. Wagner (Dem., N. Y.), chairman of the national labor board, was taking actve part in efforts to avert the threatened walkout. He expressed hope difficulties could be settled without a strike. Labor leaders, however, saw in the denial by the Wilmington federal court of an injunction sought by the government against the Weir ton Steel Cos. to prevent volation of the NRA, encouragement for man- I agement in resisting labor demands. Parley on Friday The textile threat is an outgrowth of an NRA order curtailing cotton textile mill hours by 25 per cent for a ten-week period. Union leaders asserted they could tie up the industry unless the order was revoked. The curtailment order was issued to prevent a threatened market glut which it was feared would depress prices. Labor spokesmen claimed the reduced hours would nullify NRA benefits. Conferences on the situation were expected Friday. Thomas F. McMahon, president of the United Textile Workers, said no strike order would be issued pending a conference Friday with H. O. King and Leon Henderson, NRA executives.

BARBARA. ILL. GOES TO LONDON HOSPITAL Marital Troubles Blamed As Heiress Awaits Father. By United Press LONDON, May 30.—Barbara Hutton. five-and-ten cent store heiress and wife of Prince Alexis Mdivani, of the Georgian republic, was removed today to a nursing home for treatment. The nature of her illness was not disclosed. It was reported reliably, however, that the princess was suffering badly from overwrought nerves and decided to enter the nursing home pending the arrival of her father, Franklyn L. Hutton. Mr. Hutton is en route on the Bremen, presumably to aid his daughter in reported marital difficulties. nazisTimit exports IN RETALIATION MOVE Step Taken to Offset Effects of Jewish Boycott. Bn United Press BERLIN, May 30.—Fighting for economic and financial stability against a world boycot by Jews and their sympathizers. The Nazi government today imposed drastic restrictions on import trade. During June, the currency control office announced, importers may apply for only 10 per cent of the normal quota of foreign exchange to pay for imports. In the case of selfliquidating credits only 20 per cent of normal may be asked. Corresponding figures for April were 25 per cent and 50 per cent. FRENCH LEAN TOWARD DEBT TOKEN PAYMENT Stormy Debate Looms When Cabinet Votes on Issue. (Copyright, 1934. by United Press) PARIS, May 30.—A definite swing toward at least partial payment of France’s $55,000,000 June 15 war debt instalment to the United States was shown today. A stormy debate was expected when the cabinet considers the debt payment, sometime during the next week, and the outcome was uncertain. But a poll of influential cabinet ministers showed that support for some sort of payment, if any way could be found to avoid furnishing a precedent for full payment, was growing. CODE POLL UNDER~WAY City Real Estate Men Take Part in National Election. Real estate brokers of Indianapolis this week are co-operating with brokers all over the United States in a mail ballot to select eleven members of the national code. Ballots are being distributed locally through the Indianapolis Real Estate Board. Eight, members are to be selected by organized realtors affiliated with the National Association of Real Estate Boards, and three by independent non-members. Voting will close June 7 with count of the ballots by an election committee of three in Chicago. G. O. P. Clubs Seek Members Membership drives were announced last night by the Irvington and Warren Township Republican Clubs with the former aiming particularly at younger men and seeking to have every present member ' add anew member.

HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 11 To recut en--1 is the aJg'dlaLli- Illpe. 's‘c ul— < R *, raved Un f f -J |V 1 l A 'lv Muu.b aiL UL., 15 More minute, well-known bIeIHOIq VITMsbMVI I former justice? p| [EIpiSiELB^NIKT E j n 9 Home. fl MAGDA J.. Pj 20 Contests. 10 Frame for dry- AJ, , ( r T TB_jJ r H2l Man who tans ing clothes. |D[ LUrtjIU hides. 12 Cotton I machine. QQDj . 25 Each. 13 Wayside hotel. LJI iLi'jßkju l ‘ 14 Right (abbr.). Q E DSWO; I I |CjA as a cat. 16 Southeast 28 Native metals. 17 Company L E LPE P> v ;~r:n 29 Kind of silique, (abbr.). |T|CP!L !TME? | L~NiEjQ>'A>iD|.El 30 Russian ruler. 18 To exist. , ‘ 31 Eye tumor. 19 By way of. 43 courtesy A ERTICAL 37 Kettle. 21 2000 pounds. title. 1 Hawaiian bird. 39 Possesses. 22 Wrath. 44 Nominal value. 2 Ear of a kettle. 40 Fashion. 24 Most unim- 46 Paid publicity. 3 Cow-headed 42 A portant. 4S Tow boaL goddess. 44 Mexican dollar 26 Tumultuous _ * . ,45 Bed. disturbance. 50 Bronze - 4 oute f layer of 47 Dower 27 Pillars. 51 Italian river wood on property. 32 Poker stake. 52 To put on. furnituie. 49 Driving 33 Bed of a beast. 54 Those that 5 Secular. command. 34 Judges. tend log 6 Straw overcoat 50 Part of a 35 Neither. reels. 7 Sea eagle. circle.’ 36 Corded cloth. 56 Opposite of in. S Southeast. 51 To place. 3S To rebroadcast. 57, 5S He was U. 9He was pro- 53 Chaos. 39 Female fowl. S. fessor at 55 Type standard. 41 To weep. justice. Law School. 56 Either

TANARUS"" 2™" 3*" T"™ 7 6 | ■D r “ — 'l 2:111^11111^1:1: 3fa o 7 do AN 41 1 1 4a VsN 44 <5 “is? rw 1 ‘ ■;

Y. M, C. A. TO BACK LIFE SAVING GLASS James Clark, Well Known Instructor, in Charge. A class in life saving will be inaugurated by the Indianapolis Y. M. C. A. at 7:45 tomorrow night with James Clark, w’ell known life guard and coach of the Y. M. C. A. swimming team, as instructor. The class will meet nightly for a week and lead up to examination in both the American Red Cross

and Y. M. C. A. life saving tests. Mr. Clark also is director of life saving for the local chapter of the Red Cross. To be eligible for the course, applicants must be able to swim 440 yards. Tests will include prone pressure resuscitation, treading water, disrobing in deep water, surface diving, breaking holds, demonstration of

gall * -itjjPfir^V

Clark

four different carries for use in rescuing drowning persons, and an oral quiz in life saving. Donald Pittman, Russell Mclntire, Forest Barnes and H. L. Hinman wall assist Mr. Clark in the tests. SPRING FESTIVAL SET AT INDIANA CENTRAL James Eaton to Act as King at Mardi Gras Friday. James Eaton will act as King Rex in the Mardi Gras spring festival to be held in the gymnasium at Indiana Central college Friday night. Each class is to prepare a tableau. Harold Freshly is in charge of the seniors, Loretta Brown the juniors, Treva Miser the sophomores, and Jack Nice the freshmen. The festival is sponsored by the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A organizations of the campus Othella Dennis and Wayne Smith will have charge of arrangements

the FAST aniL DEPENDABLE Ik \ LOW COST tL %t ransportation Wv yry \\ H No cost for gas, oil, tires or repairs when Bft, ■ vl L UUilttlLll you travel by interurm\ ban. You can’t drive an automobile , for IV 2 C a mile. Shown here are the ' .BgU low cost fares to principal points. %-k Correspondingly low to other points. \\ \ COMPARE INDIANAPOLIS One Round ’6|\ Louisville $2.34 $3.51 WV Ft. Wayne 2.47 3.71 'WjA Terre Haute 1.44 2.16 Wry Richmond 1.3 7 2.06 INDIANA RAILROAD SYSTEM

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Orville D. Landrus. 1126 North Drexel avenue. Dodge sedan, 94-411 from Dearborn and Tenth streets. Leonard Young, R. R. 2, Box 358, Chevrolet coadh. 49-559 from Wabash and Bright streets. David Hockett, 1039 North Beville avenue, Chevrolet coach. 121-178 from 335 West Ninth street. Patrolman Andv Clary. 441 North Denny street, Chevrolet sedan, 99-704, from Pennsylvania and Washington streets.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Homer Souder, 2616 North Illinois street Ford dump truck, found on White River boulevard at the Pennsylvania railroad elevation. Richard T. Brown. Evansville. Chevrolet sedan, found at 935 North California street, stripped. Pete Kelleris. 536 Concord street, Ford coupe, found at Plainfield, completely stripped. ZINC ORE DISCOVERED Rich Arkansas - Sulphide Vein Is Being Developed. By United Press BERGMAN, Ark., May 30.—A rich deposit of zinc sulphide ore is being opened here. One car of the high grade ore already has been shipped.

Corns Lift Right Out! FREEZONE does it! Puts the corn to sleep—deadens all pain —and soon makes it so loose in its bed of flesh that it lifts right out! Hard corns or soft—all are quickly ended by FREEZONE. Calluses, too. Get a bottle at any drug store and walk in comfort! T REEZONE

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ALL JAPAN IN MOURNING FOR ADMIRAL TOGO Elaborate State Funeral Will Honor Empire’s Naval Hero. By United Press TOKIO, May 30.—A mourning nation today arranged for an elaborate and impressive state funeral—the tenth in seventy years —to honor the late Admiral Heichachiro Togo, the Japanese empire’s greatest naval hero. The funeral will be held June 5 in Hibiya Park, across the street from the Imperial Palace grounds and not far from the modest home where the 88-year-old admiral died Wednesday morning from a throat cancer. Emperor Hirohito, who gave the Japanese warrior the devotion of a son, readily consented to the plans of the cabinet for the state funeral. Admiral Ryokitsu Arima, the seafighter’s comrade in the historic battle in which the Japanese fleet led by Togo routed the Russians and won the Russo-Japanese war in 1905, was chosen chairman of the official funeral committee. Plans were made to close schools, cancel all amusements, and shut down industry and commerce on the day Japan pays tribute to its hero. Radio broadcasting stations readily canceled their programs for today and tomorrow and turned their microphones over to officials for broadcasts eulogizing the beloved admiral. Newspapers disregarded local and international news developments to fill their columns with the story of the life and the death of the man who most nearly approached the Japanese conception of the ideal citizen. School children, to whom he was a constant source of reverence and inspiration, held special programs in his honor. Civic bodies held services. The navy, from which he retired to a quiet life in a rose garden after many famous exploits, planned

Down the Straightaway at 101 miles an hour f° rt y° u would expect on a perfectly smooth Hitting the famous South Turn at its road action, the steadiness of the steer- - i at 93 miles an hour ing w heel and the car’s smooth, buoyant, ' Speeding around the Indianapolis gliding motion. On a curve, due to the ride y. : Motor Speedway with Wilbur Shaw stabilizer, the car does not sway or roll. , H at the wheel, AUBURN again shows Additional priceless comfort comes from •/ -i* I.J the world its dependability, its great the hydraulic brakes with their smooth, ___riding comtort and its terrific power responsive, velvety action that give you Coming out of the North Turn and speed. In this gruelling run equalized pressure on all four wheels. at 88 miles an hour AUBURN took the dangerous South Also, in addition to the standard gear, Turn at ninety-three miles an hour... comparable to that found in other cars, W rounded the famous North Turn at AUBURN gives you an Extra High gear that I) eighty-eight miles an hour and reached reduces engine revolutions, vibrations and and UP speed of one hundred and one noise •$ . saves wear and tear on moving GET AN auburn WITH * miles an hour on the Straightaway. parts an d saves fuel. And does this without iSrpfYVTSk - *few !#| Regardless of the roughness of this sacrificing the speed. Drive an AUBURN WB. I 1 famous race course, at no time was the yourself. You will find that you can do the 2 REAR-AXLE GEAR RATIOS car out Q f per f ect con t ro i and at all same thing that Wilbur Shaw did on the A out Payment Plan** Deferred times it gave the delightful riding com- Speedway track, with safety and comfort. 6-CYLINDER MODELS (119’ WHEELBASE) $695 TO $945; 8-CYLINDER MODELS (126* WHEELBASE) $945 TO $1225j SALON 12 MODELS $1395 TO $1545 Equipment other than standard, extra. Prices at the factory, subject to change without notice. AUBLTRN AUTOMOBILE COMPANY, AUBURN, INDIANA. Division of Cord Corporation

AUBURN CORD SALES, INC. Terre Haute, Ind. ANDERSON MOTOR SALES Lafayette, Ind. HOLMES MOTOR CO. Newcastle, Ind. • ALFRED SCHLOESSER Shelbyyille, Ind. • 9

ENTERS COLORADO RACE

" ' 'I/ '- . |

Miss Josephine Roche (above), who won fame by instituting a co-operative plan with union workers in her Rocky Mountain Fuel Company mines, by which employes profited and strikes ended, has announced her candidacy for Governor of Colorado. She is reported to have powerful Democratic backing.

to erect a shirne in his honor at the Yokosuka naval station. He will be canonized in accordance with the Shino rites soon after the funeral. The admiral’s sorrowing family considered a proposal that his ashes be scattered over- Tokio and his birthplace in Kagoshima. It was understood that the taciturn seaman left neither will, letter nor special word of any kind.

Help Kidneys If poorly functioning Kidneys and A Bladder make you suffer from Getw ting Up Nights. Nervousness, Rheumatic Pains, Stiffness, Burning, _ Smarting, Itching, or Acidity try the • guaranteed Doctor’s Prescription Cystex (Siss-tex). —Must fix you up or money Leystex> back. Only 75c at druggists.

THE SCHOTT AUTO CO. Auburn Distributor 2004 North Meridian St. TA. 3700 HOLMES MOTOR, INC. _ Anderson, Ind.

CUBA PAGT RUSHED FOR SENATE ACTION U. S. Renounces Intervention Right in Treaty. By United ! Press WASHINGTON, May 30.—The “good neighbor” policy of the United States to sister republics of the western hemisphere took on added significance today with senate consideration of the new United States-Cuban treaty. The treaty, renouncing American right of intervention in Cuba, was rushed to the senate immediately

etd to serve beer 1 ... . when you entertain in the afternoon, svhen guests assemble for bridge or dancing in the evening. Champagne Velvet Beer is doubly acceptable for, people are saying, Champagne Velvet Beer is potent —the modern taste demands that it be so—but its healthful invigoration is followed by no unpleasant reaction. Complete fermentation and lagenng make it the choice of those who know what the effect of good beer should be. It is a real lager beerl, * Oljtl 1 l l. 1.11. £#</Oty ih riAtMow O THB C* _ 0 " TERRS HAUTE BREWING COMPANY*** TIXXI MAUTI . INDIANA 55 So. Oriental St. B. & B. BOTTLERS, INC. Riley 2601

after signature and Chairman Key Pittman of the senate foreign relations committee hoped to speed it to quick ratification. The treaty was seen as another of the series of good-will gestures to Latin America which have been more frequent since the Pan-Amer-ican conference at Montevideo last lear. It came at a time when several manifestations of anti-Ameri-can feeling had been reported from Cuba. In the Air Weather conditions at 9 a. m.t Northeast wind, 8 miles an hour; barometric pressure, 29.74 at sea level; temperature, 78; general conditions, clear, smoky; celling, unlimited; visibility, five miles.

PAGE MR. CLYDE BEATTY Arm Hurt When Thrown From Lions Den, Woman Tells Police. Clyde Beatty, or that other lion tamer, Daniel, had nothing on Mrs. Jessie Blankenship, 36, of 464 Massachusetts avenue, who reported to police that her arm was injured last night when she was thrown out of the Lions Den, a beer parlor at 442 Massachusetts avenue. She was sent to city hospital.

HOLMES MOTOR SALES Muncie, Ind. SEYMOUR AUBURN CO. Seymour, Ind. SATTER’S SERVICE STATION Morgantown, Ind. IRELAND AUTO SALES JVfontlcello, Ind.

PAGE 11