Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 156, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 November 1934 — Page 4
PAGE 4
FRENCH CRISIS IS THREAT TO WORLD PEACE Domestic Disorder May Lead to Foreign Conflict, Is Belief. Bl’ WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scrip*. Hnaard Farrtta Editor WASHINGTON, Nov. 9—France faces her most serious political crisis air.ee the revolution which Ushered In the commune in 1871. Five weeks ago Premier Gaston Doumergue told the French people that they would either have to back I*l proposed reforms giving him more power, or be prepared for civil war. Today. Premier Doumergue #> out. With him fell lus cabinet of national union, by many regarded as ine only thing between the country r nd domestic upheaval and possible foreign conflict. In a nation-wide radio hook-up, Premier Doumergue warned the country in that same speech that 1 ranee s future Is at stake. Domestic disorder, he said, would inevitably be followed by foreign war. France's crisis began more than a >ear ago. It came to a head last February when more than a score of people were killed and hundreds ' ere wounded in sanguinary rioting nbout the chamber of deputies. t nrest Is Widespread The immediate cause of the riots was popular dissatisfaction over oflicial complacency following the Etavisky financial swindle and suicide. But unrest was widespread before that and this has since continued to grow. Powerful groups to the right and to the left are preaching that democracy in France is a failure and that the present parliamentary form of government is out of date. Both extremes, from Royalists and Fascists on the right, to Communists op the left want a dictatorship. Last February, when things became critical. President Lebrun was advised that only a coalition cabinet. composed of the strongest men the nation affords, could save the country. It was then that former President Doumergue consented to come out of retirement and head the all-star cast variously called the "salvation” cabinet, the “truce'’ cabinet or the cabinet of natinal uniono. Most of its members were former premiers. Political Truce Ended Premier Doumergue‘s fall means) the end of the political truce. Some | kind of peace may be patched up i now. but few expect it to last. Among the organized groups, all j more or less in opposition to the i government, are the Action Fran- j caise, or monarchists, about 100.000, strong: the Young Patriots, numbering approximately 240.000; the Solidarity Francaise. 200,000: Croix de Peu (Cross of Firei, with large membership; ex-service men. 4.000,000, and the Communists and Socialists. numerous and aggressive. Political leaders admit France is due for reforms. Cost of living is high. The depression must be combatted. Wage adjustments are in order. Legislation of all kinds requires speeding up. Today all Europe has its eye on France, the only democracy left on the continent. Nazi Germany Arming At the moment of his assassination at Marseilles, Foreign Minister Louis Barthou was uniting about France most of the nations of the old world in a network of peace. His death imperiled that plan. Now it is still further endangered oy unsettled political conditions in his country. Nazi Germany is arming, waiting for a chance to stage a come-back. In January comes the Saar plebiscite , to determine whether ;t returns to Germany. Observers fear a Nazi invasion or other, bloody complications m that sore-spot between Ger-
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BUTLER CLASSES NAME OFFICERS
. * Ik v V*W ' i* w .
Robert Cash
K # dflMt
Robert Sorenson
Butler university’s four class presidents for the 1934-35 school year are shown here. They are Karl Sutphin. 824 Eastern avenue, senior; Luther Martin, Hinton, W. Va., junior; Robert Cash. 5238 North New Jersey street, sophomore, and Robert Sorenson, 4322 Central avenue, freshman. They were elected at student council-supervised elections on the Fairview campus. All but Mr. Sutphin are members of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. He is a Delta Tau Delta.
CRAFTSMAN'S CLASS TO BE FORMED AT HERRON Anna Hasselman to Have Charge of New Course. Miss Anna Hasselman, of the John Herron art school, will conduct a craftsman class, consisting of five sessions beginning Nov. 14. for Girl Scouts. A part of the course will be given over to gallery talks on pottery, glass and textiles, and the other to actual handicraft work. Miss Louise Schulmeyer, Butler university, will conduct a training period for the attainment of athletic badge, beginning Nov. 24. Second of hostess badge classes given by Mrs. J. R. Farrell, BannerWhitehill home center director, will be held next Saturday. At the end of this course. Girl Scouts will complete their test by giving a tea for their mothers. JOBS FOUND FOR 2,652 BY EMPLOYMENT UNIT Vacancies Filled by State Service During October. The Indiana State Employment Service placed 2.652 persons in positions during October, Martin F. Carpenter, service director, announced today. Os the persons receiving positions 1,834 were men and 818 were women. The service received notice of 3.061 openings during the month in its fourteen offices operated throughout the state for the benefit of the unemployed. Offices are situated in Indianapolis, South Bend. Ft. Wayne. Terre Haute. Evansville, Lafayette, Kokomo. Marion, Anderson, Muncie, Richmond, Bloomington, New Albany and in Lake county. many and France. Which way Italy will turn in the new balance of European power is at stake. So is disarmament, and many other foreign problems. Events in France not only vitally affect her own future but that of Europe as well.
Karl Sutphin
Luther Martin
SAFETY URGED FORHONTERS Treat All Injuries at Once, Doctors Warn in Bulletin. November’s duck hunters and squirrel chasers, along with those who liice to take a potshot at a bunny, are warned in the current issue of Indiana State Medical Association's bulletin to treat all trivial injuries as soon as they occur. The bulletin asserts that accident prevention during the hunting season calls for “horse sense, a rare commodity, as may be seen from the frequent changing of seats in a boat, dragging a gun muzzle foremost over a fence or through the brush, or carrying loaded guns in improper position.” The bulletin warns against gunshot wounds and the possibility of lockjaw with the suggestion that wounds of this nature be considered for anti-tetanus serum treatment. Thorn, wire and bush scratches should be cleansed imediately to prevent infection. Hunters are urged to watch sprains that may prove of more serious nature than at first thought. Care in choice of drinking water and the handling of rabbits with gloves when dressing to prevent tularemia, or "rabbit fever,” also £re urged in the bulletin. W. C. T. U. WILL MEET Zerelda. Wallace Unit to Hear Talk on Alcohol Education. The Zerelda Wallace Women's Christian Temperance Union will meet at 10:30 Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Carrie Handy, 3118 Central avenue. Mrs. Roy Heishman will discuss alcoholic education and Mrs. Martha Gipe and Mrs. C. W. Ackman will lead the devotions. A luncheon and musical program will follow’ the morning meeting.'
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
URSCHEL CASE IS NOW NEARING FINALSOLUTION Fresh Ransom Note Trail Is Picked Up in Three Oregon Cities. By United Press PORTLAND. Ore., Nov. 9. A fresh trail of the S2O bank notes paid in the $250,000 ransom of Charles Urschel led federal investigators today to announce further arrests were imminent in one of the nation's outstanding kidnaping cases. With seventeen persons already captured as alleged* members of the gang which seized and held the Oklahoma City millionaire in July last year, the department of justice agents expect to clean up the case through new disclosures uncovered in three Oregon cities. Further developments may depend on the recovery of Alvin H. Scott, suspect injured in an automobile accident and now in serious condition in a hospital at Roseburg, Ore. Agents claimed to have found $1,360 of the ransom money in his possession and to have located an additional 51,460 hidden in a house he occupied at Medford. In the Medford home the investigators found a secret room ideally suited for holding a victim for ransom. The room had a specially constructed ventilating system and an electric heater. It was sound proof. The investigators stood in the room and shouted for help. No one on the outside could hear their cries. The agents learned that the dwelling had been leased last June by Miss Margaret Hurtienne, Scott’s housekeeper and a relative of Clara Feldman. Mrs. Feldman represented herself at the Urschel trial as the wife of Albert Bates, one of the kidnap gang. She was reported to have been in Portland recently. | Bates now is serving a life term in prison, along with George (Machine ! Gun) Kelley and Harvey Bailey,
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ASSUMPTION CHURCH TO SPONSOR DINNER Annual Thanksgiving Program Scheduled for Sunday. The annual Thanksgiving dinner of the Roman Catholic Church of the Assumption will be given at 11:30 Supday at Assumption hall. 1105 BLaPie avenue. Cards and bingo will be played during the afternoon until 5 when a chicken supper will be served. Mrs. Emile Claus is arrangemerft committee chairman. The Rev. Joseph Weber, church pastor. has invited the general public to take part in the dinner and entertainment. Missionary's Mother 111 Dr. James Crain, member of the temperance board of the United Missionary Society, was called to Houston. Tex., yesterday because of the critical illness of his mother. named as the leaders of the kidnaping. Robles Probe Progresses liy Cmted Press PHOENIX.. Ariz., Nov. 9.—Activity by department of justice agents today created reports of impending developments in the investigation of the kidnaping earlier this year of 6-year-old June Robles, daughter of a Tucson merchant. Agent# headed by Joseph E. P Dunn of Los Angeles conferred with police officials early today. Their movements revived rumors they were on the trail of two suspects, whose arrest has been expected since Oscar H. (Buster) Robson, dude rancher, was taken into custody on extortion charges. To prevent Robson from obtaining his release on bail, United States Commissioner Daniel Hurley increased his bond from $50,000 to SIOO,OOO. Commissioner Hurley acted after being informed $50,000 had been raised. Robson, a friend since college days of June’s father, Fernando Robles, is charged with sending him a $15,000 ransom note. The suspect denies the charge. He is held in the county iail here pending a hearing Nov. 22. His estranged wife, Margaret, protesting his arrest, announced she would "fight by his side.” She returned here from Los Angeles where she had been working since their estrangement.
CUTTING'S LEAD SEEMS SAFE IN SENATEBATTLE New Mexico Progressive’s Margin 867 With Few Districts Missing. By United Press ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.. Nov. 9 Bronson Cutting, progressive Republican. apparently has retained his seat in the United States senate in the face of a Democratic landslide in Tuesday's election. Returns from all but forty-four of New Mexico's 772 precincts gave Cutting a lead of 867 votes over Representative Dennis Chavez, his Democratic opponent. Approximately 1.000 absentee ballots were to be counted. Seven hundred twenty-eight precincts gave Cutting 71.488 and Chavez 70.621. Late returns decreased somewhat Mr. Cutting's lead over the youthful Mr. Chavez, choice of the national administration, but his lead seemed safe in view of the fact that several counties yet to complete their reports were Cutting strongholds. Mr. Cutting supported President Roosevelt in 1932. tut was erratic in his votes for and against New Deal measures during the last congress. COUNTY W. C. T. U. TO HOLD TEA ON NOV. 20 Manchester College Professor to Head Program. The Marion County Woman's Christian Temperance Union will held a President's day tea Tuesday Nov. 20, at the Banner-Whitehill auditorium. Dr. J. Raymond Sehutz, Manchester college, will speak on "Radical Poisons and Their Effect on Human Heredity,” and a musical program will be given. Mrs. L. E. Schultz, president, and the county officers will be assisted by the Zerelda Wallace union of which Mrs. Fred Masters is presi dent. Mrs. Masters has announced that reservations for the tea must be made by Nov. 19.
WEIGHT GAINS MADE BY SCOUT CAMPERS 1.94 Pound Average Increase of City Youths Weight gains averaging 104 pounds were made by more than one-half of the 886 boys who attended the various camping periods at the Boy Scout reservation last summer. . Dr. John W. Carmack, health and safety committee chairman of the Indianapolis and Central Boy Scout Council, announced today. Fifty-eight per cent of the campers gained weight. Dr. Carmack said, while 29 per cent lost weight and 13 per cent remained stationary. Dr. Carmack attributed the good health of the campers to the fine management of the mess department and the swimming pool.
YOUR STOMACH AT WORK • About Digestion j I here are<*-/ nothings SOLD FOR ACID INDIGESTION, SOME CONTAINING 20 OR MORE MEDICINAL INGREDIENTS .YET IMMEDIATE RELIEF CAN BE HAD FROM A LITTLE a TRIANGULAR TABLET <3 CARRIED IN THE POCKET AND MUNCHED (§REAT COMFORT IN SMALL SPACE ! THIS IS \ EXACT SIZE OF THE TABLE T x THAT NEUTRALIZES ACID IN THE STOMACH. '
Yes, it’s curious what some people do when they have a pain in the stomach, a little gas, or attack of “indigestion!” They take all sort‘d of remedies with high-sounding names. They clutter home and office with bottles and spoons, and all sorts of preparations. When one little thing they could tuck in a pocket might have straightened them out in a hurry! Years ago, a man named Pape discovered a simple way to relieve distress due to acid stomach. Dia-
NOV. 9, 1934
U. S. AGENTS PRESS DIUIHGEB Jill QUIZ Report Due in Two Weeks, Cummings Says. By Times Special WASHINGTON. Nov. 9—Attor-ney-General Homer Cummings today asserted that he expects • complete report from justice department investigators handling the Dillinger jail break case “within the next two weeks.” Ace agent Melvin Purvis of the Chicago regional office now Ls in charge of the probe, Mr. Cummings said.
pepsin, in tablets that are just eaten like candy, has brought happiness to thousands who thought they had a “weak stomach.” If you have distress after meals, any acid discomfort at all. your stomach is probably slow in emptying. If you relieve this condition with Pape’s Diapepsin, you can eat with more enjoyment! Try it! Carry the pocket tin and take a tablet or two after meals until your digestion is “clicking” and ali that sourness is gone. Pape’s Diapepsin; remember the name.
