Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 September 1938 — Page 8
PAGE 8
HITLER BLAMES CZECHS FOR AIR RAGE IN EUROPE
Crisis Is Tumor Poisoning Continent and Must End. He Says.
19 U P).—
d today that he
LONDON olf Hitle:
Sept reveal
ed to end
of the Lon-| ho has obtained nber of interviews with Herr} and Premier Mussolini in past regarded as close to leaders | bie has got to be} r all and ended] old Mr. Price Inj Berchtes- | ia. “It Is a tumor} ¢ whole European or-| it were allowed to
until they} a fatal collapse. assured France and of his friendship. Hej he Czech people and the] Czech nation bitterly. Speaking of} the Czech warrant charging Korad| . leader of the Sudeten Gertreason, Herr Hitler said was arrested, “I my- |
rejations
nlein II become the leader of the n Germans and I should | :
see how long after that, s would be able to issue decrees. | issue a warrant for}
1¢ wont
© ‘What Could I Do’ |
ile \ oppression of erman minority keeps Europe I have to be ready may come —what Germany and for it were not for this iny tyranny over a few
ith
stop and it
of this heterogenrepublic after
10 Sei
ation hoslovakia
3 lunacy
1d the W
Moths View Night Lite on Tripot Doom
Indianapolis was invaded over the week-end by several million yellow moths which came from South America in one of the silliest excursions on record. Frank Wallace, State entomologist, said they were so thick downtown Saturday night that they covered lamp posts in some sections. They visit only brightly lighted areas which is an ancient moth weakness, and gets them behind the eight ball for their curosity Mr. Wallace said the first generation of moths was born in South America, flew across the Gulf of Mexico and settiled down, early this summer, to being public enemies in the cotton fields where they do damage. Then another generation was born and it flew 100 miles or so farther north. They kent doing that all summer. each generation fiyving farther and farther north and thereby crossing themselves up because they had no business north The generation that stopped here will fiv on and on, reaching a point aout 100 miles north of the Canadian border where they will die of hunger, cold. exhaustion and disappointment, Mr. Wallace indicated. The oddest thing about the whole enterprise, Mr. Wallace said, is that they dont fly. They probably soar to great heights and are carried by air currents. They don't harm anything in this region but ripe fruit.
chiall | 3tre shall ups.
more { loot
an GOR than $25 th Liese. 27.
ator on the Illinois St
WEEK-END BANDITRY NETS TOTAL OF $480
Police today investigated two holdseveral burglaries and a series f other robberies in which thieves were reported to have escaped with han $480 in money and other
over the week-end. “passenger” up and robbed him of according to Robert of 1227
-e i
line.
bandit early today more
Park Ave. an oper-
Mack Skinner, 52, of 420 E. WalSt., reported that while walking Vermont St
nik t. 200 block eariy today he was attacked by three Ne-
i groes who dragged him into a yard
all oppress X ninority peoples ‘All This Is Madness’ Hitler spoke of France's de3 from Gernewly constructed against invasion intimating hat had a mind to, could
treaty defend
n of
nvasion
aint
to madness,” he conr nobody in Germany ttacking France . . . nor erman want war with to Prime Minister) s efforts to end the iv, he said he was conChamberlain's sincer-
ng thesis that the 13 have been “poisoning the European organization” for
hic an
calculate what it has f Europe in that istence of Czechv of Soviet Rusthe very
where thev took his watch, glasses ang shoes, valued at $38 Police arrested a 29-vear-old man on a charge of vagrancy after receiving a call late yesterday that a man was seen pilfering automobiles parked near Washington and Pennsvivania Sts.
REPORT SOVIET INVASION
HARBIN, Manchukuo, Sept. 19 (U. P) —Japanese souices reported
today mounted on Sunday near Manchuli. troops fired on them and were behave Killed one Russian. Manchukuo
lived The others protested to the
any at foread me t German air foree . led France and! se their own air the German air| because of thel calling in Czech-| { we failed to settle the Field Marshal Goering 1 be asking me to order again, and then the i French would redouble the mad race would con id that the French romising to stand 1ad contradicted TIitOIY to vote
Reicn after be-
of Nations cond War, though political, and nce for France
xT
RL SR (Zh and att!
HARTMANN'S
Bought the Hoosier Furniture Co. STOCK and ACCOUNTS
THE FAMOUS NATIONALLY KNOWN
BARTON WASHER
TWIN TUBS
With Cover
s445°
Slicht Charge
for Terms
Ask Any Barton Owner
to retreatad. Soviet consulate.
that a detachment of Soviet guards entered Manchukuo Manchu
BOARD STUDIES RELIEF BUDGET IN CENTER TWP.
Proposed Expenditures Call For Tax Rate Increase 0f 20 Cents.
i
{ | | | A review of Center Township's $1677.310 proposed relief expendi- | tures for 1939 was started this aft‘ernoon by the Marion County Tax | Adjustment Board | The proposed relief budget calls |for a tax rate of 51 cents. 20 cents (higher than this year. The Board also will complete investigation of County departmental budgets today. Tomorrow the Board will begin investigation of the Civil City's | $7T973.264 budget. { Chairman Silas Carr, a {Councilman, said the Civil budget would be { probed.” | The Adjustment Board will make {no changes until all budgets have {been reviewed and department {heads interviewed { Meanwhile, Dana Webster, Citiizens’ Taxpavers' Protest Committee of Marion County president, said that about 25.000 City and County |taxpayers already have signed protests against a tax rise and that ithe protests are on file with the | Adjustment Board. i
FUNERAL HELD FOR | THOMAS WOLFE
ASHEVILLE, N. C,
City City “thoroughly
Sept. 19 (U.
P.).—Simple funeral services were |
theld here yesterday for Thomas Wolfe, North Carolina author who once embittered his home town with his bold descriptions in “Look Homeward, Angel,” but who later was acclaimed by the people about whom he wrote. His body was buried in the familv plot at Riverside Cemetery. The church was crowded with nearly 1500 persons. Among those attending were Clifford Odets, New York playwright and honorary pallbearer; Phillips Russel, noted biographer of Chapel Hill. N. C.; J. M. Roberts of the University of North Carolina: Maxwell Perkins, vice president of Seribners, which published much of Mr. Wolfe's works
DAVEY REPEATS DARE ON OHIO PENSIONS
WASHINGTON, Sept. 19 (U. P) —Governor Davey of Ohio charged today that Social Security Board Chairman Arthur J Altmeyver's threat to halt old-age pension payments in his state was “political | bluff.” | Governor Davey's charges were included in a letter to Mr. Altmeyer made public here through attaches of the Governor's office. In it he declined an invitation by the Social Security Board to attend a hearing on charges of irregularities in the Ohio pension setup and repeated a previous “dare” to Mr. Altmeyer to i halt pension payments,
For refreshing mildness...
Democrats
G. O. P. Leaders See Significance in Praise Bestowed by McCormick.
| (Continued from Page One)
the imminence of war in Europe as a new threat to the Constitution! and warned that the “heritage of
1777 may be lost to us forever” if the supervision of Thomas Hutson, {of three
the people allowed themselves to be overcome by war hysteria. Calling on the assembly to “con-| tinue to resist the attack on the] Constitution,” the publisher described the powers granted President by the Constitution as] greater than those exercised by any one man in any other constitutional government. | “As a leader of the military forces | in war, he is supreme,” Col. Mc-!| Cormick said. “As a leader in peace] (the checks upon his freedom of ac-| tion are only those which prudence’ demands.”
Powers of President
| “He cannot enact laws, he can‘not override the courts. He cannot! | destroy the power of the States nor deprive the people of their liberties. | He cannot suspend the Constitution.
| “Until 1933. no President sought to jevade by subterfuge these limitations on his power, and though we {have had many economic crises of |great severity, no President until ‘the present one ever used them as an excuse for demanding more ipower than the Constitution granted him.” Mr, Capehart called for a return to the “American system,” and urged a government that would ‘take the| farmer, the laboring and the busi-| nessman by the hand and say, What ican I do to help all of you.”
Claims People Regimented
| He charged that conditions today | exist because the government spending its time ‘“regimenting the lives of our people” instead of encouraging businessmen and trying | to solve unemployment. ! “Isn't it perfectly clear to all that the present Administration is doing nothing and in many cases is ab- | solutely destroying the principles! upon which private employment and | private enterprises are founded?" | he asked. Declaring that two wars had been fought to preserve liberty, the Buffalo industrialist said that the country had reached the third great! stage in its history “wherein our people are faced with the possibility | of losing that which has made them and America the greatest nation in| the world.” |
{
is |
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Capehart Added to List - Of Dark Horses for 1940;
Woo Labor
Hutson Named to Direct Series of Meetings in Every County.
Arrangements were being completed today by the Democratic State Committee for New Deal babor meetings in every county under
State Labor Commissioner and di- | rector of the Committee's Bureau. Campaign
|
activities
where Third Congressional District | Young Democrats are to hold al rally. Governor Townsend, U. S. Senator VanNuys and George Beamer, Democratic nominee for
Congress from that district, are to speak at the rally at 8 p. m. in the Columbia Athletic Club. State Committee members are to hold an organization meeting with local] party workers in the afternoon. Mrs. Sanford K. Trippett, Democratic State vice chairman, has announced a women’s speaking campaign. Mrs. Trippett is to speak at afternoon meetings in Plymouth, Saturday, Spencer, Sept. 29, and Crawfordsville, Sept. 30. Mrs. Emory Scholl is to speak at a night meeting at Logansport Sept. 27. Other night women's meetings are to be held at Linden (Montgomery County), Wednesday: Rushville, Friday, and Franklin, Sept. 29. Mrs. Olive Belden Lewis is to speak at the first meeting and Mrs. Hettie Duncan at the others. Prominent labor leaders are to be scheduled for speeches at the labor | meetings, Mr. Hutson said. Mr. Hut- | son's assistants in the Committee's | Labor Bureau are Herman Brunka, former Marion Central Labor Union | president, and Arthur Pierson, | fomer Muncie Central Labor Union president.
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LEGION PARLEY
MAY ASK STRICT ANTIWAR STAND
Chadwick, Seattle Lawyer, Wins Commandership Without Contest.
(Continued from Page One)
convention opened. The withdrawal rivals left Stephen F. Chadwick, Seattle lawyer, unopposed.
Warner, Toledo,
Chicago was considered certain to win next year's convention.
Bovd Stutler, New York, manag-
Magazine, predicted that the Legion
N.|would reaffirm its neutrality stand] {taken at the Cleveland, O., conven-
tion two years ago. Senator David I. Walsh, Senate Naval Affairs Committee chairman, in an interview before making the keynote address at the opening convention general session today, advocated complete American -neutrality but with a change in the existing Neutrality Law. He proposed that the discretionary powers invested in the President be revoked.
“I feel,” he said, “that we should have more strict legislation without the power being left to the executive department to unintentionally take a course that might involve us in war. “If we are entangled in a war, it will be entirely our own fault.” Accepting the possibility of war despite the Neutrality Law, Senator
( Mothers Standby in Treating \
Walsh said the country’s greatest | asset is in a Navy “of such strength
attack us. He announced that the next ses- | sion of Congress will be aksed to] appropriate $1,905,000 for strength-|
ening Pacific Coast naval defenses, |
from San Diego. to Alaska.
Assistant Secretary of War Louis | . Johnson, representing the War| Department in the absence of Secretary Harry H. Woodring, praised | the Legion as a force for peace but|
declared “the best way to maintain |®
peace is a strong national defense.” Today's session was devoted chiefly to getting under way the preliminary business of the five-day | meeting. Highlights were Senator | Walsh's address and the presenta-
{tion of a medal to Mayor Fiorello| |H. La Guardia of New York City|
'which was host to the Legion in
Labor Those who drqpped out were Milo J. 1937, 0O., Raymond J.| tomorrow | Kelly, Detroit, and Lynn U. Stam- | the night are to center at South Bend. baugh, Fargo, N. D.
TAX EXEMPTIONS TOTALED WASHINGTON, Sept. 19 (U. P.). —The Treasury disclosed today that
|there was outstanding on June 30, 11937, a gross volume of $65,648,000,000 |
ling editor of the American Legion in Wholly or partially tax-exempt
|Government securities. The an-| (nouncement was made as the Ad-| recom- | mend to the next session of, Con-| gress the removal of tax-exempt {privileges from future issues of Gov- | jernment securities. i
{ministration prepared to
|
MONDAY, SEPT. 19, 1938
COOGAN TO AID CHILDREN HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 19 (U. P.).
‘and efficiency, that no one will dare; —Jackie Coogan went to work for
a Hollywood talent studio today as
an instructor of children who hoped to obtain jobs in the movies.
BARGAIN PERMANENTS Croauignole Steam Oil Permanent complete with Hair r i m. Shampoo, Set and Ringlet Roberts Beauty Shop 528 Mass. Ave,
O-HUM! One should brush their teeth regularly: but listen, if you have tartar or cavity discolorations you can brush till the cows come home and never faze it—"and shure the Dintists have got vou there.”’ Too bad—O-hum. v
Over 39 Years Here
Dr. EITELJORG
DENTIST
8!4 E. Washington St.
Between Meridian St. and Marott’s Shoe Store
John W. Ransom Declares He Has New Strength, His Food Tastes Better And He Feels Better Than He Has in Years.
“en COLDS |
HN If your children keep || coming down with nasty little colds all winter, use Vicks VapoRub these three simple ways.
For relieving discomforts of chest colds and night coughs, rub |! VapoRub on throat, chest and back at bedtime. VapoRub's poul-
Retonga brought ten years of suffering to a happy ending for Mr. John W. Ransom, 716 Dorman St., who has been a resident of Indianapolis for twenty-five years and is well known throughout the city. He declares the famous medicine seemed to take hold of the very roots of his troubles and remove them one by one. In giving the details of his ex- | perience, Mr. Ransom said:
tice-vapor action relieves local congestion—eases muscular soreness or tightness—helps the youngster relax into restful sleep.
For coughing and irritated throat caused by colds, put VapoRub on the child's tongue. It melts, trickles slowly down--bathes the throat with soothing medication. Then massage VapoRub on throat and chest.
For “sniffles” and misery of head colds, melt a spoonful of VapoRub in a bowl of boiling water. Have the child breathe in the steaming vapors. This loosens phlegm, clears air-passages,
A>
makes breathing easier. Alsomas- || sage VapoRub on throat and || chest. Millions of families use these three time-tested ways to || relievethemis= l
ery of colds, Vicks) VaproRus/ |
| “I was in terrible shape. I was weakened and run down and my/ svstem was full of toxic poisons from constipation. I had splitting headaches and dizzy spells that were so bad that often in walking down the street I would almost go blind for a moment. I 'had violent pains in my arms and legs and I was nervous and irritable (all the time. I never got such a thing as a night's sleep because of getting up so often and I was as |tired in the mornings as when I [went to bed. My appetite went | back on me and my food didn’t taste |good. My condition got so bad I was just about to the point where I thought I'd have to give up altogether when I read about Retonga. I took several bottles and it just put new life into me. It built up my strength, gave me new energy and now I really enjoy living. All my
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“I ENJOY LIFE SINCE | TOOK RETONGA,’’ SAYS INDIANAPOLIS MAN
JOHN WILLIAM RANSOM _
pains and aches are gone, I am no longer constipated, all the poisons have been cleaned from my body and I feel fine. I eat lots of food and have no distress afterwards. I sleep the night through and never get up one time and in the morning I feel refreshed and enjoy a hearty breakfast. I feel better, look better and am more active than I have been in years. Retonga is a medi-
lcine that everybody ought to know
about and I am glad to recommend it.” You can know about Retonga by going to Hook's Dependable Drug Store, S. E. corner Illinois and Washington, where a special Retonga representative is stationed all the time just to tell you about this famous herb medicine. Call on him and let him give you the names and addresses of scores of Indianapolis people who have received its benefits. Retonga may be obtained at all Hook's Dependable Drug Stores. $1.25 size, 98c.
