Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 5

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE INDIANAPOLIS SUNDAY STAR, APRIL 30, 1933, Riviera Club Represents Improvement of $47,000 PARLEY OUTLOOK "FOLLIES" TICKET CE MEETINB Fishing Lodge Will Be Constructed In Maryland as Memorial to Wood 0 OS PE PAIGII OPENS CI OPEN TO PUBLIC rhnti hf Character Building and Rec I i A reational Work Will Be Discussed. Bruce, president of the chapter, had charge of the ceremonies. Membership in the fraternity is limited to students who intend to enter the teaching profession. May 5 has been set as the date for installation of a chapter of Spurs, national sophomore women's honorary, according to announcement from officers of the organization. Miss Diane Lamoreaux of Salt Lake City, Utah, will be the installing officer.

Twenty-five members of Scarf Club, local petitioning group, will become charter members of the new organization. The Butler group was granted a charter at the recent national convention of Spurs in Cor(vallis, Ore. Four coeds have been named as candidates for queen of the 1933 Butler May day, May 27. T. ey are Virginia Craig, Julia Leedy, Vera Sudbrock and Margaret Walden.

The election will be held from 9 a. m. until 2 p. m. Tuesday with all students participating.

Dr. Tolbert F. Reavis. head of the sociology department, will be one of the speakers at the annual conference of the Indiana Council of International Relations May 11, 12, 13 in the Hotel Lincoln. President Walter S.

Athearn of the university will Imminence of War Factor Menacing Any Progress on Economic Front. BT FRANK H. SIMONDS, Special Correspondent The Star. WASHINGTON, April 29. Unnoticed by Americans whose attention has been fixed upon dramatic and even sensational events at home another of the great postwar gestures has ended in nothing.

"Cellophane Age" Will Be 'Presented by Butler Students May 12 and 13. Promotion of a ticket sales campaign for "The Cellophane Age," 1933 edition of the Butler university Fairview Follies, has been begun under direction of Emsley Johnson ticket chairman. The show will be presented the nights of May 12 and 13, in Caleb Mills hall. The campaign will continue under supervision of twelve fraternity chairmen until the closing perform Owing to the widespread interest in character building and recreation- al work, as emphasized by the Indus- trial depression, the directors of the I Jewish Community Center Association have voted to invite the general i public to attend the association's an- nual meeting at the Kirshbaum com- munity center tonight. The principal address, "Character Building and Recreational Work in Its Pres-nt and Long View Significance," will be delivered by Philip L.

Soman of Chicago. Officers, directors and executives of local social ance. They are Edward Springer, Thomas Johnson, Victor Guio, Frank Wells, Spurgeon Johnson, Addison Coddington, Lyman Hunter, Frank service agencies have received sps-cial invitations. Directs Chicago Institute. Mr.

Seman is director general of the Jewish People's Institute of Chicago, one of the model social agencies of the country, with which he has been connected for the last quarter of a century. He is a former president of both the National Association of Jewish Center Executives and the National Conference of Jewish Social Work. Miss Eugenia Magidson will sing. Preceding Mr. Seman's address there will be an announcement of the election of directors to fill vacancies caused by the expiration of the terms of the following, all of whom have) been renominated Leonard A.

Strauss, president; Mrs. I. G. Kahn, secretary; Abe H. Goldstein, treasurer; G.

A. Efroymson, Isidore Feible-man, Leo Kaminsky, Miss Frances Mazur. Dr. Louis Segar and Milton Sternbeiger. Represent Federation.

Mrs. J. A. Goodman, Jacob L. Mueller and Mrs.

Louis Wolf have been appointed by the Jewish federation to represent that body on the Jewish Community Center Association board. Besides the directors who hav been nominated or appointed for new terms, present members of the board are: Sidney J. St.ernberger, vice president; Philip Arller Joseph M. Block, Ernest Cohn, Robert Efroymson, Dr. Philip Falender, Rabbi M.

M. Feuerlicht, Mrs. Samuel From-mer, Mortimer Furscott. Aaron Click, Mrs. L.

L. Goodman, Jack Harding, George Frank, Dr. A. S. Jaeger, Car.

roll S. Kahn, Edward A. Kahn, Mrs. Kdgar F. Kiser.

Mrs. Isaac Marks, Samuel Mantel. Fred Newman, Jacob Solotken, Rabbi Milton Steinberg, I.eo Traugott, Jacob Weiss, H. Joseph llyman and Albert M. Rosenthal, honorary director.

Allan Bloom is the general secretary. Reasoner Will Speak to Sons of Revolution Lieut. Col. Matthew A. Reasoner of St.

Louis, Mo will be speaker at a luncheon of the Sons of the American Revolution at 12:15 o'clock Tuesday noon in the Spink-Arms hotel. Col. Reasoner, a soldier and world traveler, will speak on "Winning of the Revolution." Mark H. Reasoner, president, and Fred I. Willis, secretary, announced that women have been invited to th luncheun.

preside at the night session May 12. Reissner, Thomas Hannell, Cecil Ray, Warren Boultinghouse and Douglas Elwood. Intensive rehearsals will begin this JAMES H. MAKIN. Pledge of $47,000 worth of improve week under direction of Edward tion will include Vice President Garner, Speaker Henry T.

Rainey, Senators Tydings, McNary, Arthur R. Robinson, Walcott. White, Pitt man. Byrnes, Townsend, Connelly and Copelnnd. Representative Ludlow.

Snell, Woodrum, Ayres, Bacon, Rrit- Green, general manager, and Dorothy Jane Atkins, dance director. This will be the sixth annual presentation "The Economic Aspect of the Paraguay-Bolivian Controversy" will be the subject of Dr. Reavis's address. The Alfred Marshall honor society for students in the department of economics has announced the names of five pledges. They are Frank Baird, Elbert Gilliom.

Carl Seet, Joe Taylor and Lloyd Weddle. Initiation services will be May 8 in the Marott hotel. Dwight Kelley is president of the society. ment for the North side was given to the modernization campaign committee last week by James H. Makin, president of the newly organized Riviera Club.

The club, a private recreation center, is under construc FROPOSKI) WILL R. WOOD MEMORIAL FISHING I.OIIGK. of the Follies. Sixty will comprise ten, Buchanan, Byrns, Cochran, Col- 1 lins. Cooper, Cullen.

Edmonds, Mc- I the cast. Eleven students were initiated re of limestone, near rhp lake where Wood used to spend his week-ends to restore his tired nerves that he might perform his arduous duties in cently into Butlqr chapter of Kappa Delta Pi, national scholastic educa tional fraternity. The new members are Aleen Alexander, Wilma Brad ford, Ralph Brenton, Mary Alice Burch, Sylvia Ecktman, Virginia Garr, Shirley Harvey, Anna Marie Iske, Janet Jerman, Grace Nesbit and Ruth Marie Price. Charlotte Congress. Indeed, the game of the lake has been rerhristened Lake Will R.

Wood. The corner stone for the lodge will he laid May 7 under the auspices of the Masonic lodge of Cambridge, Dorchester county, Maryland. It is planned to have construction completed July 1. Constructed into the InflliinnpoMft Star Bureau, ISA? Vmu Hllllillnn. WASHINGTON, April 29.

A fishing lodge, with beauty and utility, will be constructed at the end of a lake near Cambridge, as a memorial to Will R. Wood of Indiana, who long was a representative in Congress. To the country Will R. Wood was known for his distinguished service on the House appropriations committee and for his championship of the interests of the taxpayer. To his intimates he was known as an expert angler, a true disciple of Izaak Walton and a charming crony on a fishing trip.

4-Room Fishing Lodge. His fishing cronies, led by James E. Barnes of Washington, have planned that Wood's memory shall be perpetuated by the erection of a four-room fishing lodge, constructed Duflie, Sandhn, Reul, Woodruff, Wadsworth and Bloom. Trustees of Association. Active trustees of the memorial association are to include George Ade, J.

D. Bartiett and Dr. A. C. Arnett of Lafayette, Judge Oscar E.

Bland, former Indiana member of Congress; Everett Sanders. Tene Haute and Washington; Frank D. Culhertson, Vin-cennes, Ind former Senator Harry B. Ha wes, Missouri: M. J.

Mechan, New York; Col. Walter J. Riley, Blast Chicago, and Mr. Barnes. "The lodge will be built on the shore of Will R.

Wood's favorite fishing grounds while in Washington," said Barnes. "It will become a gathering place for his old fishing companions. Memory of Will R. Wood will continue to live with all who were privileged to enjoy the great outdoors with him." lodge will be a bronze memorial to Wood. Judge William J.

Graham, once a Members of the Women's Athletic Association will begin their track competition Tuesday afternoon, according to Ethel Reagan; track chairman. Events will be the mile walk, one-tenth-mile endurance run, fifty-yard dash, hurdles, high jump, broad jump, shot put and basketball distance throw. The competition will continue several days until the various events are completed. Installation services for 1933-1931 officers were held by the Butler Y. W.

C. A. cabinet Wednesday afternoon in Arthur Jordan Memorial hall. The officers are Mary Bohnstadt, president; Emmalou Thornbrough, vice president; Marjorie Car, secretary, and Martha Jane McMaster, treasurer. congressional colleague of Wood, has rency and trade must be weighed by statesmen and governments which are daily face to face with the question of peace or war.

And to deal with these statesmen on the assumption that because it is "all quiet along the Potomac" it is equally tranquil beside the Vistula, the Danube, the Rhine or the Quarnero is to invite surprise and been named president of the Will It. Wood Memorial Association. Former Representative in Congress Fred S. Purnell of Indiana will be vice president and Mr. Barnes, who has deeded to the association the land on tion at Illinois street and Riviera drive.

Formal opening of the club is set for May 30, when a dinner-dance will be held for members only, Mr. Makin said. Present enrollment in the club roster is 1,150, and the membership is to be limited to 1,500. Walls of the clubhouse are being erected and about two-thirds of the swimming pool has been excavated. Members hope to hold their next organization meeting in their own clubhouse May 16.

Previous meetings have been in the Butler university Crmpus Club. Officers of the club are Mr. Makin, Randle C. Willis, vice president, and Carlos Deeds, secretary. Directors are Curtis Dunham, Mr.

Deeds, Leo T. Hurley, Mr. Makin, Don Snoke, Charles E. Vincent and Mr. Willis.

The finance committee includes H. A. Brewer, Kurt Ehlert, R. D. Jackson, Lou Lewis, Martin Matz, Harry Tem-pleton and William Vogel.

Members of the advisory board are N. E. Boyer, H. A. Brewer, Ted C.

Brown, Mr. Deeds, L. William Drapier, Mr. Dunham, Mr. Ehlert, Mr.

Jackson, Francis Joy, B. B. Lewis, Lou Lewis, Mr. Makin, Charles Maxwell, V. A.

Niles, A. L. Ottinger, A. W. Pedigo, Hermon Phillips, Harry Reibe, Edward O.

Snethen, Mr. Snoke, Mr. Templeton, Mr. Vogel, Mr. Vincent, Charles G.

Walsh and Mr. Willis. which the memorial will be erected, will be manager. Honorary trustees of the associa (Copyright, 1933, by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) The new Holy Alliance, foreshadowed by the March conversations of MacDonald and Mussolini in Rome, has come to nothing. It has been rejected in fact and, although accepted in principle by France, it has been condemned with a violence which is significant in all the capitals of the little entente and in Warsaw as well.

Even more significant has been the shift in British opinion. When Mac-Donald went to Rome the Hitler victory was still news and the sudden attack upon the Jew within the Reich only just beginning. British Still Sympathetic. British public opinion, although disturbed by the Nazi phenomenon, still remained sympathetic with the idea of territorial revision of the peace treaties. And first in the British mind was the problem of German-Polish frontiers.

Even while MacDonald was flying toward Rome, however, British opinion was changing rapidly as the news from Germany flowed- in. And the change was taking place in precisely the quarters hitherto most favorable to Germany and to the cause of revision. It was the Labor and Liberal newspapers and spokesmen who pronounced deep and bitter criticism of the German course. Almost overnight the sympathy with Germany which had developed over all the periods since the close of the war in all but Tory quarters was abolished. Simon Stand Unopposed.

As a result, when Sir Austen Chamberlain warned the House of Commons later against all projects of territorial revision in the light of the treatment of the Jewish minority in Germany and of the further fact that revision would mean the transfer of some two million of Poles to German rule, not a voice was raised in opposition to his words, which were approved by Sir John Simon and later were the basis for a formal protest on the part of the German government. But the fact can not be mistaken that Mussolini's bid for British support of a program of treaty revision directed by his Four Power Club has failed. Germany has lost that support and sympathy in Britain without which she could hope to accomplish little. Even before he returned home from Rome, MacDonald was already aware of the fact that his plan no longer commanded national support. Thereafter he was becomingly vague about it.

British Shift Important. On the continent, however, this shift in British opinion had immediate and enduring consequences. In France the realization that England was coming over to the French view of the German situation strengthened the hands of all those who favored sticking to the alliances and holding to the league. Moreover, upon the French government there was now exerted enormous pressure from Prague, Bucharest and Warsaw. In very clear terms Paris was told that the nations of the little entente and notably Czechoslovakia and Roumania would be forced to make terms with Berlin terms which would insure the creation of a colossal Mitteleuropa dominated by Hitler's third Reich, first economically Without Cost doomed the Roman project.

But nothing seems more certain today than that nations which feel their unity or security in danger will de mand that along with any plan for economic recovery must go a mutual guarantee of the existing state of things for a period of years. But Germany, Italy, Austria, Hungary and probably Bulgaria will protest against any agreement which compels them to endure the conditions imposed by the peace treaties AT PACKAGES OF GROCERIES With Each for another decade, during which Refrigerator, Gas Range, Kitchen Cabinet, (v.i..d io) Washing Machine or Electric Refrigerator 100 Pound Refrigerator quite obviously the nations in possession would be able to consolidate their positions. And certainly neither the United States nor Great Britain is ready to give political guarantees to the nations which today are in danger. National Survival First. In Washington there seems to be an assumption that all countries and governments are equally concerned in achieving economic recovery to the seclusion of all else.

But while all governments do desire to end the present disastrous depression, some, even during this period, are far more concerned with insuring the continued existence of their own countries. Thus while one set of nations talks tariffs, another will discuss treaty revision and a third security under existing circumstances. To imagine then that any considerable progress can be expected promptly of the world economic conference is to imagine a vain thing. It is plain that the United States and Great Britain might accomplish something by mutual tariff agreements or by some form of currency bargaining. But it is equally obvious that Anglo-American financial bargains would not be of decisive importance unless France came in and in the same way their tariff adjustments would be upset by German action.

For Germany is a great exporting nation and France the present defender of the gold and then politically, and stretching from the Baltic to the Black sea. A finrl.v constructed refrigerator of a nationally famous make. Tijrht-fit-tinjr doors. Thick walls. Food chamber lined with white baked enamel.

Gray oak finish. With 50 Extras Valued at $10 In no uncertain terms the allies of France demanded reassurance as to lip the policy and purpose of Paris. French Hand Strengthened. Beyond doubt the assurance has been increasingly satisfactory in re cent days. The French hand is -1 strengthened by the realization that .95 the British are no longer sympathetic with any German project, 9 whether of territorial or armament revision.

The thing they feared most British urging to accept German or Italian proposals for treaty revision is no longer a present Electric Washer fjl With 50 Extras 27 1 Valued at $10 danger. It must, however, be recognized GENEROUS TERMS ESTATE Console Gas Range rim i i i i in i t-Ji ri What You Receive American Butter Crackers Amt's Distilled Vinegar Amt' Pure Mustard Amt's Sweet Relish Arm and Hammer Sola Astor Orange Pekoe Tea Haby Hire Popcorn liond lireal Hrlllo (llmalene Comet Rice Kvans' K-Z-Bake Flour Fairy Soap Foulds' Macaroni Fou Ids' Spaghetti Gold Dust Hast.ynTasty Biscuit Hires Root Beer Extract Iona Cocoa Kingan's Breakfast KinTs Pure Lard Kre-Mel Dessert Morton's Iodized Salt Pennant Syrup l'ittsford's Beer I.iinrh Quinlan's Butter Pretzels Qulnlan'is Pretzel Sticks llajah (round Allspice Kajah (jround utnieg lialnl, Ground Mustard (irounil Cinnamon Itajali Ground Black Pep.er Rajah (Jround Ginger Bed Star Compressed Bin so Btimford Baking Powder Stokely'H Party Peas Stokely's Tomato Catsup SterlinK Quality Sugar Sugar Creek Butter Tlnteic Color Remover Van Camp's Hominy Van Camp's Kraut Van Camp's Pork and Beans Van Camp's Tomato Soup Van Camp's Red Kidney Beans Virginia Sweet's sJrSS K.frlin.tor Srt Displayed in Our Meridian Street Window A full porcelain console model. With the famous Estate Fresh Air Oven. Choice of right or left oven. With 50 Extras Valued at $10 $39-95 I standard.

Political Disintegration Rapid. L'p to the present moment the process of political disintegration in Europe has been proceeding at an incredibly rapid pace ever since the German election of September, 1930, which was marked by the first great Hitler victory. It may be true that the pace has been accentuated, even if the process was not originally produced by economic depression, but the fact is that Europe has now reached a point where the atmosphere is totally unfavorable to any form of international agreement or bargain. What is striking in Washington today as at all times before other international conferences is the double fact that foreign political conditions seem totally ignored in official quarters and American interpretations of the world situation based upon purely domestic circumstances are accepted unhesitatingly. But at the same time European conditions are changing so rapidly and so alarmingly that the very foundations on which American policy seems to rest are being swept away almost overnight.

All Is Not Quiet. After all, once it be accepted as a fact that the political situation In Europe is so tense and the issues between peoples so acute that a new war can come swiftly and with little further warning, then plans for a world economic conference which ignore that fact strike obvious perils. A glance at the European press, the smallest discussion with continental diplomats in Washington, the smallest concern for recent historyall these must emphasize the same point. Every consideration of tariff, cur- GENEROUS TERMS MARBELIZED Kitchen Cabinet THE CROSLEY SHELVADORE that the issue itself, the question of territorial revision, has become more acute as a result of the Roman expedition of MacDonald. Poland and the little entente have been put on final notice of German and Italian purpose to partition them and to annex provinces and cities.

The result has been to fortify enormously the nationalistic elements in these countries and at the same time to create a state of permanent nervousness and apprehension. Finances Only Limit. Only financial restraints set limits to actual preparations for a new war all over central and eastern Europe. It is this state of mind which is going to prove one of the great obstacles to any progress at an economic conference this summer. That and the German situation.

For it is obvious that no real progress can be made in the direction of world recovery so long as Germany remains outside the camp of the nations working for such recovery or while Germany and France are deadlocked within any such coalition. France, too, must hereafter be under direct and continued pressure from her allies who are menaced by German or Italian revision programs. Will Tarley Be Possible? In such a state of mind will it be possible to hold the much discussed world economic conference? At least that question is being discussed anxiously and doubtfully in many diplomatic quarters both in Washington and in European capitals. Two years ago the same state of mind foredoomed the disarmament conference to failure. Then the statesmen of the world outside of Washington opposed the conference because of the obvious dangers.

But Washington was insistent and no nation dared to take the responsibility for open opposition although both the British and the French made private soundings in the matter. Once the arms conference met, the question of security was raised by Tardieu in his "bombshell speech" and that was the end of all chance of progress. Now it is almost as certain that in any conference which may meet to discuss economic matters the first problem raised will be that of establishing a political platform on which economic measures can be based. Marbleized green and ivory the newest finish for your cabinet. Roomy, well arranged, full size.

Tull-out porcelain top. With 50 Extras Valued at $10 The greatest value on the market in Electrical Refrigeration. Quality and economy plus the incomparable conveniences of the Shelvador, With 50 Extras Valued at $10 $80.50 $24-95 and up GENEROUS TERMS Kill Itch Be Sure to Visit the Colonial Booth at the Home Show Germs Quick Your ikln hai thousands of tiny stums and pores where Invisible germs or fungous growths may hide and cause your axin to Itch, Crack, Peel, Burn, also Eczema, Ringworm, Pimples. Hand-Itch, Athlete's Foot, or Crotch Itch. To stop the Itch In 30 minutes and quickly heal your skin, Just try the guaranteed perscriptlon, Dr.

Nixon's Nlxoderm Originally discovered by a famous English Skin Specialist. Works with amazing speed because made specially for external skin irritations. FURNITURE COMPANY MERIDIAN TAARYLAND 1 11 ROOT BcflT SJ) I Guaranteed to quickly clear and heal your 10-Year Truce Proposed. In the Roman project there was a political program of stabilization through a ten-year But unhappily along with that truce went the implication that frontier changes would be made in that period. That skin or money hack on return ot empty Dependable Vmtt package.

Ask Stores for Guaranteed Dr. Nlxon'l Nlxo derm today. Advertisement.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Indianapolis Star
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Indianapolis Star Archive

Pages Available:
2,552,403
Years Available:
1862-2024