Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 59, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 July 1929 — Page 5
JT7LT l!?. 1929
RAID RENEWS WAR ON BALL POOL LAYOUTS Three Truckloads of Tickets Seized at Silent Salesman Company's Plant. Three five-tor. truckloads ol baseball pool tickets* today were held e police headquarter as evidence of renewal of police and county prosecutor's drive against zambling in Marion county They were confiscated Thursday afternoon at the Silent Salesman Company, 14 North East street, manufacturer and distributors of punchboards poo! tickets and vending machineArthur Rahke 3610 College avchuo. brother of the proprietor, was arrested on charges of keeping a saming device and Emil Rahke. 4146 North Meridian street, out of town when the raid was conducted, will face arrest on the same f ha r errs. CHILD, 3. BREAKS LEG WHEN STRUCK BY AUTO A!!#n Shupinsky Recovering: Man Critically Hurt by Car. Allen Shupinsky, -3. of 717 South Meridian street, today is recovering from a broken right leg and injuries to the face sustained when he was struck bv an automobile driven ; by Edward Marlin, Negro. 18. of 1050 I Belmont avenue, in the 800 block ! •South Capitol avenue. Marlin was no', held. Condition of Fred Morgan. 42. of '73 South Sherman drive, barber, w hose skull was fractured v hen he was struck by an auto driven by Stanley Garner. 18. of 538 East drive. Woodruff Place. Thursday, was critical today, city hospital attendants said. Garner was arrested on charges of speeding and assault arri battery. SEDAN FOUND WRECKED Greenwood Car Is Demolished Against Telephone Pole. A light, sedan bearing a license plate issued to the Kelly Sales Cornpan}-. Greenwood. Ind.. was found by deputy sheriffs carl} today, demolished against a telephone pole : on National road near Cumberland. The driver left before officers arri\ cd. HONOR MRS. COOLIDGE /,r mint m -■ WASHINGTON. July 19. Mrs, Cahin Coolidge has accepted the in- , citation of Secretary of Navy Charles Frances Adams to act a; sponsor of the new light cruiser , Northampton, to be launched at Quincy. Mas. . Sept. 7.
MorrisonS 26-28 West Washington SPECIAL—“GILDA GRAY" Bathing Stilt SALE! # SATURDAY rt Regular S5 Values l J. v The most popular all- 1 \ wool 2-piece bathing \ 1 suit of the year. Now \ on sale at the ex- \ 1 I treme low price of \\ \ Morrison’s, Street Floor STREET FLOOR SPECIALS Silk and j All Silk Silk Rayon Chififon , . Robes Hose L ' n f nc All p, eces _ . . , Guaranteed Colorful nth -4 / Patterns PerUct * 1 / $0.98 sjjo /3 Also Service Off OPEN TILL S P. M. SATURDAY
Win Medals at Outing
This quartet of Columbia Club golfers boasted medals today for prowess displayed in the tournament in connection with the club' annual outing Thursday at the LP.cn Country Club, Lebanon. In the quartet, all of whom finished among the first ten in both low gross: and low net stores, are. left to right: Dr. C. R. Akers. Tom Jackson, Charles T. Langmaid and L. G. Ferguson.
DRIVERS’ LICENSE AIDS MAN PASS BAD CHECKS Attorney Robert R. Wilson Reports Fraudulent Draft'- Returned. State police are searching for a man said to have used a driver's license as identification in cashing fraudulent checks bearing the name Robert B. Wilson. 1628 Park avenue. The checks have been returned to Robert B. Wilson, 1649 Park avenue, an attorney. Persons making false affidavits in securing drivers' licenses will face perjury charges and forfeit licenses to drive if the state police find it out. Chief Robert L. Humes of the stats police announced today eases brought to his attention will be thoroughly investigated and prosecuted. First arrest on such charges was made Thursday by Carl Losey of the state force. He brought Theodore M. Engle. 3517 Balsam avenue, to city prison, charging perjury on grounds his driver’s license shows 2880 East New York street as his home address. Engle was released on bond. HOSPITALS REPAIRED Long. Coleman Refuse Surgical Cases During Steam Alterations. Long and Coleman hospitals will not admit surgical cases until Monda} due to repairs on the hospital steam pipes. Dr. J. H. Clevenger, resident surgeon at Long, said today. Without steam it is impossible to sterilize surgical instruments, making it necessary for the institutions to reject emergency cases.
INTERURBAN CUTS FARE T. H. I. <C E. T. Commuter Tickets to Cost 1.25 Cents Mile. Twelve-trip commuter tickets, gcod for a period of ten days, will be reduced by the Terre Haute. Indianapolis and Eastern Traction Company Saturday from the present. price of 1.65 cents a mile to 1.25 cents. 25 Hurt in Paris Train Crash PARIS. July 19.—Twenty-five perrons were injured Thursday night in an electric passenger train collision in a tunnel near St. Germain.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TDIES
3-CENT PAVING LEVY FOB CITY STREETS URGED Plan Board to Ask $200,* 000 for Improvement of Thoroughfares. The city plan commission will confer with Sterling R. Holt, city con- , trollcr, to urge a 3-cent tax levy, j raising $200,000 for thoroughfare im- ! provements. The thoroughfare fund will be exhausted with the widening of Sixteenth street from Northwestern avenue to Delaware street and the elimination of jogs on Twenty-ninth . ?nd Thirtieth street and Washington boulevard, and at Twenty-ninth and Delaware streets. A levy of 1.5 cent in 1929 raised $98,000. The program of the city plan commission if the levy is granted includes opening of the following ; streets: English avenue from Shelby ■ street lo Fletcher avenue, West street from Raymond to Palmer streets, Montcalm street from Twenty-third to Twenty-fifth streets, Cornell avenue from Twenty-first to Twenty-third streets, Twenty-second street from Ralston to Hillside avenues. New York street from Lynn street to Belmont avenue. and Blake street from Indiana avenue to Tenth street. storm Strikes Germany Bit t tiitril /•/•■ BERLIN. July 19.—A rain and wind storm, said to have been the worst of its kind in a century, left death and destruction near Wiesbaden, reports said today.
THREE OF INTERSTATE AUTO THEFT RING FREE Smith, McNay, Su-man Released on Parole. With the release of D. Lee Smith. Robert F. McNay and Elmer Suss-
MILLER-W OHL’S \ JULY SHOE CLEARANCE^rrVKt A r nY'j jp§r ! \ piw e ’ t L ■* continues its gigantic \ •. clearance sale of all summer stocks. In- \ % J hMHHL po p|l \ \ \ n \ eluded are the latest \ f \ ]N \ \ ■ V _ V ' patterns of blondes, \ \ !V' whites and patents in i high, medium or flat
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man from Leavenworth penitentiary, four of the Indianapolis defendants convicted in the interstate motor theft conspiracy case had completed serving their terms. The first defendant released was !: cob Wohlfeld. furrier, who wa eturned to Indianapolis July 6.
Smith, an attorney; McNay, attorney and politician, living on a farm near Danville, and Sussman. t > jeweler, were released Monday on parole, after serving a third of their fifteen months’ term:', and arrived here Tuesday. In addition to the sentences, each was fined
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when they were convicted la.vt November. There are two distinct species of camel in the old world One is the one-humped camel, the Arabian, and the other is the two-humped camel, the Bactrian.
