Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 166, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 November 1929 — Page 3
TOT. ST, 1923.
COUNTY TO GET SHARE IN ROAD IMPROVEMENTS Widening, Paving Rerouting Slated for Routes Serving City. Marion county will come In for *1,500,000 in state road improvements in the 1930 program. Director John J. Brown announced following a conference Wednesday afternoon with a county delegation and state highway commissioners. Improvements include widening of state Road 40. the National road, from the west boundry of Indianapolis to the Marion-Hendricks county line: re-routing state Road 31, north of the city; taking Three Notch road south of the city into the state system and adding several miles of pavement and paving a spur to intersect with tsate Road 31, at Franklin. The commission likely will favor taking the road from Indianapolis to Noblesville into the state system also. Brown stated. Chairman Albert J. Wedeking of the commission told a delegation from the Hoosier Motor Club, headed by Frank Hatfield and Lloyd D. Clayronibe, that the proposed circleurban route around the city is included in commission plans, but. will not be in the 1930 program. Brown predicted that this route may be completed within the next four years. Rerouting of road No. 31 will eliminate several dangerous curves around White river, near Broad Ripple, and avoid crossing the Union Traction company tracks at College avenue and the canal at Broad Ripple. \ second crossing wall be eliminated north of Carmel. A proposed overhead structure would eliminate a Monon railroad rrossing at Carmel. MORE SUITS PROTEST COSTS OF WIDENING Poor New Actions Bring Sixteenth Street List Up to 24. Four additional suits protesting damages awards and appealing from assessments in the proposed widening of Sixteenth street from Northwestern avenue to Delaware street, were on file today in circuit court. About twenty suits previously have been filed. Damages of $36,000 are asked by trustees of the Hali Place M. E. church on behalf of the church. William A. and Helen F. Brennan and H. S. Crowder, property owners ao Talbott and Sixteenth street, demand $25,000 damages. Other plaintiffs who ask no damages, but who are proetsting amounts of assessments, are the Indianapolis Propylaeum and the National Investment Company, each the owners of several lots in Sixteenth street.
HOLDUP MEN GET $75 Filling Station and Grocery Are Robbed by Negroes. Police today sought Negro bandits who held up a grocery and filling station Wednesday night, escaping with about $75. One Negro covered Walter Keplinger, Greenfield, attendant at a Shell station at Blake and Michigan street, with a gun, and took $25. While a police emergency answered Keplinger’s alarm, a Kroger grocery at 1245 North Senate avenue, of which Ora Housefield, 230 West Twelfth street, is manager, was robbed of SSO. TITLE MEN IN ELECTION M. E. Dinwiddei, Crown Point, Named President at Convention. M. Elmer Dinwiddie. Crown Point, was elected president of the Indiana Title Men's Association, at its twenty-fourth annual convention Wednesday at the Claypool. Other officers chosen were: Orville Stevens, mayor of Angola, secretary and treasurer, and H. E. Stonecipher, Indianapolis, vicepresident. Association members and their wives were entertained Wednesday night at the annual dinner in the hotel. New Club House Assured R< TSvrrinl ANDERSON. Ind.. Nov. 21. Members of the Anderson Country Club have pledged more than enough to pay a mortgage, clearing the way for an expansion program to be started next spring. Anew $75,000 clubhouse will be erected and the golf course will be enlarged from the present 9-hole layout to 18 holes. Ground necessary for the expansion has already been purchased. Glenn W. Gates, president, has called a meeting of directors for Monday night when an architect will be employed to prepare plans for the clubhouse.
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Country Boy and Grocery Clerk May Become World Bank Head
‘Horatio Alger Career’ Is Record of War Debt Banking Expert. IfY BRUCE CATTON N'F.A Service Writer CHICAGO, Nov. 2l.—A former country boy who spent his days behind the counter in a little grocery store in Texas and meanwhile burned the midnight oil to study law at night school that he might prepare himself for the future, now stands in a fair way to become head of a world-wide banking organization. He is Melvin T. Traylor, president of the First National bank of Chicago, who, his friends here believe, is soon to be named president of the Bank of International Settlements, that vast financial organization to be set up in Europe to handle Germany's war reparations payments to the world. Traylor now is in Europe and it is recalled that Owen D. Young, author of the plan and his close personal friend, visited Chicago last summer, supposedly to persuade Traylor to accept the office. The “Young plan" for the settlement. of reparations, put into a form acceptable to all parties at the recent Hague conference, includes a project, for the international blink, capitalized at $100,000,000. The institution’s purpose is to take the reparations question out of politics, put it on a sound business ba'is. collect the payments made by Germany and distribute them among the creditor nations. World-Wide Influence It is to collect approximately a half billon dollars a year in annuities and bids fair, in time, to become one of the most powerful financial organiations in the world through its influence on foreign exchange. The man whom Chicago feels certain w ill be chosen as the head of this gigantic institution has worked his own way up the 'ladder of success. Bom near the little town cf Breeding. Ky„ fifty-one years ago, Traylor still has the trace of the south in his speech, and there is a Kentucky angularity about his wiry and muscular figure. Golf has kept him in the pink of physical trim. When 20, Traylor went to Hillsboro, Tex., and became a clerk in a grocery store. He decided to become a lawyer and at night he studied law books by the aid of a kerosene lamp. In three years he was able to pass the bar examination. Clients were few’, but the struggling young attorney fortunately got a job as city clerk. Three years later he was appointed county attorney. Then, in 1907, destiny stepped in and turned his career to banking. Moved to East St. Louis He became cashier of the Bank of Malone, Tex., and two years later when it was merged with the Citizens’ National bank of Ballinger, he became president of the combined institutions. This lasted only two years. The National Stockyards bank of East St. Louis, HI., with which the Ballinger bank had dealings, soon saw he was a young -man of energy and ability. So they brought him to East St. Louis and made him vice-president. Three years later, in 1914, he went to Chicago as vice-president of the Livestock Exchange National lank. Later he become its president. In 1916 Traylor left the stodkyards district for the loop to become president of the First Trust and Savings bank. Not long ago the First National bank acquired this bank and the Union Trust as well. And. naturally enough, Melvin A. Traylor was made president of the consolidated institution.
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Winners in k Prep Step’
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Betty Jane Wolfe, 1054 West Fiftieth street, and Milton Heller, 5766 North Pennsylvania, winner of The Indianapolis Times-Indiana Roof Ballroom “Prep Step" contest, will appear at the Indiana at every performance next week, starting Friday. The ‘‘Prep Step’’ was taken from the picture, “Sweetie,’’ which will be playing in the theater at the same time.
TALK COUNTY EXPENSE Appropriations Totaling 520,000 Are Before Council. Appropriation of expense items totaling about $20,000 for several county governmental units will be considered b ythe county council when It goes into session Dec. 2 for the fifth time this year, County Auditor Harry Dunn announced today. Unites to which the appropriations probably will be allowed, in each instance for current expenses, are the auditor’s office, county sheriff’s office, witness expense fees in several county courts and repair items for hte county poor farm and the Colored Orphans’ home. ANOTHER CHARGE FILED Fraud Defendant Seeking New Trial Faces More Trouble. Bu Times ttnecial ANDERSON, Ind., Nov. 21.—More trouble Is piling up for Harry M. Goldberg, Detroit theater promoter, as a result of his attempt to evade a sentence of from ore to seven years in the Indiana reformatory for his part in defrauding Harry Muller, local theater man, in connection with anew local theater enterprise. Prosecuting Attorney Oswald Ryan has filed an additional charge against Goldberg alleging he fraudulently obtained achitectural serv-
“You’re nothing but a common cheat!” he cried
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ices from E. F. Miller, local architect. This charge will be pressed, it was said, if Goldberg is allowed to withdraw his plea of guilty and is given anew trial on the first charge. Hemorrhoid Sufferers Pile Misery Ended Without Cutting. You can quick, safe and lasting relief by removing the cause —congestion of blood in the lower bowel. Nothing. but an internal remedy cam do this —that’s why cutting and salves fail. Dr. Leonhardt’s Hem-Roid, a harmless tablet, is guaranteed to quickly and safely banish any form of Pile misery. Hook's. Walgreen’s and druggists everywhere sell Hem-Roid with a money-back guarantee.—Advertisement.
P„ Onlv SI a Week! Ground in DR. JOSEPH S. FARCHER Without Extra ntargf. 14 West Ohio St.—-Allied Bldg:., 2nd Floor
P3R one breathless moment Rex hesitated —then flung the door open. He drew back in amazement. It was true, then. Leonie was in the arms of another man! Only an hour before she had responded passionately to his kisses. He had asked her to be his wife. And now — “You're nothing but a common cheat!" he cried. Frantically Leonie realized the evil trap into which she had fallen. She knew, now, why Hester Drew had invited her to this beautiful country home. It was all part of a plot to rob her of the man she loved. What chance had she, a shop girl, against this clever adventuress? How , could she prove she was not a cheat, when everything pointed to her guilt? Did she lose Rex? Or did she turn the tables on the clever woman who planned to marry him —for his money? Read the dramatic outcome of this vivid story, “The Lure of Gold" by Amenia Rosehill, complete in this week’s Love Story Magazine. Other Fascinating Stories in NOV. 23rd Issue What goes on behind the scenes a Taxi.” This exciting story will hold of Hollywood ! Christopher Somers you enthralled to the very end. tells all in a dramatic story of a hand- You’ll enjcry "She Was the Bess,* some movie star, his leading lady and "Molly the Matchmaker, Fights their director. It’, called “King of Her a t Fa *" "PmtoyPride,” “OnApproval" r _ „ n ■_ | also su*xmp flower and she Girt Who had Everything’I—two 1 —two sensational When a wealthy young man poses novels by Vivian Grey and as a taxi driver —things are bound to Elizabeth York Millet. Many features, happen. And they do in “Diane Takes poems, articles.
CARDINAL MAY OFFICIATE AT ROYALWEDDINQ Suggested by King Victor to Unite Humbert, Marie Jose. /?/ T nitrrf pm* ROME. Nov. 21.—Vincenzo. Cardinal! Vannutelli may officiate at the wedding of Crown Prince Humbert and Princess Marie Jose of Belgium, it was said today in wellinformed circles. King Victor Emanuel was reported to have suggested the Cardinal, because of his strong support of the conciliation between state and church. The crown prince will remain as commander of his infantry regiment after the wedding, making it necessary for him to live at Turin. The couple were understood to have planned a honeymoon at the royal lodge at San Rossore, where their romance blossomed several years ago. The prince will present Marie Jose with a ring which has been in the possession of the house of Savoy for more than a century. It was worn by Victor Emanuel 1, when he resigned as king of Sardinia in 1802. It is a large ruby, in an antique setting, The Bea t Pound You Ever Bought! II 1 with, the IMS F,SH i! \ T TE stands for s . i * B ®‘**v' Xa g t u r and y \ | \ health in millions of homes the world over. He brings protection to old and young agiinst winter wet and cold. He beams on babies who need more sunshine. He offers you the easy, pleasant way of taking that great food-tonic —cod liver oil. SCOTTS EMULSION FAMOUS OVER 50 YEARS I j Scott A Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. 29-37
PE fl 5 DOWNSTAIRS STORE
B,soo Ties For Men and Boys 15c 50c %-jt, 75c Anew shipment purchased especially for the early Christmas shopper. Colorful, well-made ties in many attractive patterns. At these very special prices. I lYtlis Downstairs Store.
Smart Fur Coats Specially Priced 1 Grey Caracul Coat with large luxurious Fox collar $25.00 1 Spotted*Pony Coat with Beaver colar and cuffs $25.00 1 Wombat Coat with smart leatherette trimmings $59.00 1 Black Sealine Coat in large size, beautifully lined" $79.50 Pettis Downstairs Store.
Tweed Coats A group of tweed coats in light and dark shades. Mostly small sizes. mmam Pastel Frocks Regular $5 and $7.95 values. Light summer dresses. Broken sizes. Special. Raincoats Leatherette, fleece-lined raincoats with hats to match. Sizes 6 to 14. Windsor Crepe Yd. 30-lnch wide fine crepe. Makes lovely lingerie for Christmas giving. Specially priced. Bath Robes $! .98 Warm blanket bath robes in bright colors. Sizes 36 to 52. A gift suggestion. Galoshes $| .59 Women’s well-fitting galoshes. Four-button style. AH sizes. Brown, tan and gray. Boudior Slippers 69c tO A fine selection of slippers for the whole family. Always acceptable at Christmas. Boys’ Knickers $£ .00 Fine-wearing tweed knickers. Warmly lined. All sizes. Specially priced.
Indian Blankets $ 3 : — The famous Esmond brand. Bright, colorful patterns. Size 70x80. Splendid value. Ru££&ed Curtains Pr. Dainty ruffled curtains with colored borders. Launder beautifully. Special. Sweater Sets s£.9B Warm, colorful sweater sets, complete with tain. .Sizes 28 to 36. Very special. New Dresses $|J.95 2tor'U Specially priced silhouette dresses. Canton and crepe dc chine. Sizes 14 to 46. Gym Bloomers $£ JO Fine quality sateen. Reinforced seat. Plaited. Very special. Sheets 89 c The famous Stanwear sheets with 3-inch hem. Size 81x90. A splendid value. Shirting 19 Yd. Madras shirting in a variety of colored stripe effects. Launders well. 32 inches wide. ✓ Sheets s£.oo With the new colored hems at this attractive price. Size 81x 90, S inch hems.
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Mew Prints 1 ge y<i. A wide selection of patterns in either light or dark backgrounds. Special. Toweling 1 Yd. 150 Y'ard.s of ail-linen crash toweling, 16 inches wide. Specially priced. Men’s Hose 6? for '' jf Men's lisle and rayon hose in a variety of colors and designs. AH sizes. Baby Blankets Soft, warm baby bankets in either blue or pink. A lovely gift for the new baby. Men’s Pajamas s£.oo New shipment in men’s pajamas. Well-tailored and attractive in color and design. Bedspreads s£•s9 Crinkly cotton spreads. Size 80x105. Green,.gold, blue and rose. Very special. Bath Towels 29' A splendid value for Christmas gifts or the Thanksgiving bride. Size 20x38. Colored patterns. Black Sateen 27' 150 Yards of black sateen. Good wearing quality for children’s bloomers. Special.
