Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 257, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 March 1930 — Page 11

MAR. 7, 1930.

NO INSIDERS' IN SUPPLY BUYING, MAYOR PLEDGES Contractors May Purchase Wherever They Please, Says Sullivan. Contractors must live up to the letter of their contracts with the city, but the administration has no interest in material of supply purchases which conform to specifications. Mayor Reginald H. Sullilvan fold more than fifty contractors meeting with the board of public works today. Taking a stand that upsets former city practice where political leaders and supporters were favored in material and supply purchases for city construction work. Mayor •Sullivan drew applause from the contractors he addressed today. Treat All Fairly “It is the purpose and intention of the mayor, the board of public works and the city engineer and this administration to treat all material men fairly and impartially,” Mayor Sullivan told group. “We are vitally interested in contractors living up to contracts with the city, but, we do not care from whom you purchase your materials so long as theV conform to the specifications of the contracts you hold. “No one is authorized to represent to you that this administration favors one material man over another. No One Favored ' Neither are we interested from whom you buy your bonds to secure your contracts, and no one is authorized to represent to you that t his administration favors one txmding company or agent rather than another upon contractors’ bonds.'' A. F. Moll, a security bohd company representative, expressed the sentiment of contractors with: “Mr. mayor, I believe you are to be complimented upon that stand. That Is what the state, city and nation needs.” A number of Democratic party leaders close to the administration are engaged in bidding and construction material business in the city. APARTMENT ERROR CLIMAXED BY DEATH “Frying Pan Killer” Is Held on Charge of Manslaughter. Bj United m. t NEW HAVEN. Conn., March 7. A tragedy of thin-walled apartment houses, where every apartment look, alike, had Herman Alley in county jail today, awaiting trail on a manslaughter charge in connection with the "frying pan killing" ol Joseph Gavoni. Gavoni, intoxicated, had strayed from a noisy party in the apartment above Alley. He mistook the floor and hammered on Alley’s door. Alley armed himself with a heavy frying pan, opened the door and struck down the intruder. Gavoni died at a hospital. HAND DEALT BY DEATH Brother of Former Ohio Governor Succumbs at Card Table. K I nitf(l Press RICHMOND. Ind.. March 7. James F. Pattison, 81. Richmond, former Hagerstown merchant, died suddenly of heart disease Thursday night, while playing cards at a billiard parlor. He slumped across the table as one of four players was dealing a j new hand. He was placed upright in his chair and seemed to be re- ; viving when he died, witnesses said. ! Pattison is said to have a son. W. R. Pattison. in Cincinnati. He j was a brother of John Pattison. I former Governor of Ohio, and has a sister living at Oxford, O. STATION TO BE BUILT Plans for S'f.ooo,ooo Rock Island Union Project Approved. H’> In it i<l Press OKLAHOMA CITY. March 7. Plans for a $2,500,000 union station, submitted to the city council by the Frisco & Rock Island railroad, were approved and construction was ordered begun within five weeks rromriPAm? t Take N?—NATURES REM EOT . a —tonight. Your eliciinative j organs will be functi suing prop- C eriy by morning and your con- fr •W etipation will end wbh a bowel J action as free and easy as naj ture at her best—positively no | pain, no griping. Try it. z Mild, safe, purely vegetable—at druggists —only 25c FEEL LIKE A MILLION. TAKE 3-ROOM OUTFIT | I l,in* room, bedroom and kitchen B complete. Reron. C 1 1 Q 5 dltloned v I 1J I K\s\ TEKMs: Lewis Furniture Cos. > United Trade-In Store Jl 844 S. Meridian M. I’hone Hr. Bargains in Grand j Pianos and Radios Convenient Terms! BALDWIN’S On the Circle in FXPERT TRUSS FITTING AT W. WASH. ST. STORE Abdominal Supports and Shoulder Braces HAAGS CUT-PRICE DRUGS

‘REWARD’ OF VALOR Bread Line Now for Veterans

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IN 1898. They lined up for “chow” in mosquito-infested Cuba to free it from Spain. In 1918 They got their “slum” in muddy No Man’s Land in France, and now, in 1930, They—former soldiers—line up at 114 North Pennsylvania street to obtain provender for their families because they can’t get jobs. The photo shows a line of the ex-service men at the Pennsylvania street address receiving rations from the Ex-Service Men’s Voters League. The league has obtained jobs for twenty-five former war veterans in the last few days.

In the above photo James Thomas, 1228 East Tenth street, SpanishAmerican war veteran, is shown receiving a sack of groceries from Mrs. Florence Rowe. 209 East Tenth street, secretary to Herbert Weaver, 2209 East Tenth street, secretary to Herbert Weaver, secretary of the league. Weaver stands at the right of Mrs. Rowe. John Caylor, state judge advocate of the American Legion and former officer of the league, is shown at the left of Mrs. Howe, behind the counter of the improvised grocery. "An honorable discharge from the

“j* Complete Living Room Entemble 'Hj | fir A strikingly handsome outfit at a surprisingly low price. 4m Ijfr, I P Jim ' I|A A roomy davenport, a large arm club chair, both in heavy % J If 1 I fp * \ jacquard velour, a Coxwell chair and foot stool, a** :> Jr P 9 I Ii rxv \\ junior floor lamp, an occasional tabic and lamp, an end §| WijS If || P| [;||| I', V )\ table and a smoker cabinet. See this marvelous en- |g \r SrpTSip tfsemble § • amF pj/T' You Pay Down Only $8 ving Room Outfit Living Room Outfit j and other pieces. A wonderful value. Fur- junior and Moor lamp, 'and other useful ili^ n ,j sh y° ur h ? me c° m P lete at JJg pieces. Everything included— You Pay Only $5 Down You Pay Only $7.50 Down 'wmw A Quality Bedroom Outfit ; ” “ n f w * Bedroom Outfit Dining Room Outfit A suite of unusual character, made of selected walnut veneers richly A splendid outfit—dresser, roomy chest of ! Complete dining room furnishings—a bufgramed. large dresser, roomy chest of drawers and bed with straight foot; J"i |mM # drawers and a semi-poster bed, also an all- set, an extension table, a full set of six £?a S;SSK a Sted SagleSS ~ I k# 1 steel sagless spring, a 4-lb. mattress, all chairs, a 42-piece dinner set and a 2^ece and a pail ot excellent pm s. ne entile ouim ioi jgj M cotton, a pair of pillows and a bed- d7Q set of table silverware. A tremen- CjAC You Pay Down Only $7,50 g| SB spread; everything for only v dous value at the price Other Bedroom Outfits, 579. 599, slls and $145 if W You Pay Only $4.50 Down I You Pay Omy $5 Down I j- -a I Table Lamps Bedspreads Complete Home Outfits 9*12 WifSk Our “Wonder” Home Outfit, living room outfit, Velvet Rug Tapestry Rug tet. Imt *sQ~ Y< “ h “ *p-wO WBmPi' bedroom outfit with dining room and kitchen s<>o.7s *1 1 .75 “S. temp S velous price. Deep pile rugs, splen real bargain, a 9x12 P o\VX >S TERMS R . .. Greatest Value for the money. Complete outfit for four rooms—liv- |||| |l I fjj | Walnut finish well A sturdy rigid ironing Full standard gauge ing room, bedroom, dining room and kitchen-an entire MJr iW# | |IEI ICI "■ * made-amaz-‘ ’ board Very special and fully guaranteed. home—beautiful furnishings throughout JIII II E [ UJ: ing Cl/I OC price> QS Enameled 7C You Pay Down Only S2O .... 0 It. Jj now 7oC part .... 0

: army and navy is all that is necessary for a married man to obtain food from our organization,” Weaver and Caylor asserted. The American Red Cross and the i Family Welfare Society with Community Fund support, are other i agencies in Indianapolis aiding I former service men in sustenance of j their families and to obtain employment.. One giant redwood tree felled in ! Oregon provided enough timber to construct fifty five-room bungalows.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

REBELLION MAY DESTROY PEACE, GANDHI WARNED Lord Irwin, India Vice-Roy, Answers Declaration of Revolt Leader. By United Frets DELPHI, India, March 7.—Lord Irwin, vice-roy of India, replied today to Mahatma Gandhi’s declaration that India. is about to embark upon her campaign of nonobedience to British law, telling the Nationalist leader that his course would endanger public peace. The vice-roy told Gandhi he regretted the Nationalists were contemplating such a course, pointing out that it clearly was bound to involve violation of the law and thus threaten to destroy public peace. Drive of Disobedience A BOMBAY, India, March 7.—With fifty picked male companions and one horse to carry the sick, Mahatma Gandhi will launch his campaign to free India by civil disobedience to British rule next Tuesday. No provisions, it is understood, will be carried by the Indian crusaders, on instructions from their leader to “rely on Providence to feed them.” The first stop of the little band will be at Borsad, a salt producing region, where the Nationalists will attempt to produce this commodity themselves, in defiance of the British monopoly. Vallabhai Patel, another leader, intends to substitute a widespread “no taxes” campaign, if Gandhi is arrested. Plan Husking Bee Till T nitrd Press GRUNDY CENTER, la., March 7. —A plot on the farm of Clyde Wilhelm near here will be carefully fertilized this spring in preparation for the’ national husking contest to be held there in 1931.

Tragic Tooth Bj l nited Press CHICAGO. March 7. A toothache started the train of misfortune that ended when an unidentified middle-aged man hanged himself in a shack near the navy pier. He left a note accusing a quack dentist of pulling all his teeth because one hurt, and of selling him false teeth that caused infection and ruined his health.

JUSTICE FOR JUSTICE Illinois Official Begins Jail Sentence After Liquor Conviction. By United Press LEMONT, HI., March 7—Bela J. Novak, justice of the peace, will not dispense justice for the next ninety days. Neither will he greet patrons at his roadhouse. He began a jail sentence today after conviction of selling liquor. There also was a S2OO fine.

t e * | due to Acta | I NOOtS T, O* ACiO STO*K*CM j headache I r.ASES HA USE* _J

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GEORGE VIEWED LAST KING TO RULEENGLAND Republic to Follow is Belief of Countess Warwick, Labor Leader. NEW YORK. March 7.—Prophesying that George V will be the last of England’s monarchs, that his reign will be followed by the setting up of s full-fledged republic, the Countess of Warwick, long looked upon as an important figure in British political life, writing in the current issue of Cosmopolitan magazine, expresses the belief that the prince of Wales “would make an admirable first president” for the new republic. \ Lady Warwick, who was a fa-

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vorite of both Queen Victoria and Edward V'n. and who now is allied with the British Labor party, believes that the English monarchy has become completely outmoded. The king no longer is a king, she holds, but is simply a figurehead. "If the present king Is the last of his line,” she writes, “it will be because he and his few immediate ancestors have been such admirable monarchs that they have made their kingship entirely superflous. “They have ruled so democratically that the people have learned the

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art of governing themselves; the guiding hand of a monarch no longer seems necessary." SET VON TIRPITZ RITES By United Press MUNICH, Germany, March 7 The funeral of Admiral Alfred P. von Tirpitz will be held at noon ‘ Monday in the Munich Forest cemetery, where the director of GerI many’s submarine warfare will be 1 buried with military honors. •’