Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 179, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 December 1930 — Page 18
PAGE 18
SULLIVAN WILL HEAR ARGUMENT ON STREET CARS Conference to Be Held Sunday Night at Hospital by City Hall Group. Conference to determine the policy Os the city hall street car committee when the public hearings on the reorganization proposal open next week, will be held with Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan Sunday night 'at St. Vincent's hospital. E. Kirk McKinney, chairman, and members of the committee today discussed the forthcoming hearings on the franchise under the Insull reorganization plan for the Indianapolis Street Railway Company. It is rumored that with the wide field of discussion open on either •ide of the question, the commtitee, in order to facilitate matters, will set down certain topics for discussion. Each speaker, whether proponent or opponent, will be given a limited time to discuss the question. Wine and Stills Seized By United Press CLINTON, Ind., Dec. s.—About 400 gallons of alcohol, 100 quarts of wine, five stills and a quantity of mash w ere confiscated by a group of federal prohibition agents during a twelve-hour stay in Clinton. No arrests were made.
C—gggfo CAMPBELL'S SB Tomato Soup 4 Can. 29c BLUE HOSE RICE tjTrl 10 tts -49 W m McKenzie's ESTABLISHED m ■ wo FLOUR If** WHERE ECONOMY RiH£s~ ]1 Buckwheat 3%-Lb. "£ P or Pancake Fkg. w Pillsbury's Flour s-. b . s ag 19c Macaroni or Spaghetti Encore 8-Oz. Pkg. lona Flour 24.u>. 55 I LITTLE KERNEL I | SILVERBROOK I | SUGAR CURED CORN I I Butter BACON | 6 S9 11 Lb 3s 11 “ 29° J Milk Pet, Wilson or Carnation Tall Cans Fig Bars Fresh Baked Lb. 10e Pure Cane Sugar 5 Lb. Bag 25 Prunes 60-70 Size Lbs. 2S —————— ■ ■■■■—————————————■■■ ■ ■■ • Potatoes U. S. No. 1 Grade 15 Lb, Peek 29c Green Beans Lb. lOC Egg Plant Each 15c Green Peppers 5 For ioc Idaho Baking Potatoes J I|| V Ii i ■ ~ GRANDMOTHER’S QUALITY BREAD . *2s£ 24.0z.U0af 7® MEAT SPECIALS !N OUR MARKETS- 1 % Pork Loins Whole or Halt Lb 19 Beef Chuck Roast u>. 17c Fresh Picnics Small, Lean Lb. 14c Sausage Special A& P Breakfast Link Lb. 27G Rib Pork Chops Lb. 25c Shoulder Hound Swiss Lb. 230 Lamb Breast For stewing Lb. toe QySterS Solid Pack Qt. 69c Lamb Shoulder Roast Spring Lb. 15 JIATUNTi C* F>ACI Fltrii
Seeks Air Mark
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Undismayed by being forced down in Pennsylvania soon after taking off from New York in an attempt to surpass the transcontinental air record for women, Martha Bevins, above, prepared for a second attempt. The present record of 16 hours 591 L minutes is held by Ruth Nichols. United States representatives and senators receive a salary of SIO,OOO a year.
HENLEY DIVORCE MYSTERY TO BE AIRED SATURDAY Adjutant-General Called to Answer Petition for Allowance. The first court Rearing In the mystery of who married Mrs. Ethel Williams Henley is scheduled for 9 Saturday. At that time Adjutant-General Manford G. Henley has been subpenaed to appear before Circuit Judge Harry O. Chamberlin to answer to a petition asking an allowance for her pending final decision in the case. Mrs. Henley filed suit for a twoyear separation three weeks ago and asked $5,000 alimony and SSOO attorney’s fees. She alleged she was married to the adjutant-gen-eral in Toledo, 0., Sept. 12, 1929. The adjutant-general promptly denied he was married or that he had entered into any sort of marriage agreement. Mrs. Henley produced court records. Henley reiterated his denial. Saturday the principals and their attorneys are scheduled to start the first round of the legal battle. One oil company is planning a 550-mile pipeline costing $5,000,000 and capable of moving 15,000 barrels daily from its plant in Pennsylvania to Lake Erie shore cities.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
‘Sweetest Girls’ Are Chosen in U. S. Contest
, ,
Ilelca Robinson
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Agnes Farrand
Helen Robinson, Columbus, (O.) Dispatch entry in “America’s Sweetest Girl” contest sponsored,by the National Confectioners’ Association, has been selected winner by the jury of, awards comprised of Mrs. Jacob Baur, president of the Woman’s National Republican Club; Mrs. Samuel B. Shirk, state civil service commissioner of Illinois; Mrs. Walter C. Hughes, president of the Woman’s Library Club, and Henry B. Floyd, well-known Chicago lawyer. Newspapers throughout the country co-operated with the confectionery industry in selecting the local “Sweetest Girl,” who in turn were eligible for competition in the national contest to determine the “Sweetest Girl in America.” Miss Grace Cook, city hospital, won the S2OO prize in The Times contest here. Both Miss Robinson, the winner and Miss Farrard of Lewiston, Me., the second prize winner, sponsored by the Lewiston Sun, were selected winners from among thousands of contestants. Asa result, these girls will be sent to Havana in January, at the height of the carnival season as the guests of the National Confectioners’ Association,
Karl F® Wacker 449 W. Washington St. LI. 4867 HOG HEARTS ...... ( BOILING BEEF ...... .. Lb, B fUfc HOG SNOUTS I §ilbD hog ears ~ BEEF HEARTS Q p ounds PIG KNUCKLES .... } Pounds * * • • 6 LBS., 25£ FRESH RABBITS 2 50 EGGS DOZ„ 23£
CARLOAD SALES 'SATURDAY ORANGES TREE RIPENED $f1.75 | Sf.OO Fer Bushel H SEVEN Basket B DOZEN Sites inn from large to medium. Take doctors advice, eat and drink 8 plenty of tree rlnened oranges for health. g SSL- APPLES GRIMES GOLDEN ] & f E JONATHANS <¥* * mWW 2- ROME BEAUTIES l J° | BALDWINS £•%(£ 1 R. L GREENINGS J POTATOES Big Special Sale Saturday Round Whites <*3| Good Quality, Small Sizes ® M 100-LB SACKS AT $1.60 ™ Bush:-! 8 Idaho Russets Quality 9 100-LB. SACKS AT $2.15 gfrjfc First Come—First Served Drive In—Keep to the Kigbt—Fine Flace to Stop Car While Buying HAMILL BROS. ~ JEST SOI TH OF B. & O. ELEVATION " '
SIX ESCAPED MADMEN FOIL ROUGE HUNT Match Cunning Against Officials After Daring Matteawan Release. By United Press NEW YORK, Dec. s.—Six escaped criminal madmen, one an acid killer, another a murderer and still another a dangerous pyromeniac, matched their cunning against state an£ city authorities today in an effort to stay free. Police agencies pressed a vigorous search for them in the labyrinth of metropolitan New York, and in'the wooded sections of Westchester county, but tlfoy successfully eluded all who were hunting for them. Their escape from the Matteawan State Hospital for the Criminal Insane, near Beacon, just before dawn Thursday, was effected with daring and efficiency by three armed men who overpowered eight hospital guards and fled with the six inmates in an automobile toward New York City. Escape Is Successful Once, soon after the escape, the fugitives’ automobile was sighted at Peekskill, fifteen miles from Beacon on the road to New York, where a squad of policemen was waiting. But the men sighting the officers, swerved their car into a side street and disappeared. Since then one of the escaped n.en has been seen. He is Frank Van Der Kuylen, an acid murderer and bigamist, who, a few hours after his escape, attempted to enter the apartment occupied by his wife and their two children in Manhattan. Van Der Kuylen was refused admission and left. Later he reappeared at the rectory of St. Albert’s church, where he babbled out the story of his escape to Father Cyril Roosens. He muttered something about ‘‘giving myself up to the district attorney.’’ Killings Not Likely When Father Roosens stepped out of the room for a moment, supposedly to get a match but really to spar for time until he could determine what to do, Van Der Kuyien disappeared. Because of Van Der Kuylen’s appearance at his wife's apartment, police felt certain that most of the fugitives, if not all, were hidden somewhere in the city. Some may have left the automobile before it reached New York City, and for this reason wooded sections of Westchester county, especially along the Hudson river, were searched today.
KQ^WE-BA CMEANS THE BESTj COFFEE" ' Extra delicious, because it is a blend of the finest * coffees money can buy. Yet it's not expensive. Try a pound tin. A t Independent Grocei's
Called Slayer
Charged with the murder of his family of five, Charles King, above, went on trial at Hamilton, O. King disappeared a year ago, after prosecutors claimed he turned on all the gas jets in his home as the family slept, believing they would be better off dead than alive because of his financial reverses. He was arrested recently. In a Michigan city while working as a barber. Rabid Dog Bites Woman GREENCASILE, Ind., Dec. 5.—A dog, which suddenly became mad on the Logan Brown farm near here, attacked Mrs. Brown Monday. Before Brown could kill the dog it bit several head of hogs, another dog and killed several chickens. Mrs. Brown is taking the Pasteur treatment.
Skinless M BARS ftjr JL 9 Fresh Baked LMON j R QUICK cook UlOcJ !-Lb. Can § /\ S, (SBk (wjuj.jjiiii in >" I $ J&**lkC : Vast Camp's lA* l*g* J SAUER * 1 Boone County J KRAUT | i Camp's I BEARS 6c I MIHY I I JOO Can I H ® a s n °° Hp^f \fSok 4- \ 1m * a e fk® 1 ft I If ’#■*'*.*** II ll^wes Pure Ever Good LARD CATSUP I Margarine I KetUe Rendered 8 Large U- 1 /? O** i Fine Quality | Bottle | 2$ 25' j 10* (2125* WiMWW JUT plnt Quart £% MALIt Bottle O® Bottle I|| C SOAP sizisik. 3 *“10*
INDIA. CANADA WEATHER LINK IS DISCOVERED _p_ Dry Summer for Hindus Is Sign of Mild Winter for Dominion. 5" Science Service WASHINGTON, Dec. s.—Why unusually dry "summers in India mean : mild winters for Canada six months ) later and wet summers in India ! foretell hard, cold winters in Canada is a mystery calculated to tax the ingenuity of United States I weather experts to explain data recently received from Fred Groissmayr of Passau, Germany, and Dr. C. F. Brooks of Clark university. Examining weather reports for a period of forty-four years, Groissmayr found a remarkable correlation between climates separated by oceans of distance and months of time. Throughout all the period studied when India was unusually wet or dry, winters in Saskatchewan and Alberta have been below or above j normal in temperature, with but four exceptions. Measuring the other factor of j the Indian climate, which might be ; significant in determining the Canadian winter, Groismayr also charted the temperature in various | portions of India. Unusually cool J autumns in northwest India always*
;DEC. 5, 1930
were followed by a severe winter at Winnipeg, he found. Such decided relations led to further study of tropical factors influencing Winnipeg's winters, and indicated that not o.ily India's monsoon, but also the flood of the Nile in Egypt # have a measurable effect on distant Canada, while high pressure ov-r India, Egypt and Batavia later was reflected by correspondingly high temperature in Canada. Thus the highest India pressure, of 1877, followed by the mildest winter at Winnipeg. And throughout the period studied, temperature maximum in India was associated with highest temperatures over an immense par. of Canada and .of the United States as well. Alleged Slayers to Head GREENFIELD, Ind., Dec. 5. Mrs. Marie Cole, widow of Raymond Cole, Indianapolis, victim of a slaying, and her lover, Frank Jordan, Indianapolis, will be arraigned in Hancock circuit court here Saturday. Jordan is charged with murder in the first degree and Mrs, Cole with being an accessory.
Milk Fed White Leghorn Fryers Lb. 1 9c FREE DRESSING HOOSIER POULTRY MKT. 107 N. ALABAMA ST. Lincoln 1881
