Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 257, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 March 1931 — Page 4
PAGE 4
2 CENTS BRINGS TWO TO COURT Customers, Grocers Fight Over Cheese. Sy United Press ¶ NEW YORK, March 6.—Meyer Epstein’s liveried chauffeur leaned over the counter of Joe Churgin’s delicatessen, and said "10 cents’ worth of cheese, please.’’ ¶ Churgin’s sharp knife sheared through the cheese, and Churgln slapped it on the scales. ¶ "Twelve cents, okay?” said Churgln. ¶ “I said 10 cents' worth,” said the chauffeur, “it’s for my boss. My boss is outside.” ¶ "Twelve cents,” said Churgin. ¶ The chauffeur held a conference with the boss. Both of them returned to Churgin’s shop. ¶ “We wanted 10 cents’ worth of cheese, not 12 cents’ worth,” they chorused. ¶ “I cut 12 cents’ worth, and if you don’t want it—” ¶ Witnesses who came to court today, when Churgin and his clerk, Daniel Zedanofsky, were araigned on charges of assault, disagreed as to the subsequent developments. ¶ The delicatessen men were held in $300 bail each for trial in. special sessions. ORGANIZE SMOKE BOARD Industrial Committee Named by Abatement League. Organization of an .industrial smoke board for Indianapolis will be studied further by a special Indianapolis Smoke Abatement League committee meeting Monday, W.~A. Hanley, chairman of the committee on organization, announced today. Control of smoke from industrial plants will be the aim of the board, which will co-operate with the league. No general industrial meeting will be held Friday, as previously arranged, Hanley said. General Memorial Association Meets The General Memorial Association held an election of officers at a meeting in Ft. Friendly, 512 North Illinois street, Thursday night. Wilson C. Oren was re-elected president, E. L. Miller was elected vicepresident, Mrs. Albert L. Pauley, secretary, and William A. Edwards, treasurer.
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BELIEVE IT or NOT
s£* 1 ml tttXAHWR Alekhine fl£ ft ■lit ' ' ' ~ f?o3Sl6vh CteSS ufts am Played games simultaneously eiEOHANT Jjjk , _ WHILE BLIfipfOLDCD V 1931. KTr.t fetor* Syndicate, fee.. Britain ri*hu rtwcrvtO. 1924- 'mT
Following is the explanation of Ripley’s “Believe It or Not,” which appeared in Thursday’s Times: Two Opposite-Bound Airplanes Had Equal Velocity Tailwinds— Recently on the Ssattle-San Diego Airway, near Eugene, Ore., Grover
On request, sent with stamped addressed envelope, Mr. Ripley will furnish proof of anything depicted by him.
' at an altitude of 10,000 feet, had Tyler, flying the northbound plane a forty-mile tail wind, and Russell Cunningham, meeting Tyler in the southbound ship at an elevation of 3,000 feet, also was I speeded on his way by. a forty-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
IJ-7 Kezlitered O. S. O y rtect one* RIPLEY
mile wind on the tail of his ship. These facts are verified by the Boding Air Transport Company of Seattle, Saturday: “Our National Capital Was Pawned to a Dutchman.’*
KAHN TO HEAD CITHID FUND Veteran Civic Worker Wili Succeed W. H. Insiey. Edward A. Kahn, Colonial Furniture Company president and veteran community worker, today succeeded W. H. Insiey as president of the Indianapolis Community Fund. Kahn was named Thursday with other officers to serve a year. Others are: W. H. Insiey, first vice-presi-dent; Elmer W. Stout, second vicepresident, and Clifford L. Harrod, treasurer. Retiring officers are Herman P. Lieber, recently made 1931 honorary member of the fund, from the vicepresidency; Leo M. Rappaport, as second vice-president, and Guy A. Wainwright, treasurer. As president of the Indianapolis Boy Scout council and director of the Jewish Federation, Kahn is active in both these organizations.
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He has served as campaign manager of the community fund and on its board-of directors. Sixty-six thousand persons subscribed to the fund in its eleventh campaign last October, it is announced. The fund serves thirtyfive social agencies. $300,000 IS SOUGHT IN CITY TRUST SUIT Injunction, Special Receiver Are Asked in Court Action. Collection of $360,000 from stockholders of the City Trust Company, now in receivership, is asked in a suit filed Thursday in superior court two. Appointment of a special receiver to administer this sum also is asked. Filed by Mrs. Ruby Lipscomb, and authorized by Superior Judge Joseph R. Williams on behalf of all depositors and creditors, the suit is based on a statute which provides that stockholders in a bank shall be individually responsible to an amount over and above the value of their respective shares of stock. The suit also asks an injunction to prevent individual creditors from bringing separate suits against Individual stockholders.
COP IS ‘GOAT' FOR PRANKSTER Buckshot Startles Women: They Blame Officer. By United Press ¶ CHICAGO, March 6.—Policeman Frank McNamara, on duty on fashionable Michigan avenue, was startled when a woman, passing him, suddenly cried out, jumped, slapped herself [him], gave him what he called a “dirty look,” and walked on. ¶ A few minutes later another woman shrieked, jumped, slapped, and McNamara got another “dirty look.” After two more such performances, McNamara was becoming very embarrassed. He began looking about. ¶ In a second story window he found Beardsley, reloading a spring gun with buckshot, “just to see 'em jump.” ¶ Sperry was roaring with laughter.
.MARCH- 6,1931
He continued laughing even when Judge Daniel Trude fined him $3l.
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