Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 32, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 June 1931 — Page 7

XVXE 17,1931.

" K!W ' v s••■/■; ' ’ 'i, i%'; ,| 1 feil ,C |sfe; ' • ■•■'■■ <_ • ,iigs ? t \#'V M —Opposite Courthouse—Delaware & Washington Sts. Phone Ri. 7173 lloStore Like This I FREE i Friday Nite> 7:30 Ii %Pure< T rant . eed ’OR BUSINESS 1 I Cigarettes I ci. y y - 1 Zl n *ZT™ Jane ißth-9-M> a m Bice Cream I a-TISES'SS: 1 ”*5 CO! W c 1 Motor Out *— A. Me gg Thursday , Friday and Saturday,® While 1,000 Pkgs. Last Jfi Wt g%*W% M M ZS+SZ rf> g% 1 Q J\(i DEPARTMENT STORE THAT REALLY igg Ballard’S large size famous ice gHH M|| W W&* H H| %■ ■ ■ * V READY. cream cones FREE to everybody. jBBIK gF/fek jflH|p •"• w * MHM E f* 2fc Mft n J|F 5 w merchandise, new low prices, new store serv- gg *“/£ ggk S|C JB S3,' SJSE M ™ ,,08 W rchandismg. Our fleet of expert buyers scoured pi children must be accompanied by paSg mfm? BBm All Flavors “ HSH |#3R fLu* iraore to Boston, St. Louis to Chicago, and bought afP parents. jBBKm. ißHni* ' 3j}jf&&: ™ Bi tftndise remarkable in price. ffIBiHHSHHfiHHHBHHHIiHGH^HHBBESBBHBBHH •if a low overhead brings to you the lowest posjny, telephone service, elevator service. Meet fl Yard® oods-Domestie s-Housefurntshings, 2nd Floor! iAM to o*oo P M fl l 000 huck l Ruffled Curtains—4 and 5-Piece—Pair. 25c j Nationally Known ~ 1 twAMr’ roNTTCT I TOWELS I Krinkle Bedspreads—Box9o 59c 1 Hope Muslin of WAKfc m a „d ,| c gL. L. MUSLSN, 36-inch, bleached-Yard 4e I "fl / Yd - BSI I ZSSSi W I Sheets- —72x90, Bleached—Each 35c 1 / 72 C Ya ’ ,*• a Name *“* M Pillowcases—42x36—Each BV2C Jg ® cm,. a „d a few word., cx. [lf* * BMBB*"—R CoUoi) Blankets—Full Size—Special 44c 1 eat in envelope and deposit in | xSßfe. fl ?m*%, www et Hi Gingham—Check and Plaids —Yard _4e j§ vmße d tepted teMM I 'TOWELS fl $1.50 Mohawk Sheets—B6x9o—Each 94c §§ choice! I fl d P* * H 9-4 Sheeting—Bleached or Unbleached—Yd. _ 19c IB jntLt \ -hoick. gs or A red |% ' K Fast Color Prints—Bo Square—Yard 14 1 / 2 c Iff 36 inches ir m 1/n g ! ecnl>cst - I size, ggSScßajon Sport Satin-Yard 29e g| w,de £, (£ d Saturday. abe nathanson B Money Cheerfully Refunded—Satisfaction Guaranteed 1 !, I SPECIAL* f tjt H|l 9 ■ B I Ui B I First some silk lop toe. I Novelty Shoes Ii G Rlay I* Work S ° | MANY E ST S ™^ S SJ. 24 1 I All SS I B _^s-Z—i Other Pattern,a. s zH| ,o $ 1.9 4 g s llM|s4 C | 2-I DRESSES 1"* ffMM I dies, dimities *9 Sire m GOLF HOSE Boys Sport Oxfords, $1.94 Bathroom Slippers, 10c Pair Fi " t *“ d *7i/oe _ ~ ——n-n—J |H yto 14 yrs. to 74c H Irregulars J /2^ Boys’ and Girls’ i iv/r^ ne ’^ 1 One Lot 1 Children’s 1 Men’s Dress MBBmmmt psg. TENNIS SHOES | cS„K 1 tortgi | oxfords | OXFORDS I RAYON UNDIES I'm. t “§ Cfe o l .l,il„, 1 OXFORDS | STM|,S S bi*.t„ I V " . " dfmillff ft c■ si ■ Black, Tan ft * l at an K All Sizes |H Women’s rayon step- JUM C ihlg^wja.9 ii I *im l44-1 *ijs lissrsjrs IJL - illr ese va^ues * •Bp rn,m Cri Children’s w 2 * 000 , YMf 50e /’j^ 0 . Children’, .• . v cushions Wash *mm hankies Porto Rican If pan SOc ' sl '°° Shirts I-? 1 W Dresses f lC Ea. W ® owns f Cuff'sets I Rompcrs 1 ;" and Women’, 50c M H 3H H . . ■ art mmg ■ afIOIIS * J, M M Children’. 50c A ’ A 53n — A * A ■ 19c A>7 &JL * y J I4 C

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Leads Caravan

Dg7ZZ>J'T^= W

Miss Dorothy Cook, above, of Washington, D. C„ 'A'ill be at the wheel of the leading car when a motor caravan of members of the Women’s International League for Freedom and Peace leaves California this month to carry disarmament petitions to President Hoover. The caravan will be met by prominent women of each state along the route. The same petitions are to be laic? before the 1932 International Disarmament Conference in Geneva.

HOOVER PLANS TAXATION PROBE Conference of State Heads May Be Called. By United Press WASHINGTON, June 17.—The whole question of state and local taxation will be surveyed by President Herbert Hoover soon after his return to Washington from his western trip, it was learned today from his advisers. A national conference of state officials may be called in the fall to consider a more equitable distribution of the tax burden between the states and the federal government. The President in his Indianapolis address said the experiences of the depression “indeed demand that the nation carefully and deliberately reconsider the whole national and local problem of the incidence of taxation.” The expected fall conference of the state taxing authorities may develop recommendations for changes in federal law. Some states are particularly aroused over the federal road building plan which requires them to raise half of road costs if they are to get their contribution from the federal treasury. Stolen Dogs Recovered By United Press COLUMBIA CITY, Ind., June 17. —Officers here recovered two hunting dogs said to have been stolen in Ohio, after their owner had traveled 1,700 miles searching for them.

PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD EXCURSIONS SATURDAY. JUNE 20 $6.75 Pittsburgh ROUND TRIP Lt. Indianapolis - - 7.05 pm SUNDAY, JUNE 21 Lt. Pittsburgh - $5.00 St. Louis ROUND TRIP Lv. Indianapolis - • 11.08 pm SUNDAY, JUNE 21 $4.00 Chicago ROUND TRIP Lt. Indianapolis - . 2.30 am $1.75 Richmond ROUND TRIP $2.75 Dayton ROUND TRIP $3.75 Columbus, 0. ROUND TRIP Lv. Indianapolis - - 7.45 am $2.75 Louisville ROUND TRIP Lt. Indi •napolis - - 8.15 am $2.05 Logansport ROUND TRIP $2.75 Culver ROUND TRIP $3.00 South Bend ROUND TRIP Lt. Indianapolis - - 7.35 am Tickets Goodin Coaches only on trains shown. (AH Steel Coaches) CITY TICKET OFFICE 11* Monument Piece Phone. Riley 9331

Used Refrigerators $5 and Up EASY TERMS Lewis Furniture Cos., “A United Furniture Store" 844 S. Meridian St

★ Safety for Savings Fletcher American NATIONAL BANK Southeoit Corner of Market and Pennrylvanio

EXPERT TRUSS FITTING AT U 9 W. WASH. ST. STORK Abdominal Support* and Shoulder Braees HAAG’S CUT-PRICE DRUGS

Men’s and Women’s CLOTHING ON EASY CREDIT ASKIN & MARINE CO. l :T \V Washita .< >1

PAGE 7

'CAMERA EYE' : NEVER FAILED JERRYJIINNEY Sympathetic Police Chief Was 'Father’ to Many Newspaper Men. This Is the seventh of series of stories on the life and police career of Jerry Kinney. Indianapolis police chief, who died last Tuesday, after a lone illness. When reporters were “burned” by irate city editors for ill-understood delays in covering police runs at “deadline.” Jerry Kinney was their sympathizer. Perhaps it was to help them out by showing their “offices” what they often were up against, that Kinney frequently invited the newspapers’ “inside men" to spend an evening with him in a radio-equipped police car. It was on one of these excursions that an assistant city editor was given a night of adventure he’ll never forget. In police parlance, “all hell broke loose!” A two-bandit team chose that night to run wild in an orgy of hold-ups. To Kinney, his aids and the newspaper man in the chief’s car, the radio barked a “play-by-play” account of the crimes and pursuit of the bandit duo. Time for Reminiscence Squad cars arrived on the scene of their latest holdup just in time to hear a report of still another blocks distant. A night of screaming sirens, lightning fast rides and gunfire gave the reporters’ boss an insight into what goes on among the blue-coats while his city-room desk is closed. A later excursion with another city editor was in contrast for its tranquillity. Until after midnight, nothing came over the radio in the chief’s cruising auto but periodic station tests. It gave Jerry time to reminisce. Down muddy alleys, narrow, cobbled streets, around hair-pin jogs, the big police car purred while Jerry pointed here and there to tumbledown houses where crimes and captures had punctuated his long and vailant police career. Always Felt Compassion “We nabbed him right there, poor devil!” Jerry would say, nodding to a darkened corner. Relentless in pursuit of criminals, he never failed to feel compassion for them as victims, often, of circumstances beyonnd their control. Pictures snapped years ago by Kinney’s “camera eye” w'ere traced again for his companions as the heavy car rolled over his “battlefield” against the lawless. At last the car emerged upon a fashionable boulevard. Two girls paused on the sidewalk, stepped invitingly toward the slowly moving car—then turned and scampered off into the darkness as the letters “I. P. D.” caught their gaze. “Mollie!” Chief Kinney said with an amused smile. “They’re on the * boulevards, now!” “Red Light” Aided Police “You know,” he went on, “when they broke up the red light districts, they stripped police of one of their biggest aids in crime detection. In the old days, if a job was pulled, we knew where the crooks would blow their money. We didn’t need to look far. We made the tenderloin and we found out. The girls didn’t want it made any worse for them, and they knew the bums—heard them boasting. “But now! Where are they? Run out? No. They’re all over town. We can’t keep track of them. They’re in the finest apartments; in the best residential districts. And we get no help. “If the end of the red light had been the end of prostitution, it would have been worth it. But it wasn’t the end. It goes on as it always has; they’re scattered all over the city; and the police get no information. As for making soliciting’ charges stick in court—just try it!” (To Be Continued) FEARS PARTY’S POWER Democratic Congressman Hopes G. O. P. Will Organize House. By Scripps-Hotcard Newspaper Alliance DENVER, June 17.—Representa-, tive Edward T. Taylor, veteran Democratic congressmen, hopes his party will not organize the house next December. “The majority would be too slim,” he said here. “We could do neither the party nor the country any good. “I look forward to the sesgJoii with dread. The lineup is so close a half-dozen members could throw things either way. The speakership might change hands a number of times.”

art relief from that'gasr/ fullness, burning sour a■ II l ness, belching, upset P stomach, nausea, . BHHpBfl meals. TUNIS — a H ft] '■ |! 1 Antacid mint —relieve-. ■!■■■■■ a Eat three or four T UMS ViJiUnila —often one is enough Delicious, sweeten *i breath. At any drug store—only 10c. ACID INDIGESTION

C>ißE DEEMED Railroad Watches LIKE NEW hour Bonn flaunfttoa STSrtt . po* nflma $27.50 We Do Not Sell to Deolw WOLF SUSSMAR Established SO Teta m-M WEST ffAWPOTOir ST.