Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 114, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 September 1931 — Page 3
SEPT. 21,1931_
STATE HIGHWAY BOARD TO MAKE 800 MORE JOBS Work to Be Provided by Addition of Roads to System. Four hundred men now are employed In the new maintenance program of the state highway department, designed to aid the unemployed, and twice that number will be added this week, it was estimated today by Director John J. Brown. Work is. being done on new roads taken into the system under a plan proposed by Governor Harry G Leslie. It is financed by a surplus in the maintenance fund. The 400 men are employed on forty new projects in about half the counties of the state, Brown said. Highway officials point that in addition to actual employment by the department of hundreds of men for several weeks, many thousands of yards of gravel and stone used to put the roads into condition will mean the employment of hundreds of men in stone quarries and gravel pits throughout the state. Mileage of the state system is now 6,577. New roads on which maintenance was started last week are as follows: Road 1. from Cambridge Citv north to TVnnville. via Hagerstown. Modac. Farmland and Redkev: about thirty-seven miles. Road 3. from Charlestown to Vernon, via Blocher. Road 9. from Road 46 east of Columbus to Greenfield, via Hone and Shelbvville; about forty-two miles. Road 18. Fowler to Brookston on Road 43; about twenty-three miles. Road 22. from junction of Road 9 at Gas Cltv to Hartford Citv; about sixteen miles. Road 26. from Hartford Citv east to the Jav county line: about eluht miles. The same road from Road 41 to Lafayette; about fifteen miles. Road 38. from junction of Road 52 near Lafayette to Road 39 near Frankfort: about eighteen miles. Road 39. from Junction of Road 67 near Martinsville to Lebanon, via Bollville and Danville: about forty-one miles. Road 46. from Illlnots-Indiana state line near Llbertvville to Terre Haute: about fourteen miles. Road 47. from Crawfordsville to Road 52 via Thorntown; about twenty miles. Road 63. from Terre Haute to Merom near Indiana-lUlnois state line; about thirty-one miles. Road 68. from Cannelton east to home near the Ohio river: about sixteen miles. Road 69. from Mt. Vernon to the Ohio river near Unlontown (Kv.i; about eleven miles. Road 145. from Road 62 near Uniontown to French Lick, via St. Meinrad and Birdseye: about twenty-seven miles. Road 161. from Junction of Road 62 near Begonia Springs, via Richland: about fourteen miles. Road 163. from Clinton west to the Illinois state line: about six and one-halt miles. - Road 187. from Junction of Road 26 south through Dunkirk to Road 67: about nine miles. Road 229. from junction of Road 46 at Batesville to junction of Road 29 at Napoleon; about nine miles. Road 350, from junction of Road 1 at Milan to Aurora, via Mooreshill; about fifteen miles. FORMER BANKER GUILTY Garrett Man Faces Term of Two to Fourteen Years in Prison. By United Press AUBURN, Ind., Sept. 21.—Monte L. Green, former president of the defunct Garrett Savings Loan and Trust Company, faces a two to fourteen-year prison term as a re- , suit of conviction on a charge of j accepting deposits when he knew the bank was insolvent. Green ; was convicted by a jury which deliberated eleven hours. Because physicians say he is near collapse, Green was not in court when the verdict was returned. His attorneys, however, said they would ask anew trial. The Garrett bank was closed Jan. 2. DIES AT AUTO’S WHEEL Heart Disease Is Blamed for Collapso and Crash. Police and Coroner Fred W. Vehling today opened an investigation into the death of Harry Hillard, 40, of R. R. 17, Box 51, whose body was found in an auto after it had crashed into a curb Saturday night at Thirty-second and Meridian streets. Police said they believed Hillard died of heart disease while driving the car. His collapse, they said, probably caused the accident.
\ Turn To \ The “STATE” j y Automobile Insurance Assn. OFFERING | Safe. . Sound . . Dependable I Full Coverage Nonassessable Automobile Insurance at Low Cost j Assets. . Over $2,500,000.00 Surplus . Over $1,000,000.00 : niriT^l^ar^j \ ]! Effective October Ist, 1931, all automobile owners have i a greater responsibility. y :| Be Safe —lnsure Now ij J Largest Insurers of. Automobiles in Indiana. BBEI ;j UMI f
Entertainer
VH .
Myrna Celete First of a series of family night programs, open to members, their families and friends, will be given Friday night by Indianapolis Eagles aerie at the lodge home, 43 West Vermont street. A. J. Voight is in charge of the programs. One of the features of the opening program will be the appearance of Myrna Celete of the Stockman dance studios and fourteen of her pupils. SMALL GIRL IS LOST Found Wandering Sunday at Turkey Run Park. By Times (Special SPENCER, Ind., Sept. 21.—A girl about 3 years old, lost or abandoned, was the center of interest to visitors at Turkey Run state park Sunday afternoon. As nearly as could be determined her name is Dorothy Alene Laughorn. She says she lives on Seventyfourth street, but could not say in what city. Corease Knott, Marshall, a park guard, kept the child with him for several hours, but no one appeared to claim her. It is believed that she might have been abandoned. The child said her father works in a box factory and that she came to the park early Sunday with her parents. They drove away without her, she said. Her description of an automobile her father is supposed to own tallies with that of one seen near the place where the child’s plight was first noticed. HURT IN WALL CAVE-IN Tumbling Bricks Pinion Worker; Two Others Leap to Safety. Two workmenleaped to safety, but a third was imprisoned by bricks and injured slightly today when a wall on a house they were razing in the 400 block East Ohio street toppled toward them. All three were standing on the porch of an adjacent house when the wall began to collapse. Jack Yost, 628 North Alabama street, and Harry Petri, Negro, 617 West Vermont street, went over the porch rail, but John Garrett, Negro, 815 North Senate avenue, was held by bricks that bruised his legs. He was sent to city hospital. HEALS PIMPLES AFTER 15 YEARS A free booklet, written by E. S. Givens, tells how he cleared his face with an easv to use home treatment, after he had been afflicted for 15 years. No matter how long you have suffered embarrassrr .nt send for this free book; learn how you, too, can use this wonder treatment under a SI,OOO guarantee. Send your name and address today to Givens Chemical Cos., 2627 S. W. Blvd., Kansas City, Mo.—Advertisement.
MRS. COLLINGS GIVES CLEW TO PIRACY SLAYER Testimony Discloses One Attacker Was Father of Three Children. By United Press HUNTINGTON, L. 1.. Sept. 21. One of the two "pirates” who, according to Mrs. Lillian Collings, filed her husband and then kidaped her from the motor boat nquin, was married and had ‘tree children, it was revealed xlay. Additional information regarding i crime was released with pubation’ today of Mrs. Collings’ almony during the various ex'inations to which she has been i'jected. The testimony reveals how the distracted woman pleaded with her .zidnaper, asking him whether he had "any heart” and why he had committed his brutal attack on Collings. "Sure, I have a heart,” Mrs. Collings quoted the older “pirate” as saying. “I have a wife and three children. I am a man of family, and I don’t make war on women and children.” Continued pleas to turn back and save Collings, whom she had last seen struggling in the water, were met with assurances that he would be “all right,” Mrs. Collings said. Investigation today impelled the authorities to swing toward a theory previously discarded—that the attack was made by maniacs—paranoiacs, according to Mrs. Collings’ attorneys—whose every action bore out the supposition of insanity. Marion Man Killed By United Press MARION, Ind., Sept. 21.—Charles Ripley, 44, was killed when the automobile he was driving collided head-on with another. Mrs. Andrew Stewart, riding with him, was seriously hurt.
gCpLLucl..)uring this great B Diamond, Watch or any piece “ Lifetime Jewelry” and pay psHbmZ: 4 ONLY 17c DOWN, and you get MONTHSTOPAY! wJ&i:' The Famous “Sessions” FULL SIZE m I ELECTRIC MANTEL SW/ CLOCK BEg Smoker 111 nc^es L° n S — s% Inches High Lounge Ump Thls ctock <iust as P ictarcd > ls A |RR smart—new in every respect! It KF Hraafigpf? chase W *of e *is 00 PU or requires no winding, oiling or JM • J ■ more. 3-Caniieiabra I regulating! Just plug it in for m able re reSing 3 shade life-long dependable service and w and smoking tray is fully guaranteed. ggfS S I ONLY 17c DOWN f tj 3 DIAMONDS ! J.wtl WATCH I Mi* 1 ? I gale J J 17c Down j Sale * 17c Down I. .: ", mjdjfc o II ||| Three brilliant diamonds in an i 10-.Tewel slender style wrist r. Z • *jl HI * sito IIPW Crest solid j watch record low price! I 111 l Damp, C lock or Dishes Free! * —l7 Months to Pay! Free with every purchase of $15.00 or 11| |;! CriCCAnO [ vll V more. A beautiful guaranteed clock I !> TMI *9l '! The new “Lubian Finish”—Requires ||| )7 1 no winding or cleaning—just plug in. |||||| jwa. <[ vAiy A Or This 111 \K^ C ;! 32-Piece Set of i| 'L !| || : BABY SPOON DISHES AND FORK SET || '"t"'. |' £ ‘ 11 [" 1” I|| ZgSSttHiS | Free with every purchase of $15.00 or J F| more. Modern design in nearest col- l!i!i! (BSS I *” •-•■■w I V/\JIt*I S i—ors. 6 Dinner plates—6 bread and \ I assacas:,- , i —a———Km t~7 / ‘sr* 137 W. Washington St. ( 6 Bauc?rs. Illltl _ Directly Opposite Indiana. Theater EsssaL
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Weds Millions
/ @ —
Married last April in Covington, Ky., the wedding of Mary Elizabeth Epling (above) of Bluefield, V/. Va., to George Huntington Hartford 11, heir to a $200,000,000 fortune, just has been announced. While young Hartford was secretly married, his mother was sued for SIOO,OOO by Mildred King, a pianist, who charged she was employed by Mrs. Hartford to interest George in girls of good family. Financial Editor Is Dead By United Press MARSHFIELD, Mass., Sept. 21. An hour after he had dictated his last story—an article on the British financial crisis—Arthur J. Bean, 47, financial editor of the Boston Post, died of heart disease at his home Sunday night. *
PREDICT OUSTER OF STATE FREE JOB DIRECTOR
L K. Fishback May Be Named Successor to Bert Robinson.
Ousting of Bert Robinson as director of the free employment service of the state industrial board and possible appointment of Leland K. Fishback, 1931 senate secretary, to the position, was predicted at the statehouse today. Chairman Roscoe Kiper of the industrial board and Commissioner Walter Wills, who is in charge of the employment branch of the board’s business, refused to either confirm or deny the report. Kiper did point out that “some reorganization will be necessary” due to a $4,000 cut in appropriations for the department. This reduction was made by the 1931 legislature and is effective when the new budget becomes operative at the beginning of the new fiscal year, Oct. 1. Kiper pointed out that any change of chief in the employment service would be announced by Governor Harry G. Leslie, with whose approval such appointments must be made. Allegation that the Governor favors ousting of Robinson is based on the charge that Robinson has overplayed the union labor game in the business of job distribution. It is reported that his queries to the
Almost Wild With Eczema When the dreadful itching of eczema drives you frantic, you need eterson’s Ointment. It’s so wonderful for skin eruptions, pimples, acne and salt rheums, that usually only two or three applications are needed to make the skin clear and healthy. A big box 35 cents at any drug store.—Advertisement.
jobless man includes the question: I IfUfft ODOrnill" estab- JtVTO UDOtKVt fished a record for anti-union ac- : tivity, the Governor having vetoed ATM ME! If TUT HIV the only two bills the union lobby Hilllirivlrill lIBT succeeded in getting past tl\e last ** * I l#n I session. His veto of the old age pension v . , •. , , , measure brought a stinging rebuke Yom KippUr IS Marked by from President Tom Taylor of the _ . _ .. state federation in his recent report Prayer and Fasting, to the state labor convention at Terre Haute. Observance of the Jewish high ~ - —■ holidays and ten days’ period of An attachment for motion-pic- hh ture projectors has been invented 1 come to cloße 1 to clean grease, oil spots and dirt sundown today. * from films as they are being ex- The last day of this period, Yom hibited. Kippur, the Day of Atonement, be-
i gxnxm hPm. . ■ ■"irfl 11 EYEEY ITEM LISTED A SENSATIONAL BARGAIN Items on Sale Tuesday and Wednesday Where Quantities Permit S SMEI YOUR JUMP FOR YOUR JUMP FOR l. S. Inspected . * ,v "' !pßpl||n vvr ve. ut SLICED EgjgESß BACON ■22X113 MILK Regular 10c Can 15*“- mS sy 2 Machine sliced with rind off. your jump for WBffIfIfWfHWWWW WOMEN’S SI.OO AND $1.50 Full-Fashioned. '■l-1 ill iRBIH Silk Hose QrrFTQn Brig i7 v; wLVfM BIL \ TlWnlrf 39c wnirfr I -fjf, ~ Mill runs and menders of SI.OO KjGflJLr&ig* % an d sl-50 grades. YOUR MOVE FOR YOUR MOVE FOR Women's children's Princess Slips shoes 1 ■* WTSM 39 c * . , _ . , Assorted styles ir all sizes up Assorted Pastel Shades to 2. YOUR JUMP FOR Men's Rayon■WWrVui* ffTSPWTTKm Plaited Hose JJSSSSHI eth7%* - ■jjjSS Seconds of 25c Grades YOUR MOVE FOR HD3I3SSDX23II YOUR JUMP FOR Inch, _ _ „ m OUTING M Ur V <El| Rubbing FLANNEL ALCOHOL S c yd - wMB ai 6* Pretty striped patterns. Large 16-ounce bottle. YOUR JIMP AFTER WjSSSBHI CHlLDßEN’sßjfflflfflfl DRESSES rpjrjgjjßfl ED9 io° ns Fancy Prints. YOUR MOVE FOR YOUR MOVE FOR YOUR MOVE FOR White Green Glass Children's Handkerchiefs Mixi BowU ANKLETS 12 for 4c- jV2 c **- ii i |j, —g— J Opposite the I wJ| Former Messenger Courthouse W W Si jgH Furniture Location
PAGE 3
gan at sundown Sunday and will continue until tonight. The most sacred in the Jewish calendar, it is marked fey prayer and fasting. Traditionally Yom Kippur is looked upon as the day upon which the Omnipotent God seals the fate of every human being. Prayer, fasting. penitence and charity serve as man’s intermediaries. The Jew seeks forgiveness on this day not only for himself but for ail mankind. Services for the Day of Atonement opened in all Indianapolis temples and synagogues with the chant of Kol Nidre, and wifi end this afternoon with the Neilah.
