Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 41, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1933 — Page 2

PAGE 2

HEALTH CHIEFS FIGHT STEPS TO SLASHBUDGET Department Officials Object to Efforts to Cut 1934 Funds. Health department officials objected to efforts to cut their budget for next year at a conference today with Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan. The department may be asked to take a $42,000 cut, in the face of assertions by its officials that the depression greatly has increased its work. Number of patients at city hospital and persons treated in their homes by hospital staff members, has doubled, department officials declare, and six doctors have been added to the staff in an effort to cope with the situation. Everybody in the department has assumed twice the amount of work they had formerly and have also accepted a 15 per cent salary cut,” is the situation as seen by officials.

_ i- 1 iB 'Qu>ia4 Downdtaito 'ZomeVtotfi fiot ... fjvTf A Sale of WHITE HATS “ ' To Take You Around the 4th of July Clock ' | Weeks and weeks ago we planned this big millinery sale ... to come just in time for the Fourth Linen of July! With this date in mind, we stocked up the hats to make you your most charming “best” • Rough Crepe a—white linen sailor with B— white straw braid hat with c-This smart k- v * v —for wherever you plan to go—whatever you plan to do! There are turbans, narrow brims, A n S teathStalnd &T' "r1 e riis?£4/ bbon band; flow - brim and ahy em- sailors, wide brims and big flop hats! Most of them are WHITE! Most of them are the soft, • Straw Br&lds roidered net crown, 54<* crushy kind that are so cool, so easy to wear, easy to clean and easy to pack! However, if you R K ZF? "If 1 *” a e * d trawling compan- e-a sophisticated looking urn. >,■ , don’t want white — or the crushy kind — there are PLENTY of pastels, to match your dress — and * DOUCIC ion. In white auk pMe, <• pioue, Kde^SC'S. turban “ PLENTY of the picturesque straws! Every one is a BARGAIN at this very special low price! # White Duck —Downstairs at Ayres. More (and Better) White Hatsll - 1 MATERIALS: • Simulated Panama! _Twttttp I w* f VI ? j 6 h , ats are *?T* crowd in your summer wardrobe! You need a white hat for SPORTS /*i r.L ’’ ino-t-iott, at 01 time —a W HITE hat for evening wear! And you can choose all three from this amaz- • ulOVe F&DnCS jH han WiHo I h f r 64 soft 6118 an . d cottons and straws for sports. For dining, the soft silk tur- _ . ...JjM : * pi ™ ec * hatß * or tcn '’ n - And white pique and linens to match your fashionable pique or linen eve- # JUIMIICr FeltS mng OUttlt. Plenty of soft pastel tints, if you prefer them! -Downstairs At Ayres. W J—This white duck hat has a Skam?"wlth W G ~ Sntcl ? ed silk cre Pe hat with H-A sailor-probably Irish. I-Youthful wearers should sun***/ 0 * 1 t 0

LOSES $3,158,855

Kenyon V. Painter (above), Cleveland capitalist, has accepted judgment against him for $3,158,855 in a suit brought by the conservator of the defunct Union Trust Cos. of Cleveland. A director of the bank, Mr. Painter, was revealed as a borrower of this amount from it. He saH he had borrowed to buy more bank stock to uphold its price.

NORMAN DAVIS AND ROOSEVELT IN CONFERENCE Roving Ambassador Dares Seven Miles of Fog on Trip to Schooner. By Vnited Prets LAKEMAN’S BAY, ROQUE ISLAND, Me., June 28.—A navy life boat today carried Norman Davis, America's roving ambassador, through seven miles of fog blanketed Atlahtic to the side of President Roosevelt on his schooner Amberjack 11. Davis, summoned to present to the chief executive full details of the Geneva disarmament conference, was transferred at sea from the destroyer Bernadou to the small from the destroyer Ellis which had slowly picked its way through a wall of white mist. Board the Amberjack the Presdent lost no time in getting down to brass tacks with Davis, who also is chief of the American delegation to the Geneva conference.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

WILL WED BRITON

■<*...' imm ßraSH SaggSotewK. jq/'- \

Gwendolyn McCormack, above, daughter of John McCormack, noted Irish-American tenor, soon will be the bride of Edward Pyke, scion of a prominent British family. Miss McCormack is herself a singer of repute. The wedding will be in Ireland.

O’NEILL SLATED TO GET STATE SECURITIES JOB Former Lieutenant-Gover-nor Again Will Be Named Department Chief. William P. O'Neill, Mishawaka, former Lieutenant-Governor and one of the few old-time Democrats at the statehouse, will be reappointed state securities commissioner, it was announced today by Governor Paul V. McNutt. O'Neill originally was appointed to the post when Frank Mayr Jr., South Bend, took office as secretary of state. Throughout the bitter battle between the Mayr and McNutt forces he avoided factionalism and remained an ardent Democrat. The securities commission and corporations department remain in Mayr's office, but McNutt names the personnel. Joseph Hoffman, Indianapolis attorney, will remain as corporations department head.

A Whale of a HEAT WAYE FOR weeks the mercury has been trying *to kick the top out of the thermometer . . . and Old Man Humidity has had everybody gasping and hanging on the | ropes! Everybody, that is, except the lucky thousands who have kept happy and cool through the intercession of Ayres Downstairs Stores’ industrious AI R - COOLING SYSTEM. These happy thousands were the smart ones—the thrifty ones who shopped in Ayres Downstairs w.iere a twenty-ton refrigerating plant, huge motor-driven fans and pumps cool and wash 56,850 cubic feet of air every minute. This arrangement makes our store the on’y cool spot in town in which to shop. Shop and Cool Off Downstairs at Ayres

JUNE 28, 1933