Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 42, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1933 — Page 2
PAGE 2
WOMAN DIES IN HOSPITAL AFTER BRIEF ILLNESS Rites for Mrs. Mary Wray, Cloak Company Employe, Set. Funeral services for Mrs. Mary T. Wray. 59, of 111 East Sixteenth street, will be held at 8:15 Friday morning in the home of a daughter. Mrs. William F. Sandmann, 5744 Carrollton avenue, and at 9 in SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Burial will be In Oak Hill cemetery, Crawfordsville. Mrs. Wray died Tuesday night at St. Vincent's hospital, after a week’s illness. She was born in Crawfordsville. where she lived until the death of her husband, Newton Wray. She had been an employe of Rink's Cloak house for ten years. Mrs. Sandmann is the only survivor. Henry D. Foley Rites Final rites for Henry D. Foley, 66, of 437 West Forty-fourth street, were to be held today at the Hall Christian church, twelve miles northwest of Indianapolis. Burial was to be in the Hall cemetery Mr. Foley died Tuesday, while visiting a daughter. Mrs. Edwin Shake of Eminence. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Milllie J. Foley; three daughters, Mrs. Shake, Miss Mytle Foley and Miss Hilda Foley, and two sons, Howard O. Folev of Indianapolis, and Charles Foley of Martinsville. Fall Injuiies Fatal • Mrs. Sarah Oakley, 72. 5283 East Raymond street, died Wednesday night at the city hospital. She was admitted to the hospital- June 22. Death was the result of a fractured thigh. Dies in Hospital Funeral services will be held at 8:30 Friday morning in the John J. Blackwell & Sons funeral home for Miss Margaret Stundon, who died at St. Francis hospital Wednesday. Services will be held in St. Bridget’s Catholic church at 9. Miss Stundon is survived by her brother, John Stundon. Funeral This Afternoon Funeral services for Delmar Thompson, 24. who died Monday in South Bend, were to be held at 2 today at the home of his mother, Mrs. Thressa Schnell, 817 West New York street. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Surviving Mr. Thompson is his mother; his father, Maynard Thompson; a sister, Mrs. Gladys Watson, and five brothers, Lucian, Bynum, Hemeth, Berlin and Lowell Thompson. Last Rites Set Final rites for Reinhold E Vetter, R. R. 1, Box 479. will be held at 2 Friday at the J. C. Wilson funeral home. Mr. Vetter died on Wednesday. He is survived by the It s a Wonderful Way • to Relieve Ugly Eczema For 20 years nuw, sootiiinsr. eoolinc Zemo has seldom fallod to relieve itching in five seconds, and clear lip stubborn cases of Eczema. This wonderful remedy gets such mna/.ing results because of its rare ingredients not used in other remedies. Get Zemo todav—• if you want to clear up Hashes, I’iiuples. Ringworm, ami Eczema. It's worth the price because you get relief. All druggists, 35c, 00c, sl.—Advertisement.
HATTREIMPECIAL Free Delivery Indiana CREDIT TERMS _^^——■ shop Our to Sufi Your Income Jl,ows! ■A H Hi M^FITOtTIfREI Him. 11. Jtlm IBmW^.r W. Washington St.
RETAINS STATE POST
r 1* ? JST
William P. O’Neill William P. O'Neill, Democratic veteran and one-time LieutenantGovernor, has been reappointed state securities commissioner by the McNutt administration.
PRESIDENT BATTLES FOG ON OCEAN TRIP Roosevelt in Final Caucus on Disarmament. /?;/ f nitrrl I'res* LAKEMAN'S BAY, ROQUE ISLAND, Me., June 29.—Despite the persistent fog which still limited visibility to about 100 yards, the yacht Amber jack 11, with President Roosevelt at the wheel, weighed anchor this morning and started on the final stage of his cruise to Campobello, N. B. Norman H. Davis, American am-bassador-at-large, attempting to bring about universal disarmament, received his final instructions frorh President Roosevelt aboard the schooner earlier. Davis, brought to this harbor aboard a naval destroyer, recounted to the President his efforts in the various European capitals and at Geneva to bring the disarmament conference to fruitful conclusion. He will return to Europe next week. ORDER KILLER’S DEATH Slayer of Girl, 12, Will Pay With Life in Electric Chair. Death sentence of Donald Glenn Shustron will be carried out at the Indiana state prison July 28, rehearing of the case having been denied by the supreme court. Shustron was convicted of the murder of Alberta Knight, 12, Whiting. widow, Mrs. Mary D. Vetter; a son, Richard Vetter, and two daughters, Mrs. Carl Klink and Mrs. Paul Pritchard. Long Illness Fatal Funeral services will be held at 8:30 Saturday at the home, 2121 Napoleon street, and at 9 at St. Catherine’s church, for John Glassmeyer, 76, who died Wednesday. Mr. Glassmeyer had been ill three years. He came to Indianapolis thirty-three years ago from Cincinnati. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Fred Geyler, , Mrs. Augusta Phillips and Mrs. John Sauer, and two sons, Robert and Lawrence Glassmeyer. Mrs. Margaret Cahill Dies Mrs. Margaret Cahill, 1459 South Meridian street, died on Wednesday night. She was the wife of Thomas Cahill. Other survivors are three sons, Thomas, Martin and Edwin, and two daughters. Mrs. Mary Baker and Mrs. Margaret Dwenger. Funeral services will be held at the residence at 8:30 Saturday and at 9 at St. John's Catholic church.
ZOOMING PRICES : THREATEN FARM RELIEF PROJECT i Revolt on Abandonment of Acreage May Follow New Highs. BY WILLIAM F. KERRY t'ritcd Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, June 29.—Skyrocketing commodity markets today held a mounting threat for PresI ident Roosevelt’s ambitious farm re- | lief program. Officials, nevertheless, moved ahead with arrangements to put it into effect. A 30cent tax was ordered imposed on all wheat used after July 8. The agricultural rehabilitation plan, involving hundreds of millions in cash benefits for the farmers, is dependent upon acreage reduction. It seeks to take enough farm land out of production of basic crops to ; hold prices at pre-war levels. Farmers confronted with the longed-for ,dollar wheat and li-cent I cotton may spurn the government’s offer to compensate them for abandoning a portion of their acreage. Make More Money They may argue that they would make more money by planting as much land as passible. But the agriculture department holds that permanently higher prices must rest on reduced pro- | duction. Officials assert that unless | this week's campaign for destruction | of one-fourth of the growing cotton ! crop is successful, the south likely lis to suffer three more years of j ruinous prices. The same thing, they believe, may |be true of wheat. They point out } that much of the present boom in wheat prices is attributed to A 1 drought and brings no benefit to i farmers whose crops has been ruined. They fear prices might collapse again if farmers attempt to recoup by harvesting a huge crop next year. 30-Cent Wheat Tax Apparently acting on this theory, | Acting Secretary Tugwell pro- ; claimed the 30-cent wheat tax, to be collected from millers and all | other first processors of wheat. Equivalent taxes will be levied on ! all stocks of flour and other wheat | products which millers and whole- | salers have on hand on July 9. The tax on flour will be $1.38 a barrel. Proceeds of the tax will be paid to farmers in benefits for reduced production in 1934 and 1935. First payments will be made this fall, tax will make the cost to the processor, $1.30, with the promise of corresponding increase down the line to the consumer of bread. DEFEND FEDERAL LOAN Public Works Funds to Be Repaid from Gas Tax, Is Claim. Defense of the expenditure of a proposed $1,400,000 government loan for public works was made today by county officials with the explanation that repayment will be made from gasoline tax funds, instead of direct taxation. It was announced that the 70 per cent of the loan which must be repaid will be from funds allotted by the state for highway construction. The remaining 30 per cent is a grant from the government loan fund for public works. Sixty-six employes started work Wednesday, and it was said that 1,200 will be employed in the next (year and a half.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Boom! Thanks! Victim’s Ad in Paper Tell% Bombers ‘Much Obliged’ for Publicity.
By United Preen Harrisburg, hi., June 29. An explosion awakened Delbert Balabas. He ran outside to find that his repair garage, near his home, had been partially wrecked by a bomb. The following advertisement signed by Balabas. appeared in Wednesday evening's paper: "Boom boom. Thanks for the advertising. While it is a little hard on nerves, and replacing broken glass will be expensive, we are doing business as usual. If you should wreck your car playing with bombs, bring it here, and we'll make it good as new.” Police said they had no clews as to who was responsible for the bombing.
HIGH GROTTO POST AWARDED TO FOSTER City Resident Installed as Grand Prophet. C. Wilbur Foster, who served as Sahara Grotto monarch in 1932, today was installed as grand venerable prophet of the Mystic Order Veiled Prophets of the Enchanted Realm at the international convention in Chicago. Foster is vice-president of Foster Engineering Service, and lives at 340 Kenyon street. The Sahara Pirate band won first prize in Division A of musical and drill units of individual Grottos. Local delegates included Monarch Delbert O. Wilmeth, Chief Justice Luther Manley, Master of Ceremonies Walter Beauchamp, Past Monarchs Othniel Hitch, Chaster O. Martin, Lawrence W. Drapier, Can Schey and Oliver R. Wald. PROPERTY PROTECTION COMMITTEE NAMED Gavin Payne Chairman of Realty Board’s New Division. Executive committee of the new property owners’ division of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board was announced today by Albert E. Uhl, division chairman. Committee chairman will be Gavin L. Payne, who has been active in moves for property tax relief. Aiding him will be J. Harry Miles, realty board president; Walter L. Stace, Indianapolis Home Builders’ Association president; Charles R. Yoke, Fletcher Avenue Savings and Loan Association president, and Charles J. Oval of Oval & Foster, lithographers. The division is being formed to work for protection of small property owners’ interests. CHILD BITTEN BY DOG Daughter of Hendricks Kenworthy Is Injured by Pet Chow, Genevieve Kenworthy, 14-year-old daughter of Hendricks Kenworthy, ninth ward Democratic chairman, was bitten on the lip Monday at Shafer lake by her six-, months-old chow puppy. The dog later was found dead and Kenworthy brought the head here for rabies examination to determine if Pasteur treatment will be necessary for his daughter.
CANADA PLANS LABORSESSION All Provinces May Be Rallied to Ottawa for Conference. By United Preet MONTREAL. June 29.—An effort to rally all Canadian provinces in a huge inter-provincial conference at Ottawa to study the enactment of uniform legislation limiting the hours of labor in trade and industry, is to be made by the Quebec government. The conference, which, it is hoped, will take place in September or October, will have as a basis for its deliberations Quebec’s limitation of hours and labor act. adopted during the last session of the provincial legislature. The Quebec government already has undertaken the enforcement of this act. After a conference between department of labor officials and employers and employes recently, it decreed that the act will first be extended to the building trades in the District of Montreal: The decree limits the number of hours of employment in that industry at forty a week. Eventually, it is hoped to extend the law to trade and industry at large, thus assuring a larger number of workers employed.
BUREAU WILL AID IN TRADE CODE PLANS l. . Business Group Will Draw Industry Schedules. Offer of the Indianapolis Better Business Bureau to assist trade organizations and industrial groups in formulating fair practical codes under the industrial recovery act was announced today by T. M. Overley, manager. The bureau’s advice will be limited largely to sections of codes dealing with advertising, selling and related problems of distribution. Overley said the bureau will meet with organizations and groups and aid committees in formulating fair practice codes, review proposed codes and make practical suggestios on standards of practice, and help business obtain practical application of such standards of practice after they are adopted and ratified by the government. ORDER DANCE HALL SHUT Neighbors’ Complaints of Noise Led to Closing Edict. The Barn, a dance hall at Thirtieth street, and Kessler boulevard, was ordered closed today by the park board. Residents in the vicinity said noise from the place disturbed them.
Will Enable You to Make For the sake of your family don’t start on that 4.50-21, 4.75-21 4*Bo 4th of July trip with smooth, dangerous tires. 1.75-19 515 Hign speed and thin tires are a dangerous combi- x 00.1 q Z9Z.iq c re nation on a hot day. Come in and let install a S 9 **** set of Miller Geared-to-the-Road Tires. 3.00-20, 5.25-20 5*70 They’re built not only Safe—but EX- , 5.00-21, 5.25-21 6.70 TRA SAFE against blow-outs with DOUBLE SHOCK ABSORBER W&BBSM J ’ 0-25 PLIES right below the mas- 5.50-19 700 sive tread and TWO EXStock Limited Come Early Buy NOW Before PRICES GO UP wtj 59 95 We Expect a Price Raise Any Day 4.40-21 $6.4*0 $5.00 5.25-18 "&15 7.35 II 4.50- 6.80 5.40 5.25-19 9.35 7.60 wWtMMmCn 4.50- 7.10 5.60 5.25-20 9.65 7.75 I 4-75-19 7.60 6.05 5.25-21 10.00 8.00 4.75-20 7.90 6.35 5.50-18 10.20 8.15 5.00-19 8.15 6.55 5.50-19 10.45 8.50 WUjKffl' OPEN 7 A.M. to MIDNIGHT - nnl? 122 S’S 6 o °- 20 1225 10 90 WZT Compbt. Tire, Battery, Auto Radio, 0.00-21 8.90 7.00 6.00-21 12.60 11.10 *8? Lubrlca „ on and Road Service — Rt. 83SS Other Sizes Proportionately Low r
YOUR CREDIT H GOOD HERE OREO RII RCCDUIIT
Slugs Irate Father Lawson Edens. 43. of 1502 Abbatolr street, ordered a young man.
4$ mi mn u U j UUu A L to wear with your slacks W 4 y iV ,4/ jV V - Plenty of ' “MESHES” and “WHITES” on sale at jm department by themselves, just 11 Not only Meshes, but RIBBED effects, njjgfl new CLOCK ideas. Not only whites—but new frosty tans and kv\ \ blues and grays and greens and pastel shades. J Lisles and Silks and Rayons and combinations. New Short (Ankle) They are about the best looking hose that Socks, ribbed efTects_2sC ever "? lked , in the company of a popular price, 25^. L STRAUSS & CO.
who had been paying attention to his daughter Gladys, to stay away in the future. The young man.
JUNE 29, 1933
known only to Edens as “Gene." hit the protesting father on the nose, causing lacerations and bruises.
