Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 68, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1933 Edition 02 — Page 2
PAGE 2
ROOSEVELTS IN HYDE PARK FOR MONTH OF REST
President's Party Reaches Hudson Estate After Trip From Capital. H<i I nil" 1 /’> "• HYDE PARK N Y. July 29 President Roosevelt fame back home today for a month of work ! and play among hi* old neighbors of Dutchess county. The special train bearing him to the familiar scenes of boyhood days pulled into the little station here at 9 a m , after a leisurely trip from Washington that began Friday night. The old neighbors," as Mr. Roosevelt affectionately terms them, | were out in force to bid him wel- , come Long before the tram arrived they had garnered from all j section* of the countryside Returning to historic Krum Elbow, the family home overlooking , the Hudson, for the first time since he left it to enter the Whit' House. Mr Roosevelt had the added joy of a reunion with mother. Mrs. Sarah Delano velt. who cair.e from Campobello. N B for the occasion Cheers Greet Arrival The President, who breakfasted in his private car with Mrs Roosevelt and members of the party, was given a rousing rheer as he appeared on the rear platform to see the flag bedecked Hyde Park village and to board the automobile waiting to carry him the five miles to Krum Eloow He and Mrs Roosevelt were smiling broadly as they responded to the cheers, the President waving affectionately to the group in which were friends he has known all his life. Carried Out Promise In returning to Hyde Park. Mr Roosevelt was carrying out a promise he made to the townsfolk whn he said gf)odbye iast March. He'told them at that tune that he would come back to establish the summer White House in their midst. From the station, the presidential party was driven immediately, escorted by a motorcvcle detail of state troopers who will remain on duty at the home as long as the President remains. | At the gates of the estate, however. the party divided, some gp- , ing to the house and others pro- 1 ceeding to Poughkeepsie, where White House offices have been established in charge of Secretary Marvin H Mclntyre. Conference Expected Mr. Roosevelt planned to spend a quiet week-end working only on I those matters he considers of vital} importance His friends explained that he wants the opportunity of obtaining as much rest and relaxation as possible during his stay, althoueh they felt that Krum Elbow the coming month will be the scene of conferences ebaring on the domestic and international situations. | He was expected to retrun to Washington the middle of August for a few days to clear away pressing official business and then return to remain until after Labor day.
GROCERS TO ASSEMBLE State-Wide Session Called for Action on Recovery Code. St ate-w ide meet me of retail grocers, sponsored bv the Indiana Retail Grocers' and Meat Dealers' Association, Inc., will be held at the Clavpool Aiis 6 and 7. Artion will be taken on President Roosevelt s blanket recovery code and reports received of agreements reached bv retailers in Indiana cities and towns. C. J. Steiss. Ft Wayne, is secretnrv of the nssoiration. Leo J. Stofleth. Evansville, is president. Fred W Steinsberger. 2037 East Tenth street, is a director of the organization. WILLIAMS TO PRACTICE Democratic Committee Aid to Open law Offices. Marshall Williams, secretary of the Democratic committee with headquarters at the Clavpool. announced today that he is entering law practice with offices in the Illinois building He will take charge of the committee secretaryship part-time until a successor is chosen at the reorganization of the committee next spring, he said SOUTH REUNION SUNDAY Several Hundred to Attend Annual Affair a* Riverside. Several hundred people are expected to attend the fifth annual reunion of the South family at Riverside park. Sunday afternoon. In charge of the programs are the officers of the South family club. J Albert &>uth, Indianapolis, president: Charles South.*Hamilton. O. vice-presidenl. and Mrs. Hattie M Hopkins. Indianapolis secretarytreasurer REUNION DATE IS SET Daviess. Martin Counts Residents to Gather Here Aug. 13. Annual reunion of former residents of Daviess and Martin counties will be held Aug. 13 at Garfield park with a program arranged for the entire day. Officers in charge are Thomas Nugent, president, and Miss Emma McNamerv, secretary-treasurer. Gone, but Not Forgotten Automobiles reported to notice s stolen belong to Mirshsil Stono 1421 Belle for.tsinr stree" Oldsmobiie touring S6-51 from Ri\-rside Psrk Cer:l Currans '.*o9 Pruitt atreer Port! roadster 89-464 from Fifteenth and Yindei streets Lee Hammer MS Sanders stree’ Chevrolet coarh 45-348 from in front of SJO Park avenue RACK HOME AGAIN Stolen automobiles recovered bv police belong to Robert B Pvans *SB River s\enue Chevrc.et coach found three miles east of Briircri Joanna JMeDonatd 1243 West Thirtieth street Clwvrolet sedan found in front of 1645 Barth avenue Ford roadster, no license plate* found at fbim-eurbtt street aud College avenue.
Pollution Is Ruining Big Sugar Creek Fishing Grounds Loved by Gen. Wallace
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Spawning Spots Being Blighted by Wastes of Industrialism. (Continued From Page One) water tested 100,000 B coli per one hundred cubic centimeters and 200,000 bacteria for one cubic centimeter. It was heavily polluted w'ater. Craw fordsville wastes dump into Big Sugar. The city is figuring on doing something about it. but the same old depression has acted as ether on the plans and ideas. Th* optimistic fisherman who tossed his line at this section of Big Sugar had as much chance of getting bass as he would if he'd dropped his line in a goldfish bowl. Above this Crown Prinre of the Carp Country is the electric light company's dam. Just on the other side of the dam. The Times writer found a group of youngsters hanging on to the dam. ducking each other in its waters. They were photographed In water that tested out. according to state laboratories, to contain 10.000 colon bacilli in 100 cubic centimeters of w’ater. Yet rules of the state board of sanitary engineering rite that "no samples shall show a positive test in one cubic centimeter." The bacteria count in this water was 600 per cubic centimeter, while the state says." No single sample shall contain more than 200 such bacteria per cubic centimeter." Colon bacilli, known as B. coli. is the positive test for organic pollution from human wastes. It is the key to safe swimming w’ater. Private i>ools, properly chlorinated, will show B. coli sometimes, when thickly populated, but in many pools the bacilli will not be present at any time, despite congestion. The only sunny ray for the children who swam in Big Sugar was that it was a creek and consequently running water. But 10,000 B coli in running water is too high to b* safe for swimming. day in and day out, health authorities say Just below the dam a sewage ditch empties into Big Sugar. A sample at the outlt of this ditch into Big Sugar showed 350.000 bacteria per cubic centimeter and ONE HUNDRED MILLION colon bacilli per 100 cubic centimeters. Crawfordsville children wpre seen wading in this and a short distance away several swam in it. The ditch was high in alkalinity, which might not bode well for fish downstream.
Contract Bridge
BY W. F. MKFNNFY VfrMirr Amfrlrn Briiti* llf THE desire to play the hand certainly is the cause of ruining a lot of good big hands. When you pick up a hand containing two strong suits, your first thought should not be. “Well, here is a nice big hand." but rather. "I must, b * very careful to learn as quickly as possibly whether or not this is going to be a misfit hand." Here is another of the interesting slam hands that cam* up at th r Hanover meet. South, the dealer, opened the contracting with one spade. North bid two diamonds While North has two ace-kmg suits, I don't believe it a good jump force, especially when playing the constructive one over one system of bidding. Rememb-r that partner has made an original bid which shows a good liand. Your great difficulty with that hand is that it also may be a misfit—your partner may have club* and spades. By jumping you tell partner that there is a possibility of the hands fitting and getting into a slam, and you certainly have no assurance or this pattern of a fit. After the two diamond bid. South will bid three clubs. North should bid three hearts. The bidding of the heart suit after the diamond suit shows definitely that you hold either two four-card suits or a six and a five-card suit. mam OVER three hearts. South will bid three spades. North then should bid four hearts Re-bidding the heart suit show* a five-card suit, South sow knows
Upper Loft—Big Sugar creek from a point on the old farm of General Lew Wallace, author of Ben-Hur," near Crawfordsvllle. Upper .Right—Where Big Sugar gets its B. coli! The photo shows a sewer emptying into the creek. Within 100 yards of the pipe carrying its wastes, a fisherman casts a line with no hojie to catch anything but carp.
Fishermen along Big Sugar’s banks tell of days when w-astes from a wire mill in the city redden the water to a copper hue and make fishing—good fishing—an impossibility. Numerous summer cottages cling to Big Sugar's bank below and above the dam. Occupants of cottages below the dam are at the mercy of pollution from Crawfordsville. If they swim, there's danger of disease.
MOTHER SEES TRAIN KILL BABY, SISTER Gary Tragedy Occurs as Panic Seizes Woman. Ry I'nitfd Prr* GARY. Ind.. July 29—An 18-months-old girl and her aunt were crushed to death by a Pennsylvania passenger train near here Friday night while the baby's mother lookPd on. powerless to help. Mrs. Mary Arvanitis was airing her baby in a buggy. Her sistpr. Mrs. Sailiope Lacoreece, was walking with her. Mrs. Arvanitis halted on a railroad track when she saw the train approaching. Mrs. Lacortece. seized with panic when she saw the approaching locomotive, took the baby from the buggy and leaped directly into the train's path. HUNT FLEEING CONVICTS Auto of Escaped Prisoners Believed Sighted by State Cop. Two convicts who escaped Friday from the Indiana state prison at Michigan City wer* believed hiding in Indianapolis today, following a report from a statp policeman that he pursued a car. reported to bo driven by the jail breakers, near Municipal Gardens. Lafayette road and KessW boulevard. Friday night. The officers' description of the automobile coincided with that of Warden Louis Kunkel of state prison.
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that hfs partner holds six diamonds and five hearts. You will notice that South did not support the hearts on the first round. It is not advisable to support with only three trumps, especially when the bidding indicates that it may be a four-card suit. However South can now bid five hearts to show a fit, and Ncith will go to six hearts. It generally does not pay to ead a trump against a slam contract, as about all that does is to allow the opponents to bid a slam and then call for a lead. However, in this particular case, hoidmg five of the opponents' diamonds. you know that he is going to want to ruff diamonds in dummy. and the best opening in a heart. I want you to lay the hand out and play it for six odd. And I will give you this tip—don't take your ace of spades out. and only ruff one diamond. You can make six odd. i, 4 Doju right, am jXKA Service. lacs
THE INDIANAPOLTS TOTES
Lower Left—Children swimming in polluted water in Big Sugar, just above the power company's dam. Lower Rignt—The study of General Lew- Wallace in Crawfordsville, where he wrote "Ben-Hur.’ His fishing tackle, used often on Big Sugar, hangs in the study for the curious to see.
Colds, infections of eye, ear, nose and throat are likely to be transmitted. If they fish, they may find that the game types have hunted cleaner waters downstream and be forced into contentment with hardipr species that can withstand the flood from open sewers. Cottagers above the dam are better situated for swimming, with the colon bacilli count lower, but In instances sirrtilar to the point at the dam—unsafe.
DRIVER HELDJN CRASH Negro Faces Drunkenness Count J After Trolley-Auto Collision. One driver is under arrest today following a street car-automobile collision at College avenue and Seventeenth street, .Friday night. The driver. Lawrence Fields. 39. Negro. 809 West Tenth street, is charged with drunkenness and operating a vehicle while under the influence of liquor. His companion, Betty Johnson, 36, Negro. 2145 Massachusetts avenue, w’as arrested on a drunkenness charge. George Nathan. 38, of 938 Meikel street, was injured Friday night when the car in which he was riding, driven by William Salsbury, I 27. of 1014 South Pensylvania street, collided with one driven by Minnie Irving. 52. of 3018 West St. Clair street. The accident occurred at West and Washington streets. OUTSMARTS HIMSELF Fears Bandits; Hides S3O in Trash Box; It's Gone. Orville Lay, 725 North Alabama street, kicked himself mentally this morning. Friday fearing holdup men w’ould invade Wimpy’s hamburger place, where he is employed. Lay deposited S3O in a trash box for safe keeping. Orville forgot and permitted a Negro helper to empty the trash box. Vanished the S3O. MEMORIAL RITES' HELD Services Honoring Charles J. Orbison Held in Superior Court. Memorial services for Charles J. Orbison. former superior court judge who died this week in California. were held today in superior court one by the Indianapolis Bar Associaton. Homer Elliott, association vicepresident. presided at the services.
Sendees Car; Recognizes Motor Parts as His Own
Filling Station Attendant Great Observer: Three Youths Held. When prizes are given for powers of observation. Elzie Kennedy. 1646 Gimber street, an employe at a filling station at 820 Troy avenue, will win not only the first, but the second and third, as well. Into the filling station late Friday chugged a dilapidated automobile. Kennedy serviced it. As he lifted the hood, he glanced at the motor, blinked his eyes, and took another look. He called police. Thursday, he said, his automobile, which had been stolen July 16. was found at Villa and Troy avenues, completely stripped. It was so bare, said Kennedy, that it gave him the Jitters. He pointed triumphantly to the motor of the dilapidated auto before him. as the three youths who had driven it in. looked on nervously. The spark plugs, said Kennedy, the carburetor, and the gasoline line feed were from his own car.
Fletcher Ave. Savings & Loan Assn. Handled J OE-MarkelSl
In tossing a line over the side, above or below the dam. the rod and reel boys will have their arguments anent game fish. "If you're fishing for carp and a sewer empties below a dam. then go below, but if you're hunting game fish, go above," is the advice of one Ike Walton. The General might have given that advice. Crawfordsville’s General would have had his say about the ruining of Big Sugar as a spot for the sweep of the flies. Kindly though lie was. he might have put his oar in for the | youngsters and their swimming in a stream with B. coli in it. But The General's fishing tackle hangs unused in his study for all —even sportsmen—to see. Next: Along the Banks of the ■ Wabash—Long Ago and Today.
NEGRO HERB DOCTOR SUCCUMBS TO BURNS Gasoline Stove Explodes in Tent Laboratory. George W. Percy, 54, Negro herb doctor, died in city hospital today of burns suffered Friday night when flames swept his tent home at the rear of 415 West Ohio street. Suffering from paralysis, Percy was trapped when a gasoline stove exploded, filling the tent with flames. Percy's home, - police said, was in Birmingham, Ala., where his sister lives. His assistant. Walter Kruse, 21. Negro, of East St. Louis. 111., was burned severely on the hands and arms as lie pulled Percy from the blaze and pulled the flaming clothing from his body. The paralyzed herb doctor pitched his tent a month ago. The tent was his living quarters, store and laboratory where he concocted herb medicine over a gasoline flame. DIVER STILL CRITICAL Youth Hurt in Gravel Pit Plunge lias Fighting Chance to Live. Mtno Foster, 17, of 353 Kenyon street, injured June 2 in a diving accident, still is holding to life by a slim thread. Methodist hospital physicians reported today. His neck broken and spinal rord crushed, young Foster, son of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Foster, is given little chance to pull through. Plung- ; ing into shallow water in a gravel i pit. Foster struck rocks, falling on : his back and neck. He suffered paralysis of the ' shoulders and has been kept under the influence of medicine for the last -few weeks.
Under arrest were Floyd Owens. 17. of 524 East Michigan street, the driver of the “crazy quilt." Harold Hapgood. 17. of 3015 Harlan street, and Richard Schuttle. 16, of 3016 Carson street. The latter two were slated on vagrancy counts. Owens is charged with vagrancy, failure to have a driver's license and license plates. Owens said he found the parts Kennecy claimed as his in a ditch near Villa and Troy avenues. Hapgood and Schuttle said they assisted him in fitting them to the old machine. Kennedy now needs just about thirty-nine other parts to put his own car in shape, police said. He has hopes. ATTEND THIS SUMMER Why wait until fait? Matte your summer month* count. A root, pleasant place to work and study. .Central Business College Architect* A Builders Bldg., Ind'pl*.
WAR TO LIMIT TO BE FOUGHT IN NRA JACKET Federal District Attorney to Prosecute Blue Eagle Cheaters. (Continued From Page Onei ette. Terre Haute and Greencastle. A similar flight to southern Indiana i cities is planned for Wednesday. Wells said his office was ’swamped" with signed agreement* from Indianapolis merchants co-operating j with the' President's program. Wells I said tTTat he had net had time to count the mail. Chambers of Commerce in the fol-' lowing cities wired Wells today that recovery- programs had oeen instituted. Wabash. Lafayette. Noblesville, Lebanon. Marshall, Flora. Marion. Nappanee, Orleans Brazil. Salem, Sullivan. Clinton. Crown Point. Booneviile. Kokomo. Columbus. Sheridan. Greensburg and Delphi. Bakers to Discos* Code West Disinfecting Corporation. 617 East Vermont street, received a letter from thpir New York office today announcing acceptance of the recovery code, according to J. S. Norman, manager who will announce details later. Armour <fc Cos., meat packers, an- : nounced adoption of the recovery 1 program today and a 25 per cent j increase in men power, according to A. L. Leoftard. Indianapolis plant general* manager. Indiana Bakers Association will meet at the Antlers Wednesday to discuss adoption of a code. Florists of Indiana have been invited to meet Tuesday night at the Severin to formulate a state code. The Indianapolis Co-Operative Council, an organization of Marion county funeral directors, adopted resolution pledging support at a meeting Friday. Thirty-nine lumber companies in the Indianapolis area signed the blanket code agreement at a meet- j ing Friday at the Architects and j Builders' building and an executive 1 committee appointed to arbitrate disputes. Real Silk Roosts Pay Employes of the Real Silk HosieryMills were given an increase of 37' j j per cent in hourly pay as a result of | the recovery campaign. Pay was increased 10 per cent and the fortyhour week adopted without a pay cut. The Brotherhood of Railway and Steamship Clrrks. Freight Handlers. Express and Station Employes wired the President today, pledging support. Woodsman Agency, insurance firm in the Fidelity building, announced that the firm had signed the recovery agreement and would make •"the necessary change effective July 31." Auto Dealers Called At a meeting of the Letter Shop Association of Indianapolis at the ColumbLa Club. Friday, steps were taken to form a permanent organization and to comply with the provisions of the national recoveryact. Alex Beck was elected president. Alice Anderson, vice-president, and Harold Devine, secretary. A state-wide call for automobile i dealers was issued Friday by W. J. Robinson, district director of the National Automobile Dealers Asso- | nation. to meet at the Athenaeum I Tuesday afternoon. The national industrial recovery 1 program will be discussed and committees appointed to work out an , Indiana code.
FUNERAL TO BE HELD FOR VICTIM OF FALL I,ast Rites for Percy Nicholson, 61, to Be Sunday Afternoon. Funeral services for Percy Nicholson. 61, of 240 East Ninth street, will be held Sunday afternoon in the Bert S. Gadd funeral home. Burial will be in Noblesville, where the Mystic Tie lodge will conduct services at the cemetery. Mr. Nicholson fell from a second floor window in his apartment Friday. His body was found on the sidewalk in front of his home. He was born in Noblesville, but had lived in Indianapolis about fifty years. Surviving is a son, James Nieholson, 920 North Alabama street. FERGUSON RITES SET Funeral of Former City Councilman Will Be Monday. Funeral services will be held Monday for Millard W. Ferguson. 48. former city councilman, who committed suicide Tuesday at his home, 380 North Holmes avenue, by taking gas. Rites will be held at 10 Monday morning at the George W. Usher funeral home. 2614 West Washington street. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Ferguson's body was found in the kitchen of his home, lying over the stove with a blanket over the head. All gas Jets had been turned on and all openings in the kitchen closed. He had been dead several hours. Mr. Ferguson was a city councilman during the administration of John L. Duvall, former mayor.
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July Paris mob takes Louvre and. sacks Tuillenes. IS Booth Tark- • in£loti,£enFlenun from InJi3tU, horn, C &f# rvf ytK'+e ffff <4i> ~ og.<oJ flack IMS’ Rcnilo Mussel ini born. Raises xi4>it arm ana 'hollers.]
CHICKEN THIEF OUTRUNS COPS Drops Fowls. However. So Relief Kitchen Will Have ‘Feast.’ Today was to be fried chicken day at the city relief kitchen on Maryland street. And it all results from a half j hour's chase early today on the north side. Patrolmen John Roman and Harry Hayes sighted a Negro sneaking through an alley -'ast of College 9 venue, just south of Twenty-second street. After him they went. In his hand, the Negro clutched a sack Through alleys and streets the trio went. Finally, the pursued man dropped his sack and fled for dear life, wit?\ full steam ahead. Roman and Hayes investigated tlie interior of the sack It contained several chickens, all apparently stolen. They turned them over to the relief kitchen. Hence the smacking of lips on Maryland street today.
YOUNG WIFE KILLED UNDER TRACTION CAR Coroner Told Joliet Woman Resented Teasing. Hy I'nitril Prr* ANDERSON. Ind., July 29 —Mrs. Lee Harrison Luck. 22. Joliet. 111., was killed instantly Friday night when she was ground beneath thp wheels of an east bound Indian-apolis-Muneie lnterurban train. John Applegate. Munrie. th* motorman. said the woman was lying motionless between the tracks. She was wearing a dark dress which made her invisible until the train was too close to stop. Mrs. Luck had been visiting her sister, Mrs. Mae Lasley, R. R 8 Coroner S. J. Stottlemeyer said he was informed that fifteen minutes before she w’as killed, Mrs. Luck left the Lasley home in a rage because she had been teased. Survivors include her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Luck. Joliet; a daughter Mary. 5. three brothers and five sisters. The whereabouts of Mrs. Luck's husband is unknown. Stottlemeyer said. 4-H RESULTS SCANNED Girl Winners of Judging Contests to Be Announced Soon. Results of the contests in which 300 4-H Club girls judged Friday will be announced soon, according to Janice Berlin, county girls’ club leader. Miss Berlin stated that it would take until next week to score the contests, which were held in the auditorium of L. S. Ayres Sc Cos. The 4-H club girls judgad foodstuffs, clothing and health. CITY MAN IS ELECTED Dr. W. S. Grow Named Officer of National Osteopathic Group. The American Osteopathic Association in session at Milwaukee, re-elected Dr. Walter fi Grow of Indianapolis as recording secretary of the legislative council Friday. Dr. Grow who has an office at 452 Consolidated building, lives at 4240 Park avenue.
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JULY 29, 1933
MISS PERKINS MAKES STEEL MILLS SURVEY Labor Secretary Gets Own Data of Conditions in Industry. tfj/ S>ri|/t-//off/?r f Xffrtpapsr i inm PITTrSBURGH July 29—Armed with her own impressions of modern steel-making and opinions of working hours and wages from thf men who make steel. Miss Frances Perkins was comple’ing her sm . \r today of a study which will be incorporated in her ch at -he opening of the hearing on the stM code Monday. From blast furnace to finishing mills the labor secretary and -h' Rov Francis Haas trudged fvhy watching the process which turns scrap iron and ore into jttru-tur.il steel; tonight she heard the working men tell of conditions in the steel mills. The sparks of iron which flew about her as a giant blast furmdisgorged its molten metal wet'* r. > less colorful than the stories of hardship and privation working men have experienced during the long years of depression. In the Homestead borough hall. 200 men and women packed council chambers; in the lobby of the post office a radical group rurt her: in the privacy of a Catholic priest's rectory she heard others. • There was little time and little occasion to question men at their work. She chose meetings to hear them. Away from the influence of company officials. Out of it came this impression: The steel worker wants above all else a chance to earn a living at regular work. Some spoke for thirty-two hours; some for a minimum of 50 cents an hour; some denounced comp idles for their "coercion against national unions." Most of them did not se-m to knowmuch about codes; they did knowthat the government seemed to be taking an interest in them and they were pleased. Take the crowd which met down under St. Ann's Catholic church. Homestead, a meeting scheduled privately through arrangement between Father Haas. Bishop Hugh C. Boyl of the Pittsburgh diocese and Father C. J. Rhtaney, the pastor. Throe hundred men. mostly of Slavic oxt-action. filled the hall. They prayed. Then Fnther Haas explained why the party was here. He mentioned President Roosevelt. Immediately the audience cheered and rose to its feet
rose tST jt i
The speed with which the country has gotten hack of the President leaves no doubt that what this country has needed is the kind of leadership that inspires confidence. The whole morale of the nation has changed since last March. The fine thing' is the fact that people have forgotten petty politics and all are standing shoulder to shoulder with the President in his efforts to drive the spectres of poverty, hunger and distress from our midst. tt a The fellow who buys a car next week gels a break Starting August Ist license plates are half-price. The Rose Tire Cos. has a State Auto License Branch for your convenience. B B B The Wall Street .Journal in a special article says that tire manufacturers are planning on further increases in order to get out of the red. With cotton prices up 60 per cent, rubber 160 p*r cent and wages and overhead increased by the X. It. A. code, there is no other alternative but to line up tire prices with present manufacturing costs. You* can still buy Miller Tires at practically the lowest prices in tire history. You can beat rising prices by buying now on our liberal credit plan. Liberal allowance for your old tires. B B B Wr are open until midnight tonight and all day Sunday. Tires, batteries, vulcanizing, battery service, gas, oil. lubrication. accessories, and auto radios. • B B B Your favorite Auto Radio is at the Rose Tire Cos. Come in and ask for a demonstration of any of the following makes: Majestic, Motorola, General Electric, Philco, Atwater Kent, R. C. A. Vid r and the Lyric. Installation while you wait. Terms gladly arranged. u 9 m CHIEF TIRF. CHANGER MILLER TIRE DISTRIBUTOR
