Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 68, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1933 — Page 2

PAGE 2

10-CENT HOURLY WAGE IS PAID ON REMODELING

Employer Defends Scale as ‘Made Work’ for Jobless. Carpenters hammers pound at 15 cents an hour Laborers shoulder boards and help rough in" repairs on a roof at 10 cents an hour. The carpenters and the laborer*, with hamnvr and muscles, are working in the Indianapolis Casting Compai.- emptv building, 131 South Harding street With NRA going into effect, the men working there may be thrown out of )ob* "I* wouldn't be profitable to work them at th- minimum wage of 30 cents an hour under the recovery act said F W Cornelius, owner of the building, and in charge of remodeling of the vacant building's roof 111 probabh have to quit the work. ' he added Cornelius admits that he has employed labor to remodel the roof of the casting company’s structures at wage which he says range from $1 to S3 a day " Better Than Charity Laborers on the project say they have been getting 10 rents an hour, while others who handled saw and hammer and w n re listed a* doing carpentry work received 15 rents an hour Cornelius protests that the project is a made work ' The men were around the place and wanted work and I gave it to them They figured it was better than living off the county. There was nothing holding them there They riuln t have to work for it unless they wanted to. They could quit at any time, he said He cited the fact that he was permitting one family to live In two rooms of the casting compam building Asked if he didn’t believe that the desire to obtain a weekly wage, regardless of how small, forced the men to hire themselves at that rate in preference to being idle, he said: "Maybe so but I worked at a lower wage when I was a boy Why. I've worked for $4 a week.'' Threatens Shutdown "Does The Indianapolis Times want to hire these men? I'll close this work down if there's going to be so much to do about it." he reiterated. Cornelius admitted that he had been remodeling the roof without a building permit for more than a months time If I'm wrong there. I'm willing to do what's right. But when we started out to fix the building and leaks in the roof, it was no more than a job of just cleaning up Then in patching a board would come loose and we'd nail It down. I don t know for what part of the work I should get a building permit." he said. Complaints Are Received After a conference with the city building commissioner, a fee of ST was paid by Cornelius for the work already done on the casting company. It was agreed that other work would be paid for at the conclusion of the job. Complaints have been received by The Times that the Frank M. D~il Coal Company, of which Cornelius is general manager, has employes working at as low r wage as those employed on the roof of the casting building. One workman told The Times that the largest pay he had received for one week's work was $5.31. "Some men working for me at the coal company work just part time. They're paid for their actual work," Cornelius defended. "But we have to stay around her? and wait for coal cars to unload," said one of the workmen. Cornelius said workmen of the coal company under NRA would be paid the minimum scale of 30 cents an Iwitir for the actual work. He praised the recovery act.

PLAN FIGHT ON T. B. Renewed Attack on Disrasr Will Bp Made in l.uisiana. B'i I nitft /'-> NEW ORLEANS July 29—Louisiana. with the assistance of the federal government, is preparing to launch a renewed attack against tuberculosis through the Mate's health, welfare and tuberculosis agencies Dr L Lumsden. director of the L T mted States Public Health Service of District No 4 stationed here, is preparing a survey of the state's needs for combating the plague, and will deliver a report to the state and city board of health and other public health agencies regarding the methods of attack WILLIAMS TO PRACTICE Democratic Committee Aid to Open Law Offices. Marshall Williams, secretary of the Democratic committee with headquarters at the Claypool. 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 th* 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 afe the officers of the South familyclub. J Albert South. Indianapolis, president: Charles South. Hamilton. O. vice-president, and Mrs. Hattie M Hopkms, Indianapolis, secretarytreasurer. REUNION DATE IS SET Daviess. Martin County Residents to Gather Here Aug. 13. Annual reunion of former residents of Daviess and Martin countiea 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 SicNamery, secretary-treasurer.

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) i water testod 100.000 B coll per one hundred cubic centimeters and 200.000 bacteria for one cubic centimeter. It was heavily polluted water. Crawfordsville wastes dump into Biir 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 Prince 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 water. Yet rules of the state board of sanitary engineering cite that "no samples shall show a positive test in one cubic centimeter." j The bacteria count in this water was 600 per cubic cenrimeter. 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 water. Private pools, properly chlorinated, will show B coli sometimes, when thickly populated, but in many pooLs th® 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" 1 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 outlet of this ditch into Big Sugar shower! 350.000 bacteria per cubic centimeter and ONE HUNDRED MILLION colon bacilli per 100 cubic centimeters. Crawfordsville children were seen wading in this wat®r 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. E. M KENNEY Seerttarv American Bridge Leacue npHE 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 tig hand." but rather. "I must b"> very careful to learn as quickly as possible whether or not this is going to be a misfit hand." Here is another of the interesting ■Jam hands that cam? up at the Hanover meet. South, the dealer, opened the contracting with on? spade North bid two diamonds. While North has two ace-king suits. I don't believe it a good jump force, especially when playing the constructive one over one system of bidding Remember that partner has made an original bid which shows a good hand Your great difficulty with that hand is that it also may be a misfit—your partner may have clubs and spades By jumping you tell partner that there is a possibility of the hands fitting and getting into a slam, and you certainly hav? 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 shows a five-card suit, therefore South now knows

Upper Left—Big Sugar creek from a point on the old farm of General Lew Wallace, author of Ben-Hur.” near Crawfordsville. 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 hope to catch anything but carp.

Fishermen along Big Sugar's banks tell of days when wastes 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.

YOUNG WIFE KILLED UNDER TRACTION CAR Coroner Told Joliet Woman Resented Teasing. flu I’nitnt Arm* -ANDERSON. Ind.. July 29 Mrs Lee Harrison Luck. 32. Joliet. 111.. was killed instantly Friday night when she was ground beneath the wheels of an eastbound Indian-apolis-Muncie interur'oan train. John Applegate. Muncie. 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 was 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. ARCTIC SPEAR IS FOUND Weapon. Twelve Feet Long. With Ivory Tip, Discovered. ISii 1 nitnl Prr** FLORENCE. Ore., July 29—An arctic spear, twelve feet long and tipped with ivory, was the most interesting among many curious finds on Heceta beach near here.

♦ None ¥ A-K-J-9-3 ♦ A-K-J-10-8-5 *J-2 ♦ K-J- | NORTH ] *6-5-9-7 fc J 3-2 ¥ 7-6- uj tr> ¥ 5 4-2 £ H ♦ Q-9-6-4 7.4 Dealer 3.2 + Q-9-5 SOUTH! .*6.4-3 AA-Q-10-8-4 VQ-10-8 ♦ None that his 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 lead a trump against a slam coil'race, 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, holding five of the opponeirs' diamonds. you know that he Is going to want to ruff diamonds m dummy. and the best opening is 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. ¥ <Copyright, 1913, bv KSA Service. Inc 1 I

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Lower Left—Children swimming In polluted water In Big Sugar, just above the power company's dam. Lower Right—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 hardier 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 similar to the point at the dam—unsafe.*

Services Car; Recognizes Motor Parts as His Own

The City in Brief

Mapleton Association will hold its seventh annual reunion at Brookside park Sunday. Aug. 6. at Brookside park. A basket dinner will be held at 1 p. m. Isaac Rogers, 13. of 1702 Lockwood street, was reported missing today by his mother. The Rogers boy has a cousin at Gosport. Ind., and it is believed he may have gone there. Gosport officials have been notified. J. F. Thompson, 3635 North Illinois street, reported to police today that a pair of field glasses had been stolen from his automobile and six gallons of gasoline siphoned from the tank Friday night. Report that he was rohl.rd of S2OO by two Negro women in the 100 block. South West street, -vas made to police today by Gary Hutchins, Hortonville, Ind. Equipment valued at more than SlO9 has been stolen from six vacant houses owned by him. No-ris P Shelby. 223 Hume-Mansur building. reported to police today. William G. Stroud returned to his home at 1543 Udell street Friday night to find it ransacked. Missing, he reported to police, are a chro-mium-plated percolator set. a mantle clock, and a gold watch, with a total value of $l2O Samuel S. Waters, chairman of the astronomy committee of the Nature Study Club, will lead a discussion tonight on summer stars in a meeting in Ellenberger park. A radio valued at .$25 was taken by a burglar from his store at 1102 South Meridian street. Charles Larman. owner, reported to police Friday night. The burglar entered by prying open a rear window. Plumbing equipment valued at $75 was stolen from a vacant house at 910 North Capitol avenue. Mrs Margaret Liska of Mt. Jackson sanitarium, the owner, reported to police Friday night. Two rings and a gold tie pin. valued at more than SSO. were stolen from the apartment of B C Miller. 320 Virginia avenue, during his absence, police were informed Friday night. Jerry Flanders. 21. of 2234 Carrollton avenue, reported to police early today that he had been held up by two Negro gunmen at the rear of the Antlers. North Meridian and St. Clair streets and robbed of $23. Seventh annual Roessler family reunion will be held at 2 Sunday at Brookside park Mrs. Charles Roessler is president; Mrs. Robert Ward, vice-president; Miss Bertha Roessler. secretary, and Robert Ward, treasurer.

Fletcher Ave. Savings & Loan Assn. Mall Account* If) f llakltal Cl H “ PsM Dividend* Safely Handled IU L maIKSI Oil on

In tossing a line over the side, j above or below the dam. the rod i 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. Th? General might have given that advice. Crawfords ville's General would have had his say about the ruining of Big Sugar as a spot for the sweep ! of the flies. Kindly though he 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 1 —even sportsmen—to see. Next: Along the Ranks of the Wabash—Long Ago and Today.

Filling Station Attendant Great Observer: Three Youths Held. When prizes are given for powers of observation. Elzle 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 railed 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, lookpd on nervously The spark plugs, said Kennedy, tlie carburetor, and the gasoline line feed were from his own car. Under arrest were Floyd Owens. Ii 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 Kennedy 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 ‘aid. He has hopes. DRIVER~HELD IN CRASH Negro Faces Drunkenness Count After Trollev-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. 8094 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, was 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. 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.

ATTEND THIS SUMMER Why Trait until fain Make your summer months count. A cool, pleasant place to work and study. Central Business College Architects & Builder* Rulr.. Ind’pln.

SOLVE WEIRD ‘ DEATH OF TWO IN RESTAURANT Eccentric Woman Recluse Gulps Poisoned Crust Used by Suicide. BY H. ALLEN SMITH I'nited I’re* Stiff C orrrpom)cnt NEW YORK. July 29—A New York woman, who, with $45 000 In the bank, spent her days in sorry poverty rather than touch her savings. was dead today because she unwittingly snatched up a crust ol bread, which already had served a despondent man as a means to end his life. There are many women in New York like Lillian Rosenfield; women who inhabit dirty cellar rooms, miserly and mysterious in their every movement They venture forth at night to: beg pennies on the street, some of them ever, rifling garbage cans, while their fat bank books are hidden somewhere ir their lodgings. Most of them are older than Lillian Rosenfield. She was only 43. But this story properly begins 1 with Henry Jellinek. Puts Poison on Bread Jellinek was S(V an automobile mechanic in business for himself j 6f late, business had been at a standstill with him. and his health ' was poor. He decided to kill him- 1 self. He went to an automat restaurant on upper Broadway—a place where patrons serve themselves by inserting nickels into slots for the items of food they desire. Jellinek carried a violent poison with him. He obtained bread and went to a balcony in the restaurant, where the bustle is not so great, pouring the poison on the bread. He ate part of It. then walked stoically from the table to a washroom, knowing that he would be, dead in a few minutes. Snatches I'p Crust Lillian Rosenfield. ill-dressed and haggard, was hovering nearby waiting for some customer to leave his table without consuming all hi; food. She spied the remainder of the bread, sat down at the table and wolfed it. As she rose to go. the agony struck her. She whimpered, fell to the floor, and died an hour later in Knickerbocker hospital. Jellinek already was dead in the washroom Police and the medical examiner were deeply puzzled at first. They j found the same poison in each of i the stomachs. On learning that th® eccentric woman held all men in contempt, j they reached the conclusion that I her death had been accidenal. while Jellinek had killed himself intentionally. The bankbooks, showing Lillian Rosenfield to have been a wealthy woman, were found in the cellar room she occupied. There she slept on a rickety bed that had no mat- , tress and lhat stood behind a win- j dow blocked by cardboard boxes.

FACTORY WILL REOPEN Fall Creek Firm at Mooresville to Rehire Ex-Employes. Reopening of the Fall Creek Manufacturing Company at Mooresville, with eventual re-employment of all former workmen, will take place soon, it has been announced by W O. McDaniel, manager. The business has been ; urchased by the International Furniture Company of Chicago and McDaniel. The Mooresville plant will continue the manufacture of overstaffed furniture after a shut down of a year and a half. McDaniel resigns from the Sales Promotion Corporation rs Indianapolis to assume his new duties. The local company, engaged in manufacture of an auxiliary bed for use with standard davenports, will be in charge of H. C. Black of Bloomington, it Is announced. GET CACHETS OF FIRE I’rominents Receive Descriptions of Dubois Blaze In 18RR. till I nili il Arm* DUBOIS. Pa., July 29.—The list of philatelists to whom cachets commemorating the Dubois fire of 1888 were mailed read like a chapter from a world's "Who's Who." They included King George V, Premier Mussolini, Chancellor Hitler, Mahatma Gandhi, Pope Pius XL President Roosevelt. A1 Smith, Jack Dempsey. Postmaster-General Farley and Tom Mix The cachets included a description of the fire, which swept eighteen blocks in the center of Dubois in 1888. TEACHERS STRUGGLE ON Payless Instructors Find Variety of Work for Summer. tty Vniirrl Arm* LORAIN, 0.. July 29—Undaunted by the fact that their salaries are unpaid and most of their reserve funds tied up in closed banks, Loram school teachers are turning to a variety of methods of making their living expenses. Here are a few of the summer vacation occupations of the instructors: Several have gone back to the farm; many have their own backyard gardens; two teachers are raising bees; two are writing fiction: one man is managing a summer resort concession.

AN IMPORTANT DECISION The decision to acquire the habit of making deposits at regular periods may prove to In* a decision of far reaching effect. It will insure the funds that future opportunities or ambitions may call for as well as provide a bulwark against adversity. Why not make vour decision today? Jhe inOIANA TRUST s c ur7 t lS l s $2,000,000.00 THE OLDEST TRUST COMPART IR IHDIARI

July I^so-Parls mob takes Louvre am sacks Tlulteries. IS 64 Booth larkin&tMi. gentle nun from Indiana, bornj _ Aeurrof yoo 'l't 0f fiJ z <4l N *#?/,/ ogiiiw OCpIMF CTLACR lfcW ftcnilo Mussolini bern. Liaises ritiht arm. arui rollers.

TIRADE AGAINST M'NUTT STIRS PARTY LEADERS Vigo County Democratic Chief Flays Governor on Patronage. Statehouse corridors are abuzz now regarding a verbal assault on Governor Paul V. McNutt by Richard Wernecke. long time leader of Vigo county Democracy. "Dick," who has been on the slior* end of patronage fights with the Governor, roundly assailed the chief executive at a Vigo county Democratic meeting attended by about 1.000 Thursday night. State Chairman R Earl Peters, highly praised by Wernecke. as were other state officials present. The Governor is attending the Governors' conference on the west coast. Burden of Wernecke’s plaint was to not blame Peters for loss of state patronage by Vigo county, but "put the blame on one man at the statehouse." Then, by praising all other state officials who the one man to blame became apparent. It was Governor McNutt This Is the first public tirnd“ against the Governor by a Democratic chiftain and stirred much comment. ROYAL SCOT ENGINEER PILOTS 20TH CENTURY Briton Gets C rack I’. S. Express in Ahead of Schedule. tty I tilled Arr ELKHART. Ind.. July 29—William Gilbertson of Carlisle, England, engineer of the Royal Scot, crack English passenger train, piloted the Twentieth Century Limited into Elkhart from Chicago Thursday night ahead of schedule. He made the 101-mile run In 105 minutes. Gilbertson and his stoker. J*. Jackson. have been displaying the Royal Scot at A Century of Progress in Chicago They took over the cab of the New York Central train on the first leg of their homeward trip. Gilbertson said he was amazed at the tremendousness of American trains. "We used an average of 160 pounds of coal per mile coming from Chicago.” he said. "We run the Royal Scot on thirty-three pounds a mile. The locomotive of the Royal Scot weighs only thirty-five tons as compared to the 175-ton weight of the century locomotive. "It seems to me that American roads could reduce operating costs considerably by lightening their equipment.” DELAY DIVORCE DECADE Couple Waits Cntil Children Grow I'p to Obtain Decree, Ail f ii ih ij l*t i *.< OMAHA. Neb., July 29—Charles Nelson, master plumber, and his wife. Mary Louise, delayed their divorce ten years until their two children reached maturity, they told Judge Rhoades, who gav® them a decree last week Following their estrangement. • hey continued to live togeth-r with the children. Although their interests were far apart, the children's happiness came first. Mrs. N°lson said, and neither did anything to detract from it.

FIDELITY TRUST CO. General Banking Licensed in Class A FIRE INSURANCE and All Other Lines Except Life 148 East Market Street

C/Jtifpl OUTLET ! r) M^J SHOE STORES RELIABLE SHOES AT lOViIEST PPICESi VO TV K. U lolilngion St. -T.ff- lifts W Waitiincti.il n. STORKS '1(19.111 *. Illlnoic SI.

JULY 29, 1933

SECRET POLICE URGED TO WIPE OUT KIDNAPING Patrick Roche. Noted Foe of Gangdom. Would Spy in Every 'Mob.' BY ROBERT T I.OI'GIIR\V I tilted Prrn Staff f orr*ipon*lrnt CHICAGO, July 29 A secret police with a spy in everv gang was the solution to the kidnaping menace suggested today by Patrick TerRoche, whose name long has been a terror of giyigdiuu. Roche, who nas fotiuht criminals twenty years as polio man. ;ed* ral agent and chief investigator for the Cook county state's . ttornev is th® only man to gather evidence in Chicago which drew a life sentcnc for a kidnaper who pleaded guiltv That was during his service under States Attorney John A Swanson, who was succeeded at the last election bv Thomas J Courtney. "Kidnaping is a national problem." Roache said today “it requires nation-wide alertness ts w? are to stamp it out. "War time measures should be used During the war. the government had agents in all the subversive groups operating ir. this country. We can do the same now—learn the identities and plans of kidnapers and save lives and fortunes " * CITY CLERGYMAN TO GO EAST FOR SESSION National Catholic Charities Conference Will Be In New York. Two Indianapolis men will attend the national conference of Catholic charities to be held at the Waldorf hotel. New York. Oct 1 to 4 Bishop Joseph Ritter will attend and the Rev. A R Fussenegger. director of the Catholic Community Center. 1004 North Pennsylvania street, will participate in the discussion m the interest of local relief work National leaders in all fields of social welfare will attend. Purpose of the gathering is to discuss social problems involved in the work of economic reconstruction. Alfred E. Smith, former Governor of New- York, will speak on "Leadershij) for Social Welfare." Other .sjieakers will include Frances Perkins, secretary of labor; Governor Herbert Lehman of New York if and Mayor John P. O'Brien of New* York. A method of washing and cooling air was patented as long ago as 1855. C^ART ROSE The speed with which the country has gotten back 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 thine 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. ana The fellow who buy* a ear next week gets a break starting August Is, license plates are half-priee. The Rose Tire Cos. has a State Auto I.ieense Branch for your convenience. a a a 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 per cent and wages and overhead increased by the N. FT A. code, there is no other alternative but to line up tire prices with present manufacturing costs. Your can still buy Miller Tires at practically the lowest prices in tire history. You can beat rising prices by buying now on our liberal cred’ plan. Liberal allowance so, your old tires. aaa Wo are open until midnight tonight and all day Sunday. Tires, batteries, vulcanizing, hattery sendee, gas. oil. lubrication. accessories, and auto radios. aaa 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. Victor and the Lyric. Installation while you wait. Terms gladly arranged. aaa \ CHIEF TIRE CHANGER MILLER TIRE DISTRIBUTORS