Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 70, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 August 1933 — Page 11
AUG. 1, 1933
WEIGHTY HOGS OFF 10 CENTS AT CITY YARDS Cattle Steady to Lower in Mixed Trade: Sheep Weak. Hogs weighing from 160 pounds up mostly 10 rents lower this morning at the Union Stockyards. Underweights showed “no change from the previous session The bulk. 160 to 200 pounds, soid for $4 55 to *4 0 , 200 to 275 pounds. v s46oto $4 65 Top price was S4 70. Weights of 275 pounds and over sold for $4 20 to $4 50. 140 to 160 pounds. $3 75 to $4 Light pigs sold down , to $250 Packing sows brought $3 25 to $3 85 Receipts were estimated at 7.000 Holdovers were .384 A lower trend was in evidence on beef steers under $6 in the cattle market. Other classes held steady. Several steers sold for $6 25 to $7 25. lower grades bringing $4 50 to $5 75. Heifers made the market at $4.25 to $6 cows around $2 75 to S3 50. Receipts were 1,700 Vealers were 50 rents lower at $5.50 Calf receipts were 600. I.ambs were weak the top of $8 25 paid sparingly Bulk of ewe and wether lambs brought $7.50 to $8 Burks sold for a dollar less. Culls and throwouts were to be had for $3 50 to $6 Receipts were 2 200. Asking was higher on hogs at Chicago with bids about stead’, with the previous range Good to choice 200 to 250 pounders were bid in at $4 55 to $4 60. Receipts were 18 000. including 6.000 direct. Holdovers were 3 000 Cattle- Receipts were 5 000; calves. 2 500; market, strong Sheep were steady with receipts of 9,000. HOG.H July Bulk Top. Receipts 25 14 45*; 4 so It 55 12 000 26 4 55*; 4 70 4 75 5 500 27. 4 7P4, 4 80 4 85 6 500 2* 4 55*i 4 70 4 70 8 000 2>j 460 5 470 4 70 2.000 31 4 OS’® 4 75 4 75 6.500 ■Vi* l 4 55 S 4 45 4 70 7.000 Market, lower. (140-160i G<wi and choice 8 3 7S"L 400 • Licht Weights—(l6o 180i 000(1 and choice 4 55 • 1180-200 1 Ooo.J and choice 4 60 Medium Weights—-(2oo-220) Good and choice 4 65 j (200-250) Good and choice 4 65 i 470 Hf.iS) Weights - . (250 2901 Good and choice 4 50'., 460 .290-350) Good and < hoice 4 30'. 4 50. Pac king Sows — .350 down) Good 350 I 385 (3,50 upi Good 3 25*( 3 7a 100-301 Good and cnoice 3 OO'.i 3 50 Slaughter Pigs - (100-130' Good and choice 2 50 4? 3 15 , CATTI.F. Receipts. 1.700; market, ateadr. (1 050-1.100. Good and choice $ 5 754, ,25 Common and medium 4 —s*r 5..5 (1 100 1.500. Good and choice * '* -l f25 Common and medium ... 4 jD'u sao ■ Heifers—-(sso-7501 Good and choice 500 o 6.5 Common and medium 3 25 i 5 4KJ (750 900,--Good and choice 4 50(.j 600 Common and medium 3 25'<i 4 50 Cows Qnoci Common and medium l,oi cutter and medium 1 50',i 2.50 Bulls ivearlingK excluded Good .beef. Cutter, r unmon and medium 2.00'u 3 oo 5 t Ulß< Vteretpta. . market, lower. Good and rhoice 7 500d 50 ->0 Medium 3 50-y sno Culland Common - 00sj 3an - Calves - (250 500. ,„„ . „ Good and rhoice Common and medium . on and 4 00 Feeder and Stocker Cattle (500-800. ... Good and choice 4 50 <i 5 .5 Common and medium 3 00',i 450 . (800-1 500. Good and choice 4 50 ,t 5 .5 Common and medium 300 w 450 sHUP IMI I.AMBS Receipts. •; ?(MI market, stexiiv. tambs Sliorn Ba;ls - (90 lb? down, Good .V cheurr S 7 00'u 82' (90 ,bs down. Com and med 4 00*5 7.00 Ewe*— Oood and chotre ...... 2 004i 3.00 Ccmmon and medium l.OOsi 2 00
Other Livestock BY IMTfn PRESS CHICAt.O. Auk 1 Hof.< Rfcwpls 1* - 000. mrludine 6 (too direct .Mow (e *l*s strn3\ mn! bid". 10 to 20c lower. 200-200 lbs $4 5o >t 46$ extreme top $4 70. later hid;, around $4 40 and down. 140-190 ibs . S3 7.V.1 460 pigs s3'.i3 sii packing sn*s. $3 50V, . light ligh-v. 140-160 lbs good and choice $3 50 ~ 4 40. lightweights 160-200 lb- good and choice J4IS ■< 460 medium weights 200.250 lbs good and choice S4 40 , 1.0 hears weights. 250-350 lbs . good and choice, S4 15414*0 parking sows 275-550 lb* good and choice, S3 25 .4 40 slaughter pigs 100-160 lbs good and choice. s7'.i 3SO Cattle Receipts. 5.000 calves 2 500 strirtlv good and choice fed steers and senrlmgs strong to 15c higher: in-between grades steady, but common graves and warmed up offering' verv dull, weak to lower $7 so paid for strictly choice long sear.mgs and medium weight steers, set - era! loads. S6 75<u 735 practically nothing done on kinds of \al ie to sell at $5 50 and down all cows slow sealers strong at $5 50 O 6 25. a few S6 50 and better, slaughter cafle and sealer’ Steers 450-900 lbs . good and choice $5. iso w 7.25 900-1.100 lbs. good !Mid choice $5 SO ~ 750 1 1004,300 lbs good and choice. $5 50 750 1 300l.son 'bs. good and choice <s 75m7 so SSO-1.303 !b common and medium s3<m 575 heifers 550-750 ibs good and choice. $5 : 6 25. common and medium. $2 75 •5. rows good. $3 so i4 75 common and medium. *2 50i 375 low c :”rr and cutler cows 50 M 2 75. bulls yearlings exc ude good beef $3 20.i 4 cutter, common and medluSi. $3 .30 u3 75 sealers good and choice S3 75 u 6 50 medium $3 575 cull and common. $3 so 5 stocker and feeder cattle steers SOC-I 050 lbs g -od and choice $4 50',1 575 common atuf medium. $3 u 4 50 Sheep Receip’s 9 000 lambs'rong ’O heig er on paper, mostly s'eadv to strong improved quail’s considerea bulk notues $7 75 6 ear.- top. $6 MJ otheis ar.d Choice rangers held aOose $4 25. slaughter sheep and ’a mbs I.a mbs 90 ibs. down, goon and chore $6 75 -6 25 common and medium. $A75> ,r 7. ewe-. 90-150 lbs good and choice. <1 25:2 75 all weights common and medium $1 j 1 75. Cl r:\FI ASn Sug 1 Caf e Receipts. 150 market, draggv and a shade lower. laige number of ’hm cattle shipped oil from drouth sections of slate choice steers. 750-7 100 bs at 16 50 r 7 25. good heifer*. 600-1 000 bs $.4 50 6 25* cows and bolls unchanged. C;vr> Receipts. 400 receipts mostly common, market steadv in dull trading choice to pttrr.e. $7 i 7 50. common 350.4 50 Sheep Receipts. 1 OOP fully v’eadv in slow trading prices generally unchanged .<’ Mondays prices Hogs Receipt 1100 market slow ar.d steads to !0c lower, good clean tip on all ara.iable hogs choice. 220-250-lh butchers 4 90. light butchers , 180250 bs 54 65 440 FT W4YVF Aug 1 Hogs 15c off 200-250 lbs . $4 60 2>o-300 lbs $4 50 300350 .be. $4 35 170-30 C lbs. $4 50 160-170 lbs $4 35 150-16 lb *4 151 $3 "5. .30-140 lbs $3 55 100-1 •< S3 roughs $3 50 s’ags $2 Ce'ics $5 50. lames $7 50 cattle, stead’-. unchanged PITTSBURGH. Aug 1 Cattle Receipts 20. marke’ s’eadt Receipts .“>OO marke’ actise steadv prime h*a\ies. 240300 r> $4 90-t 3; heart mixed 210-240 lbs $5 ix3 10. mediums !8-'-210 .bs $5 ; 5 10. hear Yorkers $4 75m 5 light Yorkers 120-145 lbs . $4 (i 25 |i US ||m H 3 23. roughs $5 -4 75 sheep and lamn< Receipts 6>o market stead' iambs good to choice 90 lb* down l*7s,i*. medium, 90 lbs down s3"t* medium lamb}, light fed $5 50d6 50 sheep wethers prune $2 50 1 3 fair to f 14. $1 75:2 25 ewes, medium to choice its: 2 Cal'es Receipts. 50 market steads sealers good $5 ■: 37' medium. $4 50ti5. heart and thitt *l5O i3 50 TOI.EDO. Aug 1 H-ygs Receipts 200. market steadv to 5c lower heavy sorkers. $4 65 mtked ar.d bu.k of sale- ,4 6> .4 70. rough*. $2 75‘: 3 10 Cattle- Receipts, light market steadv to strung calves, receipts, light market, steadv to strong Sheer ard lamb* Receipts light, market steadv
55^ A D'a-a at Family Lira' HELEN HAYES i And ROBT. MONTGOMERY /a tb* *' , 9‘-C’-Go ! dyn-\ , c.e’ HU “ANOTHER LANGUAGE " ——■ —■b — x ■= MARIE (ttffi DRESSLER f mJY WALLACE if*®* BEERY ••TUGBOAT ANNIE" ,
—Todav and Tomorrow — Racketeer Crimes Flourish With Assistance of Public and Connivance of Officials. BY WALTER LIPPMAVN KIDNAPING, racketeering and bootlegging differ from ordinary crimes j . of passion and violence in that the criminals operate with the as- j sistance of the public and with the connivance of the authorities. They constitute, therefore, a fairly distinct category of crime and a peculiarly dangerous one in that these crimes tend to be wen organized well financed and well protected The ordinary criminal works with the knowledge that every mans haiwi is against him The bootlegger, the racketeer and the kidnaper have allies among the innocent and respectable. The attack iflor. these forms of crime is not. there-
fore merely a matter of making detection more certain and the punishment more swift. Nor is it. in any shortterm view of the problem, a matter of dealing with the poisoned heredity, the early maladjustments and the corrupting environment by which criminal tendencies .ire fixed These organized crimes aie the products of a bad political and social organization and of bad public policy. The most obvious example is, of course, bootlegging. Here is a vast industry, created by constitutional fiat, run by statutory outlaws, and patronized by a very great part of respectable society. It is doubtful whether there ever has been, in any modern civilized state, such a vast alliance of the respectable and the law-breaking as we have under the eighteenth amendment . For as that law has worked. mo6t of us, including
judges and policemen and preachers and professors and editors, old gentlemen, schoolboys, dowagers and young girls have been the customers and the patrons of A1 Capone and Jack Diamond and their like This has meant that, the force of opinion has been exerted to protect the A1 Capones in their main business of law breaking The source of racketeering is less obvious to many persons, but ,
in the main. it. too. is th*- product] of a false conception of public policy The chief organized rackets derive either from cut-throat competition in organized little industries or from a lack of a strong organized system of collective bargaining for labor. a a a r 'T'HE fetish of competition and the laws against combination, have produced the racketeering trade association in which employers pay tribute to gangsters and get in return not onv protection against the violence of the gangsters, but against the competition of new employers in the same line of business. That is why it is so hard to persuade business men to testify against racketeers In part they are terrorized and in part they are loath
Other Livestock BV ( SITED PKF.SS LAFAYETTE Aug 1 Hogs Market 5 (10c low v: 2*9-30(1 lbs. $4 50'. 4 SO. 300325 lbs . 44 2.' 170-200 ib . 54.35424.45; ; 140-170 ibs . S3 60.(3 H.>. 1(10-140 ib*.. $2 25 1 .3 in rougl S3 50 down; top calves. $4 50. tip iamb*. $;. EAST ST LOUIS 111 . Aug I—Hogs 1 Receipt. 12.000. market. 5" 10c liigner. pigs not established top. $4 60; 170-280 lb $4 50,4 55. lew $4 45 140-160 lbs. s.(> 5 ,4 35. sows. $3 45',, 365 Cattle Rereip 4.000; rapes, 2 000, mnrket. openinn sal'-s generally steeds with sausage bo.: 'ending lower; a tew steers. $5 40'./ 610 mixed vearlings and hetfe-?. $4 50',/ individual lieners upward to $6. top ■ esrern heifer: $4 25. cow s. *2 50'', 3 25. l->w outers. $1 50., 185 good and choice •.ealer.* 85.50; slaughter steers. 530-1.100 lb- soon arm r.ioic.r 15 504/7 common and medium 53 254(5.50; l.lliO-I.SOO lbs. choice so Os, 7. good. 85 75'-, 650 medium. s 4 .0,( 575 Sheep Receipts. 5 COO. m.irkct. no ear:-. ar> ~n asking eadv Parker- lalku.g fit is> ; hi. ding be'ter .atnbs around 5.75 <. lambs 90 lbs. down, good ' ..11b choice ,-..3 i.u.mon ana medium. S3 '.o'., 7 veari.i g"C ier . ••0-110 .b good and choice $12., 4 "0. ewes. .90-150 ,o> good and run • $1.504,2.75. all weights common and medium sl', 2.
lt‘i I inn * S/trrlnl lot 1.4V11.1 F Aug 1 —Cattle Receipts. 12- .-low and ..round steady 011 ail classes. • i ■ 451 plain Kinds down lo S3 ami less; net ter finished ted offerings eligible to $5 75 bulk beef cow v. 32 50s 13 Sow cut- 1 teiv sl:>o’,/2 25. hulls slow quotable mosth $2 75 down, bulk Mocker* . alable $4 down, tew eligible higher, calves, receipts, ?0d! -leady bet’e; grade- mos: > $4 M 4.50. medium and lewer grades. ii.so down: buyers discriminating again*', heavy grassy calves Hogs Receipt-. 1.000 sows :md 25c ~iv er. nlfrs 10c ff. 13-;*s • b . <4 75 275 lbs. up. $4 25. 110-185 tbs . $3 75. 140 lbs down. 32 05; sow . $3; slag*. 51 15 Sheep Receipt*. 1.540. mostly stead' bulk better truck la.-ab*. $7 25": 1 7 50, few choice i:mds eligible higher most j bucks. 36 2,3'/6 50. immature light lambs. - 53,,i fat ewes. S! ,2 bulk better stock 1 ewes. *6 M 7 50 per head, Receip’s Monday Ca’Me, 580 calve*. 555. hogs. 1.708. ' sheep 4 323 Shipment* Monday Cattle. 149 calves 445. hog.-. 689 sheep. 2.569. , CHICAGO I Kl R M.IKKI T R" fnltril I‘rett* CHICAGO. Aug 1 Fruit and vegetable quotations Apples Michigan duchess Lu.-hei. 85c jsl 2a Michigan transparent* bushel. 60c -i $1 15 red- bushel. 514/1.15. - tries Michigan red.-. 31 10§ I 50. Cherries Michigan sour. 31 ,11 3.5. sweet. <1 25Ml .50 Rlarkberries Michigan. SI 50 165 Blueberries Michigan. 51753/2.50. Uoos/berrie* Michigan. $1 50 1 1 11 5 Curreots Michigan. ci.7562.25 Canteloupaa Indiana 75cm5125 Carrots- Illinois, 'j /2' 2 C Let'ure Western*. $2,154) 3.25. Spinach Illinois 40./60c Cucumber* Illinois. 25m 75c. Michigan. SOm 7sc Beans Illinois and Michigan. 50c sl. Michigan lima*. 75c /SI Peaches—lllinois. *140',/ 160 Corn Illinois. 40 / 75c Tomatoes— Illinois, 25 30c. Michigan. 40',t 90c Strawberries Michigan. $1 35 Eggplant Illinois 125 Peppers Illinois. 7Ssißsc Squa.shIllinols 75r r.infrloupes Illinois. 50',, 75c Michigan *1m1.75. Beets Illinois. 1 1 2 r Radishes Illinois 'j,ilc Cabbage Illinois, sl7s'// 275 Ce'-rv Michigan. 30,/ 80c Onion market Illinois vellows bushel. 75c. lowa vellows bushel. 75',/850.
ms*S> v VO ‘‘WHEN LADIES MEET” M Ann Harding Robert Montgomery , Thilrxdtiy—Laurel 4 Hardy, ’’levH’ Brotlirr” VQ TON IfrHT S . fC E NTAT lONS PVT* cs iT ' °°* - !L:’i\ NEIGHBORHOOD THEATERf
NORTH SIDE bf-1 ■ :[•■■■ Family Site < hi*"OANGEBOI'S CROSSROADS" , j - m m IMk A Rllif lll'lilLl Family Nit* Joan Rlond*ll 'BROADWAY BAD' EN*bl* at Mans. Family Nit* William Brad "OLIVER TWIST" "I *t 30th iyat 1 90P ’it 1 ’ - F*ltnr* France* D** "CRIME OF THF CFNTI 8V WIILI AM POWELL in “LAWYER MAN" ip* _* **' FIGITIVE from a*CHAFs'oANG” naMPPaaB st .Alth H*nrT Carat •ADORABLE t tMri t-nd and CoU*(* fSHSII Ul MVI Rudy tall** "INTERNATIONAL HOI SE" rnrn ■ m|■ 11 SI- Clair at EL Warns A H I HIH Richard trim Chari** Bickford THE SONG OF THE EAGLE" EAST SIDE IpYTT/alll Hi) Dearborn at 10th WullAairW* laurel Hard* in •THE DEVII.’S BROTHER" mb jti JTTTnBB **** F - Tfn, k ■iJiiLliJM Rurna. •IM ERNATIONAL HOUSE” gmmu • THE SILVER C ORD” Frrrlrir March—Carol* Lombard “EAGLE AND THE HAWK” ■■nrrrftMßß *- wash. Bariain Nit* j “. Jack Holt SiTRANGER* MARRY" I
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Walter Lippmann
- ~ j to give up the advantage of the combination. The union side of racketeering is the product, on the other hand, of the long resistance by benighted employes to open well organized, truly representative collective bargaining. The resistance has been sufficient in j many trades to drive out responsible j labor officials and has cleared the j way for the gangster labor leader. Against the organized criminality which lives on bootlegging the repeal of the eighteenth amendment will do much. For when the production of liquor ceases to be a statutory crime, the public will cease to ally itself with the underworld in order to obtain liquor. Repeal will not, of coures, solve the liquor problem.
It will take more than repeal to do that. But it will solve the problem of crime as it arises from bootlegging. It will cut off the largest source of money which has ever gone to finance the underworld. Against racketeering the policy embodied in the national recovery get is the most promising that ever has been proposed. That act, if it is as wisely administered as it is well conceived, can be used to reorganize the disorderly, diseased, overcompetitive, irresponsible industries in which racketeering flourishes. It can organize them, standardize them and develop means of protection under the law, thus depriving the racketeer of that justification for his existence which today keeps him from being treated as a wholly predatory criminal. 0 a a tt
IN this category the most difficult crimp to deal with is kidnaping. because thp victim is so helpless. There can be little doubt that kidnaping would cease if the family and friends of the victim could be prevented from paying the ransom. But who has the heart to say that the Lindberghs should not have tried to ransom their baby, or Mr. O'Connell his son? Who, if he were the .victim, would be brave enough to say. “Do not ransom me "? What jury would convict a father for “compounding a felony" by ransoming his child? Yet there is no doubt that the kidnapers flourish just because they know the families will pay. and shat the public authorities will stand aside and give them a good chance to escape -rth the ransom That is what makes *he problem so poignant. There is no difficulty about arousing public sentiment for inflicting the death penalty on kidnapers. But first, you have to catch the kidnaper. and how are you going to do that if the police stand aside .vhile the family pays the ransom and meets the kidnaper's terms? The question is whether the American people are. Spartan enough to enact and enforce laws which forbid private dealings with kidnapers and, therefore, make kidnaping unprofitable. It seems like the right and the necessary thing to do. but it has the uncomfortable quality of being brave at someone rises expense. iCopvrlght. 1933i
EAST SIDE HH.i n n&Jk 1 B*l. Lncoti "NIGHT of TERROR” HWRTEW| iosn E. N*w York Familr Nit* "THI BIG DRIVE" _ mrll liVi AA! I Wash. StT* HiiKUiUiiaH Ooubl* Fratnrr Tom Kern*. "f'ROSSFIRF. ' 1 it, B n: i.K imi >i ui lJ:lJ!ldl>.Tl s *?,*- t K2.*cJohn Rarrvmor* ”SW EEPINGS” SOUTH SIDE At Fountain sauars iAi-I—Li-LLrl'l'r 11-d KouM* Frature Sallv Eilrra • HOLD ME TIGHT” Ralph Bfllamj— Far AVray “BELOW THE SEA” Cttrn*ra-'>hark*r Ftsht Pictures TTTTTTT. IJB Frorpcrt and ~Sb*7bj VblAJillitS Douhl* Fraturr M*rna Kcnr.cdr r . JP H 'IRED ALIBI I ___Jy*l McCrca "SPORT PARADE" u ' "THE DEVIL S BROTHER” MrTrrrTTTT^M Jaraiy Gl*ann iirrr Pitta THE < ROOKFD CIRCLE" BEEHHS3 ■ H“ "AIR HOSTESS” WEST SIDE ■■HHUaiapßa W Wash. at Bel. v F .r," v _, N r ;;„ KISS RIFORF THE HIRROK MrrmnHß Sidney and Murray "COHENS and KELLY in TEOCBLE" _ gaw*H i •■OCT ALL MGHI” 1
THE INDIANAPOUTS TIMES
14.000 WILL QUALIFY FOR AGEPENSIONS 2.536 Applications From Marion County Are Expected. Approximately 14.000 persons, ! 2.536 of them in Marion county, wul j qualify under Indiana's old age , pension law, according to first statewide estimates announced today. The figures were made public Ly ! Otto P. Deluse. past national president of the Fraternal Order of Eagles and chairman of its state pension commission. The order for twelve years led the effort to obtain an old age pension law for, Indiana, culminating in passage of j a statute by the 1933 Indiana lcgis- j lature.
| ‘ While the total of probable pen- j 1 sioners, based on county figures, is ! 19,100. we believe that 14.000 is a liberal estimate of the total which ultimately will qualify,” Deluse ex- | plained. He said the lesser figure i was based on the experience of other states in which pension laws ! have been in effect for periods long enough to afford accurate data 2,536 Local Aplicants Marion county is expected to have 2.536 applicants. Indiana's law. which will become | effective Jan. 1, 1934, provides for i pensioning of persons 70 and older. 1 who have been residents of the! ! United States and of Indiana fifteen years, and who meet a number of other requirements. It is mandatory upon counties. Deluse said that Indiana was among eight states enacting pension laws this year, bringing to j twenty-five the total which now af- i ford the aged this form of relief. ' The Eagles have pledged county commissioners and auditors full cooperation in administering the law,” ( Deluse announced. "We expect to' be helpful especially to officials in carrying out that provision of the law requiring them to give full pub- ! licitv to details of the state's oldage pension system.”
Counties Are Listed Figures for counties, giving a total of approximately 19,100, fol- ] lows: Adams, 100: Allen. 885: Bartholomew, 1.048: Benton. 72; Blackford. 92; Boone, 134; Brown, 35 Carroll, 90; Case. 201; Clark, 177; Clay, 148; Clinton. 155; Crawford, 61. Daviess, 140; Dearborn. 137; Decatur. 104; Dekalb. 150; Delaware, 404: Dubois, 124. Elkhart. 414: Fayette. 116: Floyd. 208: Fountain. 108; Franklin, 87; Fulton, 91. Gibson. 168; Grant. 307; Greene. 190: Hamilton. 141; Hancock. 100; Harrison. 101; Hendricks. 160; Henry, 212, Howard, 344: Hunting- , ton. i75. Jackson, 142; Jasper. 75; Jay. 86: j Jefferson, 116; Jennings, 72; Johni son. 131. Knox, 263; Kosciusko. 165; Lagrange, 83. Lake. 7,568; Laporte. 364; Lawrence, 214 Other Estimate Figures Madison. 498; Marshall, 152; Martin. 59: Noble, 135. Ohio, 44: Perry. 100; Pike. 99; ! Porter. 132; Posey, 107; Pulaski. 68; j Putnam, 133. Randolph. 150; Ripley. 109; Rush, 110; St. Joseph, 960; Scott, 40; Shelby. 159; Spencer, 101; Starke, 64; Steuben, 76; Sullivan, 169; Switzerland, 52. i Tippecanoe. 280; Tipton, 92; Union. 36; Vanderburg, 680; Vermilion. 140; Vigo. 594. Wabash. 152; Warren, 56; Warrick, 112; Washington, 100: Wayne, 438; Wells. 113: White, 95; Whitley, 96.
MOTION PICTURES GEm NOW PLAYING World's Funniest IDDII BOBBY JONES in “HIP ACTION’* Travel—News 1 254 i 25c U H COMFORTABLY C00L... MOT COCO APOUO.S jj{ WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY i] 111 The Musical Hit of the Year Moow & AMD Fum NEXT FRIDAY lew AYRES ginger ROGERS Mn-DONTBETONLOVE" Cam/y f scf Last 3 Days!'*~** EXTRA W. C. Field* Comedy Entitled ’’The Barber Shop** Friday—“MIDNIGHT CLUB”
TWO-STORY SCHOOL' BUILDING MADE ONE-STORY STRUCTURE
. * A When children return in September to School 55. at 1675 Sheldon street, they will find a startling change in the building's appearance. Workmen are shown removing the second story from the building, remodeling it into a one-story structure. Total cost of the improvement is $7,337. school board officials said.
COPS NAB 2 IN ALLEY Chase Ends in Capture of Suspects in Robbery. One pometimes hears facetious remarks about policemen and their absence when most needed. But Lieutenant Leo Troutman and patrolman Edwin Jordan can prove that for once, at least, it isn't so. Monday night Troutman and Jordan were riding around. As they arrived at 120 West Maryland, tw'o men darted out of an alley, and at the same time, a cry of Robber” went up. The police gave chase and captured the fleeing pair at Capitol avenue and Chesapeake street. They were running “just for exercise," said Arthur Hathaway, 21, of 4128 Vandalia avenue, and Charles Sears, 37. R R 1. Box 6. Steps, however, were retraced to the alley where the policemen found Janies Miller, 62. of 150 West Twenty-Ninth street, seated on the ground, blood streaming from a gash under his right eye. Miller, watchman at a local steel plant, pointed to Hathaway and Sears and charged them with luring
A MESSAGE TO -FOOT SUFFERERSf Leg pains, backaches, headaches and some systemic disorders can be traced to foot troubles. The INDIANA | FOOT CLINIC scientifically treats all foot ailments, so I come in today for a FREE EXAMINATION and learn I fl your trouble. It may be dangerous to delay. Burning | • 1 sensation in the front part of the foot with periods of J numbness are the starting of trouble, they are warn- I A L Scientific treatments Corns. Callouses. Bun- r/\ ■ ending foot pains v 1 ions and Ingrown NailsDUC A FREE EXAMINATION L jl INDIANA FOOT CLINIC 211 Roosevelt Building Elevator service Hours: 9:0fl A. M.—8:00 P. M. Phone Riley 1266 Sundays till 12:00 NOON.
■ - • nu~TWGiJHM.<ii3LLf> imiif <i~ wririi J iwitii m~ ~•< ir**'' -V THE RENTAL GUIDE RUNS AUGUST Ist. About Times Rental Plan —Ride Free or Half Fare in a Red Cab
Gone, but Not Forgotten Automobiles reported to police as stolen, belong to James L Ridgeway, 5315 East Tenth street Ford coupe i3-165. from In front of 5315 Erm Tenth Mret. George G Bruce. I*2. Woodlawn avenue. Plvmouth sedan. 34-967. from Fountain ] Souare Rav Thiesig. 3411 East Sixteenth stree’ Ford roadster from 225 North New Jersev street Helen Rogers. Ambassador apartment No. 211 Chevrolet coach, from Ohio and Pennsylvania streets K.nge A- Sons. 2442 Madison avenue Ford truck T 1-886 from Palmer street and Madison avenue. BACK HOME AGAIN Stolen automobiles recovered bv police belong to Theodore Buabejr. Roosevelt hotel. Ford sedan, found at 100 East Court street Irvin Fossati. fire headquarters. Ford roadster, found at Vermont and Liberty streets F E Mcßride. 234 West Fortv-fourth street. Plvmouth sedan, found at Michigan stree' and Forest avenu* Robert Dwver 853 Parker avenue. Chevrolet roadster found at 600 Agnes street him into the alley, slugging him. and robbing him. Scattered over the route of the chase, police said they found Miller's cigaret case, pocketbook, and special policeman's badge. He was sent to city hospital and ordered held on an intoxication charge. Hathaway and Sears were slated on vagrancy charges Bov Drowns While Swimming Hu l nit? 4 Pm* FT. WAYNB. Ind., Aug. I. Warren Saalfrank. 14, Hoagland. drowned while swimming here Monday night.
FIRMS LEASING NEW QUARTERS Real Estate Activities in City Are Spurred by Deals. Activity in real estate spurted Monday with announcement of a number of new leases taken by Indianapolis firms. Indianapolis Motors. Inc. has obtained a lease on the salsroom and service departments at 1525 North Meridian street. The firm will d.stribute Hupp automobiles in central Indiana, two counties in Illinois and one in Ohio. Changes will be made in the building prior to occupancy about Aug. 15. The East Side Motor Sales Company has leased a one-story brick j salesroom and service building at ' 3839 East Washington street, for- , merly occupied by the Newby Motor Company. New tenants are D E Thayer and Louis L. Cohen. They are dealers for Chrysler and Plymouth automobiles. Indianapolis and Southern Motor Express Company has leased the building at 1415 South Capitol avenue. formerly occupied by the Alex* ! ander Box Company It will be used as a freight terminal
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WEALTHY OIL MAN SET FREE BY ABDUCTORS Officials Hold Up Action for Eight Hours After Urschei's Return. nv GEORGE B ROSCOF. I r.iied Ptm Staff Correspondent OKLAHOMA CITY Aug I.—With j official activity held in abeyance eight hours at the behest of the family of Charles E. Urschel, re- : turned near midnight from nine i days m the hands of kidnapers, authorities expected to open an unlimited offensive today on suspects I m the case We are not going to move until j the family so advises." said R. H. i Colvin, chief of the local departi ment of justice bureau. In announcing the safe return of the oil millionaire, his brother-in-law. Arthur Seeligsnn. indicated an agreement was made to allow the kidnapers eight hours of immunity from pursuit It is known that suspects in the cas” are Bobby Brady. Haney Bailey, Wilbur Underhill and associates, ail 1 convicted murderers and bank robbers who escaped Memorial day from the Kansas state penitentiary. PRINCETON MAN KILLED Train Mangles Forest Army Worker at Rookport. Bit T’nltnl prs'*s ROCKPORT. Ind . Aug 1 -Olin D Rader. 41. Princeton, was killed instantly when struck by a Southern railway train late Monday, j B-mnie Brenner, train fireman, said he saw Rader sitting on the track with his head in his hands, but that it was too late to stop the i train. Rader had been employed in forest conservation work at Lincoln City. A widow and several children survive “I Suffered 10 Years With itching Eczema” " • . . and after spending hundreds of dollars to clear it up. I tried Zemo ! and got relief." writes G C. G of j Texas. Soothing and cooling. Zemo relieves itching in five seconds because of its rare ingredients not used ! in other remedies Also wonderful for clearing Rash. Pimples. Ringworm and other irritations. Zemo is worth the price because you get relief. All druggists'. 35c. 60c. sl. Advertisement.
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