Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 71, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1933 — Page 3
AUG. 2. 1033
VIOLATIONS OF NRA PLEDGES ARE CHARGED Wells Waiting O-der From Washington to Make Probes. • Continued From Pape Onri spnr ific harbingers of co-operation in the rpoo\erv program came. "Officials of the Standard Oil Company have been in Washington for some time aiding in the negotiations regarding the petroleum industry code asid F H Fillineham Indianapolis manager today. Preparations are being made by the company to comply wholeheartedly with the provisions of the code " The central division of the Gulf Refining Companv. which includes Indiana. Ohio. Illinois and Michigan joined the President's call for action Ttif -dav by signing the NRA code according to G D Kessler, manager. National Biscuit Company, the Uneeda Bakers have igned the President re-empKn. ment agreement. The company employes 300 people in Indianapolis vho will benefit by : hortei working hours More emp*i'ment will result, the company ’itr-ci as a result of their agreement with the government. Rirhberg to Speak ••The National Industrial Recovery Art ' will be the subject of a radio broadcast over the Columbia network at 4 45 p m. "astern davliglit saving time, today by Donald A Rirhberg general counsel for the NRA The program is sponsored by the American legion. Indianapolis Poultry. Butter and F.gg Association officials said thrv are in hearty accord with the general federal recovery program but are awaiting interpretation of the code of their industry at Washington before signing agreements 1/tchl members of the industry said they have been instructed they will be given until Sept. 1 to sign agreements. Miners to Get Increase Wage scale in the limestone industry wen; into effect Monday, ac - cording to a report from Bloomington ihe Auburn Automobile Company at Auburn put a 15 i>er cent increase for hourly labor into effect and the Mishawaka Rubber and Woolen Company announced a 15 per cent increase in ttie pay roll. At Princeton. 112 miners employed in the Somerville co-operative mine will receive a 25 per cent increase; 400 employers at Anderson signed the blanket code of the NRA. and at Huntington 25 city employes were put on the forty-hour week. War on ‘Chiseling’ BV 11. O. THOMPSON I mtnl Press MafT ( nrresponrient WASHINGTON. Aug 2. Aroused by evidence of "chiseling” on the voluntary re-employment agreements. NRA officials today determined to make a strick checkup of violations and evasions. Administrator Hugh S Johnson prepared for a survey to disclose not only actual violations, but also round about methods by which some employers are socking to display the blue eagle, and obtain benefits of the agreement without making any real contribution to re-employment and wage increases. Reports from regional offices showed hundreds of thousands of signatures to the agreements. What the NRA officials are more anxious to know, however, is the number ol men actually re-employed and the amount of money added to the nation s pay rolls This information will be obtained through a questionnaire to all employers. The gieat organization twine developed through all the states will make a check-up comparatively simple In its final form the organization, designed to spread the gaspel of the re-employment drive in every city and town, will be adaptable also to store-to-store canvasses and other methods of obtaining desired mfoi illation. The nation-wide organization is being perfected rapidly. Members of twenty-six district and fortyeight state recovery boards were appointed late Tuesdav.
SAFES IN 4 STORES BATTERED BY YEGGS Empty Vault Is Blown at Realty Firm. Yrccmr n wore busy in Indianapolis Tu<--day night, damaging safes in srv-ral offices, with in tie loot for their trouble. About S3O was obtained by burglars w ho blew open a small safe at the Irwin Stout real estate office. 136 North Delaware street. Room 102. A wall safe in the A. J. Hueber Realty Company office. 144 North Delaware street, was blown open during the night, but employes said it contained no money A few doors away, the Patterson Shade Company. 136 North Delaware street, was entered, but no loot obtained Combination was knocked from the safe in tile Bader Coffee Company. 618 North Davidson street, but the yeggmen were unable to op’n the safe The Yaverowitz department store 1235 Oliver avenue, was broken into and ransacked during the night. Stock of the store was being checked today to determine th’ loss Babe Bishop 515 East Wabash street, reported her home entered by a burglar Tuesday who stole an Elk s tooth set with a $l3O diamond, a $1 bill, some jewelry and a box of relics. Trolleys Pun in Oldest Subway BOSTON. Aug 2.—Trolleys still operate In the nation's >dest subway here It is the Tremert street subway, built in 1897. With subsequent alterations it cost $4.370000
EVAN5 * FOR ALL PURPOSES
War Veterans Will March in Parade for Sen. Robinson; Open Recruit Office
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Emmanuel French * left being "enlisted by Dr. James A. Rosebrough. for the parade of veterans Sunday honoring .Senator Arthur R. Robinson. They are standing in front of the parade "recruiting ’ station, 237 North Illinois street.
U. S. APPROVES ROAD PROGRAM 27 State Highway Projects to Be Finished With Federal Funds. I Continued From Page Onei | mately 14 miies grading and 9 9 miles paving on Road 101. from Brookville to Liberty. Huntington and Whk ley—Approximately IB .1 miles grading, paving and roadside landscaping on Road 9. from Huntington to Columbia City. Lawrence Approximately 3.6 miles grading and paving Mid overhead bridge over C. M. At St P. Rairoad on Road 37, from Bedford to Oolitic. Hancock Approximately S R miles of resurfacing, widening and roadside landscaping on Road 40 from Cumberland to G eenfield. V:go and Clay—Approximately 11.5 miles resurfacing and widening from Terre Haute-to Brazil on Road 40 Scott. Jeffoi on and Jennings Approximately 17.0 miles paving on Road 3. from Blocher to Vernon. Many Kinds of Jobs La Grange—Approximately 2.7 miles grading and paving on Road 9. from Wolcottville north. Putnam Approximately se ve n miles grading and par ing on Road 43. from Road 40 north. Warren—Approximately 1.1 miles grading and paving and overhead bridge ov-r P A: E railroad on Road 34 from the Wabash river west. Shelby—New bridge over Brandywine creek on Road 29, five miles north of Shelby ville. Porter—New- overhead bridge and approaches to replace present narrow structure over B. A: O. railroad on Road 49, six miles north of Valparaiso. Porter New overhead bridge and approaches on relocation to replace narrow timber bridge over Michigan Central railroad on Road 49. one mile north of Chesterton. Tippecanoe New overhead bridge to replace existing narrow structure over Big Four and Nickel Plate railroad on road 43. one mile south of Lafayette. Scattered Over State Montgomery Overhead bridge and approaches over Monon railroad on road 43. two miles south of Linden. Grant Overhead bridge and approaches over Pennsylvania and C. Sz O railroad on road 21 at Mier. Lake Reconstruction of narrowunderpass under New York Central railroad on road 8. west of Crown Point Lake Underpass under Monon railroad on road 8, 4.1 miles west of Crown Point Jackson Approximately 6 4 miles grading and overhead bridge over B. A- O. railroad on road 50. from Brownstown. west. St. Joseph Approximately seven miles roadside planting on state road 31, from Southyßond to Lakeville. POILU FINDS DAUGHTER 14-Year Search for Child Finds on Night of Betrothal. Hi I nihil 111 LPT France. Aug. 2. A baby girl abandoned fourteen years ago by her mother, when the latter was torced to flee from the approaching enemy, has been found by her father on the eve of her wedding day. Mile Madeline Colette Rollet—her real name—was adopted and brought up as a "regular" member of the family of her foster parents. She attained the age of 18 and was betrothed when her own father succeeded in locatinc her. After demobilization Rollet tried to find hi sfanuly. but succeeded only in establishing that his wife was dead. It was merely by chance that he traced her child to her present address.
GULF Joins the Call for ACTION! W| oo out tAtf The GULF Refining Cos. (DELAWARE)
‘Appreciation’ to Be Shown for ‘Last Ditch’ Fight for Pensions. , War veterans of Indianapolis are being "recruited'' this week to parade in honor of Senator Arthur R Robinson Sunday in "appreciation" of his last-ditch fight in the senate against the administration economy measure, cutting veterans' pensions The parade will be held at 1:30. forming in front of the Antlers and marching south on Meridian street lo the monument, east to Pennsylvania, and north to Michigan street. Robinson will address the veterans from the imposing barkground of the World War Memorial piaza shrine, speaking from the north steps. The parade and meeting are expected to have an influence on legislation favorable to veterans next January. Among the organizations invited to take part are the G. A. R , United Spanish War Veterans. D. A. R.. American Legion. V. F. W.. War Mothers. Gold Star Mothers and auxiliaries. James C. Mangus. U. S W. V. senior vice-commander, is in charge of arrangements. Harry Franklin will be parade marshal.
‘lt’s Love’ Plea Fails to Save Brick Wielder
Ex-Negro Pugilist Is Given 30-Day Sentence for Attack on Rival. Because of his artistry in wielding bricks. Charles <Shifty* Calloway. 29, of 614 West Michigan street, one-time prominent Indianapolis Negro welterweight pugilist, j will Ret thirty days free practice in 1 brick handling. Judge Dewey rulwi Tuesday in municipal court. And it all came because of ’ love,” Shifty lold the judge. Accused of knocking W'lliam Stiles. 35. Negro. 1108 Maple street, cold with a brick. Calloway admitted his deed. In love with Anna Mason. Negro, of the Maple street address, said Shifty, he called to visit Anna. He declared that Stiles a sureenough heavyweight, attempted to dissuade him from talking to Anna, and that when Stiles reached for his pocket that resembled a gun, he went into action. • Judge, a man's got to defend himself with anything that he's got. Judge. I had a brick.” John Owens, another Negro heavyweight, from the Maple street house, declared he saw the encounter, but Calloway broke in with: "He didn't see anything, judge. He was Hiding .behind Stiles." When owens offered no denial to this. Myers waved him aside, and sentenced Shifty to thirty days on the state farm and tacked on $1 and costs fine for good measure. MISSOURI VOTES AUG. 15 Repeal Sentiment to Be Tested With Choosing of Delegates. /?/ f Mtfrt/ prrn* JEFFERSON CITY. Mo.. Aug 2. Missouri voters will go to the polls 1 Aug 19 to select delegates to a state convention to decide this state's attitude toward repeal of the eighteenth amendment. Delegates will be selected at precinct meetings for county conventions. which in turn will name delegates to the state convention. The state convention will be Aug. 29. A British air pilot recently observed what appeared to be rums under the Miditerranean. and divers sent down found columns and walls of some old seaside town.
THE TIMES
SIX CONVICTS WIN PAROLES Marcellus Cole Only Man From Marion County to Get Clemency. Marcellus Cole, who has been serving a ten to twenty-one year robbery sentence in the Indiana .state prison since Oct. 8. 1925. had his sentence commuted to from seven to twenty-one years and was paroled today by the state pardon board. He was one of six prisoners to be released bv the board and the only one sentenced from Marion county i to secure clemency. Former Judge James A. Collins, who sentenced Cole, recommended his release. Parole also went to Jess Edward Derringer. Connersville, for whom Raymond S. Springer entered a plea before the board. Springer also appeared today for Earl Ellison, convicted on a false check charge. Hearings on reformatory cases continued today. Twenty-two prison cases were denied clemency and one was conj tinned.
LANDLORD FINED FOR ASSAULTING TENANT Elderly Woman Is Accuser in Row Over Rent. "I'm going to teach you a leson.” said Judge Dewey Mvers of municipal court Tuesday to Frank Hannowsky, 119 West Walnut street. “I’m going to teach yon to keep your hands off women who owe you rent. The way to put someone out of a place you own is provided for by law.” Hannowskv was charged with injuring Mrs. Clara McDonald, 622 North Illinois street, a frail, elderly woman, who. with her husbSnd, owed Hannowsky rent for a room at the Illinois street address. Mrs. McDonald charged that Hannowsky seized her by the arm. hurled her outside, and tnen seized her again, and flung her nack into the room. “I’m fining you $1 and costs,” said Mvers to Hannow.-xy, "and sentencing you to thirty davs on the state farm. I'll suspend the days providing you pay the fine and costs here and now.” Hannowsky paid
bXvarck HOTEI^ CHICAGO I RANDOLPH I AT LA SALLE LEARN Evening Law School m mt mm a opens sept, iith I am uM fnr 3li Year 1 SR WW Thr-e- • standard V ■ legal roarse lead* to LL.B. degree. Catalogue Tpon Request. BENJAMIN HtBBISON LAW SCHOOL lISS Consolidated Bide. Bller XM7
Progress the Soft Water Laundry
YYterCx and Wom&ti. CLOTHING ON eASV CREDIT ASKIN e MARINE CQ 117 W.WASHINGTON ST.
R. C. WHITE, MUNCIE, QUITS FEDERAL POST Aid to Labor Secretary Will Practice Law in Washington. Hi/ 7 i Sprcinl WASHINGTON. Aug. 2—Labor Secretary Frances Perkins announced today the resignation of Robe Carl White, assistant secretary of Muncie. Ind. He has resigned to practice law in Washington. she said. His successor has not been named. Recognized as one of the United States’ leading immigration and naturalization authorities. White has served under four Presidents Harding. Coolidge. Hoover and Roosevelt. High tribute was paid White by Miss Perkias. who. in * :rn. was praised by White as "a gracious woman who is mentally keen and an excellent cabinet officer." White, with Mis. White, will leave on a vacation trip to Indiana next week. He will spend some time in Indianapolis, he said. His resignation is effective Aug. 10. TALK LINCOLN SHRINE Illinois Courthouse Where He Practiced Law to Be Preserved. Hi/ 1 nil'll Prim MT. PULASKI. 111.. Aug. 2 Plans for making a Lincoln shrine out of the old Logan county courthouse, located on the public square here, are being formulated by a group of local residents. Lincoln practiced law as a circuit rider in this old brick sctructure in the days before he became famous. The Postville courthouse also made famous as a place in which Lincoln pleaded his cases was purchased several years ago by Henry Ford and moved in its entirely to his Dearborn village near Detroit.
ITV jT* r• j M Ii i I ; j-i TfTtVl ' 7 ] ljT I I ii y | M ! m;ni' p£| . | .i; j ■ / 1 ALL WOMEN'S f I I. 4 SUMMER ►* J\ I SHOES i-A | j Choice of the House! )l jj Next year you’ll pffy as high as $t for these same g values! .Sandals, straps, ties, pumps and oxfords in I ■ \ X '-- white, blonde, black patent leather and kid. High. J I * OW u^an heels. Every summer shoe must go '/ regardless of former prices. All are marked down to C / !:/\ \ f ’I i a P a * r - Be here w hen our doors open at 9 to- / / # . morrow for best selection because you’ll want .1 or 1 bHL . * ' pairs at this ridiculous “unloading price!” Sizes .'5 to S. ( * Main Floor SfetfV-'' If Men’s $3 ti $4 Sample Women's S I.OO V. S. Boys' and Girls' Sport OXFORDS Sport SANDALS TENNIS SHOES I 2£T-?. £*4 aq TIES and A/V I f“rH s l- 49 straps9Q c 1|| c I ilf sizes 6to 7'j only. n.i t,rn. iiii ti,it. i„ B_. B While 75 pairs last, pair— ■ ffl Hj Pair— medium rubber I Wm *§P Ifc Main Floor " nd ** ,<e *- *•**• 3 <• • Main Floor HI |£4RA We Are Keeping Faith With President Roosevelt J4RA.I if ctodc unimc I WEEKLY I I SATURDAY | I s z^|9^ 530 z 1 19m-9 wj W:l
GIRL FLIER DROPS IN ON MOSCOW
WBKfC's % > * ipr
A leap into space two miles over Moscow! Thus the cameraman records a remarkable action closcup as Claudia Schacht. Russian girl parachute jumper, tugs at her rip cord as she begins her hazardous decent.
SHOOTS AT CHICKEN THIEF FROM AMBUSH Prowler Believed Wounded on Farm Near City. Running into an ambush, a persistent chicken thief was believed wounded by a shotgun charge on the farm of Stanton G. Dawson. Sixty-third street ana Keystone avenue, early today. Dawson said his henhouse had
been robbed of six fowls Thursday night and twenty Friday night Since then, an employe. James Lockhart. 46. Negro, has been hiding near the eoop each night armed with a shotgun Shortly after midnight Lockhart told Deputy Sheriff Harry Cook who investigated, a man attempted to break into the coop Lockhart fired, and the intruder screamed and ran. escaping He said he lielicved the shot struck the thief, as there was p blank the size of a man's body ir the pattern of shot in the thicker house wall.
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BANDITS TAKE SIOO,OOO LOOT ! IN JEWEL SHOP Two Robbers Appear Just After Society Woman Leaves Store. Ay I niff! Prri* NEWPORT. R I . AUg 2 T\o bandits held up a clerk in an oxculsive jewelry shop here late Tuesday and escaped with $100,009 in diamond rings, bracelets and other jewelry. „ Mrs. Henry B R Ripley society leader of Newport and New York, had just departed when the men came into the Bellevue avenue shop of Thomas Kirkpatrick. New Yoik jewelrr. , After ordering Henry Coppi. a ! clerk, to stand back or "you will be shot." they scooped up the jewelry which Coppi had been showing to Mrs Ripley, and escaped in an automobile in the direction ol : dence. QUIVERING NERVES you are just on edge j , when you can't stand ihe children’* noise .. . when everything you do is a burden .;. when you are irritable and blue ... try Lydia E. Pinks ham’s Vegetable Compound. 98 oul -of 100 women report benefit. It will give you just the extra energy you need. Life will scent wortlj * living again. Don’t endure another day without the help this medicine can give. Get a bottle from your druggist today. > S. Oml£omC4. ’ VEGETABLE COMPOUNO
