Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 97, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 September 1933 — Page 20
PAGE 20
END OF STATE ROAD OILING IS REPORTED NEAR Eleven Projects Remain to Be Completed: Detours Are Listed. Present schedule of oiling under which state hignway commission crews are operating will be completed Sept. 12. and only eleven projects are to be worked this week. Detours still are in effect for construction and grading work, however List of detours is as follows: Road 1- Bridge run-around at 7 mile north of Cambridge Citv Bridge in Bluff- : ton limited to ten-ton capacity, detour for hea% y traffic only Road 3—Detour from Junction of roads S 5 and 1* 'o 2.5 miles north of Road 118, is thirteen miles via Warren, fair gravel road Detour from .7 mile south of Vernon at Junction of road 7 and 3 to four miles south is 5 : , miles, fair gravel and stone C S. Road —Detour near Tracv is >.5 miles, oil mat Road 7—Devour from east city limits of Columbus aouth. is eight miles, good gravel. Road •—De'our from Crown Point west. U nine miles, pa ed surface. Road #—Detour from Wolcottvllie north, ia six miles, good gravel Road Ih Drive carefully over new pave- | ment east of Illinois line Bridge runarounds at one-half mile east of Illinois line, one mile st-s' ol road 41 and two miles east of road 41. Roaa 12 Drive slowly east ol Michigan City Road 13 Bridge run-arounds at one-, half mile north of Strawtown. five miles f south ol Elwood and one mile north of! Elwood. Short detour in Elwood. citv i streets. Road 14-Bridge-run-arounds at five and six miles west ol Rochester V 8 Road JO—Detour from west of Chesterton is 14 miles for westbound traffic: 2 2 miles for eastbound traffic, i good stone. Road 21 Drive carefullv over new pavement so h of Peru Detour from seven mi>.v 0 leas' of Peru to twelve miles we-t of Msrion it thirteen miles fair : grave! Bridge-run-around four miles west of Matthews Road 2*- Bridge-run-around at three miles west of Logansport I Road 25 Dri' carefullv between Odell and Shadeland over new pavement. Road 2fi Detour west of Rossville Is four miles, fair but narrow gravel. Detour from Road 41 east is three miles fair gravel Bridge-run-around on* and one-half and four miles west of State Road 0 and at one and one-half miles west of Road 13 U S Road 27—Detour from Portland to Brvant is twelve miles over gravel and atone , Road 29 Bridge-run-around between Burlington and function with Road IS Read 35- Detour between Palmvra and New Salisbury is six and one-half miles, j narrow stone road Detour from Morgantown to Bean Blossom is ten and onehalf miles fair gravel, narrow |T. S Road 3 Drive slow over new Sa emen’ between Danville and Bainbridge ridge-run-around at four miles east of Lynn. , _ . . Road S7—Detour from Exchange to Waverlv. seven miles, fair gravel Through t traffic between Indianapolis and Martins-i Ville advised to take Road R 7 Road 3ft Detour from Noblesville west ( Is five miles, oil mat and gravel. Road 43 Drive carefullv over seven j miles of new pavement north of Spencer , Detour from Cloverdale to ten miles south \ Is 16 1 • miles fair macadam surface not: suitable for heavy traffic Bridge-run- • round at four south of XaCrossp. u S Road 50-Drive slow over new pavement between Shoals and Bedford, also from Bedford east Roan Detour from Ouilford to Dover Is in 5 miles over poor gravel Detour rom 1 nvles south of Oswell to two miles north of Jasper is fourteen miles, fair gravel. Detour passable only in dry w-eather. Road 19 Detour from Clav City to two miles south of Ashboro is eleven miles over **Road 7 P Drive earefullv over new pave-; ment north of Spencer m Road 101- Detour from Rosebtirg M Brookvil'e is twentv-three miles, seventeen miles pated, six miles good graver Road 130 Detour in town of Hobart Is one mile over city streets De, °' , iL e fr ”w Valparaiso to Wheeler is nine miles, six | pa'-ement. three stone Road 150 Drive slow over new pave-| ment in and east of Shoals. Read 102 Detour from Blanford to two miles west of Clinton is eleven miles, five miles concrete and six miles gravel. Road 244 -Detour from Milrov to four miles west, six-mile detour, good gravel. Road 245- Detour from Lamar south is Six miles gravel, narrow. MIESSE TO SPEAK IN PHILADELPHIA ON TAXES Four Addresses Are Scheduled for City Man. Addresses on the tax reduction plan sponsored by the Indiana Taxpayers' Association will be given in Philadelphia next week before four citizens’ groups by Harry Miesse. | association secretary. He will address a group of manu- j facturers and bankers Wednesday. j Philadelphia Real Estate Board Thursday, and the Philadelphia Bond Club and various women's civic clubs Friday. The invitation was extended to Miesse following a visit here several weeks ago by Alexander Biddle, chairman of the Pennsylvania branch. National Economy League, who will be Miesse's host, and George Kearney, of the Philadelphia Public Ledger, to study the j Indiana tax situation. — TRAFFIC TOLL MOUNTS 88 Death* Occur in County in Fight Months. Traffic accident deaths in Marion county this year will reach 132. i thirty-six more than in 1932. if the rate maintained during the first eight months of 1933 continues during the last four months starting todav. Up to today, eightv-eight persons had been killed in the county, since Jan. 1. For all of 1932. the total was ninety-six.
SAIL ALONG WITH dm C) TTS always smooth sailing \M JL for those who feel young! { B "'■w m ' And you can feel young at any age if you get plenty of %x V the things that .ye/A is made JapW of: proteins and minerals, carhohs drates and Mta- *, mins. That's w hat the food * ™ authorities call these vital ||af elements. You can call them % something simpler —just ask , $ , , fc for Shredded Wheat. ’“'Y youth-building elements in her richest cereal grain, WjM whole wheat. And Shredded MQ Wheat übole übeat with nothing added, nothing taken awav. It's whole wheat with all its vital elements, all the bran just as Nature measured it. * flgaL> ’ - **-, B<• Won't you trv this vitally different food >, ;kj for at least 10 days? It's ready cooked, ready to eat. Serve it with milk or cream. Add the fresh or preserved fruit that you ■ When yam tee Sugar* Fsllt prefer. And watch it wake your appetite yarn hart Shredded Wheat. •- • and your youth! SHREDDED WHEAT A product ot NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY "Unooda Bakora”
The ABC of the NRA Below are given answer* to questions sent to The Times by readers seeking information on problems arising from the National Recovery Act. Answers to other queries will be printed from day to day. If you have problems to which you wish answers, write to The Times, or call Riley 5551, ask for the ABC department, and dictate your question. In giving your query, please state definitely the industry, business, or occupation on which your question is based. It will be answered as soon as possible.
q who is supposed to get the V)-c*nt wheel-in charge, the coal dealer or the hauler? A— This is a matter of contract between the dealer and the hauler. a a a bob q What nr* th wages and hours for the title industry? I am working between fifty ,nid sixty hour* a week and receiving 22 cents an hour. The companv ha* not signed th* code. C. M. B A—No code for the tile industry has been adopted. We can give you the wages and hours as soon as a code or agreement for the industry has been submitted and signed.
* * * q what are provisions of the national code as to salary and hours of office employes of s public utility? A—Please repeat your question specifying the kind of public utility company. The modified agree-' ments for the electric light and powpr and gas industries fix a fortyhour work week for office employes 1 in these public utility industries and the minimum pay is $14.50 a week. ana Q- Is there any code for girls who work; m doctors' offices? If so what are the hours and the minimum wage?—P. E. D. . A—Doctor's as professional men do not come under the NR A. They may sign the PR A and comply with tis provisions if they wish. Under the PRA the maximum hours for girls working in an office would be forty hours a week and the minv mum pay would be $14.50 a week. Nurses, as professional people, do not'come under the NRA. b a a Q- Has th* maintenance code for office buildings been approved? If so. what is the maximum working hours a week for nonunion carpenters, painters, and electricians?—E H J A —A temporary agreement has been approved. The maximum hours are forty-eight hours a week and the minimum pay $14.50 a week. a a tt Q- Please publish the hours and wages for meat route drivers who do no selling, as approved bv the NRA.—J. F. D. A—According to the temporary agreement modifying the PRA for i food and grocery distributors, the j minimum pay should be $14.50 a week. Their maximum hours are not limited under the agreement. a a a Q —How manv hours a week are allowed a night watchman with special police j Sower, in a bank where the NRA pledge j as been signed? A—According to the temporary agreement modifying the PRA for the banks, the hours of night watchmen are not limited. • 8 0 0 Q —With regard to the restaurant code. I does an employe have to pay for meals where he is employed when he does not eat there" 1 Should he not receive his $14.50 a ; week salary?—S. E. W. A—According to a modification of the agreement modifying the; PRA for the restaurant industry, is- | sued Aug. 17. 1933, minimum rates and wages established in the agreement shall not be subject to de- | duction for meals furnished em- j ployes, unless such was the practice in the restaurant prior to June 16, j 1933, and if such was the case, the j charge shall not exceed 25 cents a I meal, nor $3 total in any one week. The minimum wage for restaurant workers is 27 cents an hour. 8 0 0 Q —l* there any code for commission house-to-house workers? If so. what are the hours and minimum wage? A—No. Outside salesmen working solely on commission do not come under the NRA. 8 0 8 Q-rl am a worker In the city hospital, laundry and would like to know If there is any code for city workers? If so. what are the hours and the minimum wage?—C. M. T. A—Citv employes do not come under the NRA. 8 0 8 Q—ls a salesman working on commission basis guaranteed a certain amount of money under NRA. whether he brings in any business or not? * A—Persons working solely on commission are not guaranteed a minimum salary nor are their working hours limited under PRA. However. in some businesses, this question is under discussion and may be specifically covered when a permanent code for the industry is adopted. 8 0 8 Q —ls there any code for elevator operators in public buildings'’ If so, what are the hours and the minimum wage? —B P. A—ls the employes are working in a building owned by the state, city, county or federal government, they do not come under the NRA.
BRIGHT EYE EGGS Fresh from Our. Farms rjvery Day. Small. 18e Dozen Standard. 200 Dozen. Extra Large. '22c Dozen. Get Them at BOYER'S LUNCH 34 X. Delaware.
Q —Has a hotel code been approved? If so what are the hours set aside for hotel clerks?—L. A—No code for the hotel industry has been approved. Bridge Aids Unemployed B ) United Pre* SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. I.—Employment for 200 to 250 men for fifteen to eighteen months is assured here in structural steel mills where | forges are busy hardening more than J 10.000 tons of metal for the new 1 Golden Gate bridge. The steel will be used in approaches.
MEAT MARKET SPECIALS /fgpSgjh For Your Labor Day Outing Complete Selection o£ Choice Luncheon Meats .... Also Quality Fresh and Smoked Meats at Lowest Prices! Save on Meats at A & P! wt OO OUR PAtl ; _____- Beef Pot Roast 11 FRESH GROUND BEEF, PORK AND VEAL For Loaf Lb. 121/ 2 c KiNGAN’S BAKED CANADIAN ROLL • Whole nr Half Lb. 35c SMOKED PICNICS, BONED AND ROLLED ' Vh H °!? f or I4V 2 c HAM SALAD Highest Quality Ingredients Lb. 33c BOILED HAM ■ 25* Pork Roast Picnic Cut Lb. 8c Thuringer Summer Sausage Lb. lie Sliced Bacon 2 Lbs. 35 C Pig’s Feet SmSS 90z - Jar - ,0c Spiced Ham wafer sliced Lb 23c Cod Fish Fillets J r r 0 e ze h n Lb m Tt-rn (No. 1 Grade Hens 4-5 Lbs. Lb., 19c) Milk-Fed in ft (Stewing Hens 3-3‘£ Lbs. Lb., 15c) Fryers *-D. £M 9 PRIME RIB ROAST Boned and Rolled Lb. 22c SMOKED PICNICS, KINGAN’S size* Lb. 9c BREAKFAST BACON * Lb End Cutß Lb 12c FRANKFURTERS Large. Juicy. Tender Lb. 10c KINGAN’S Smoked Hams r~ L -14%* FLOUR lONA BRAND 24-LB. BAG 79c KIRK’S HARDWATER CASTILE SOAP „ 6 cake* 27c HEINZ VEGETARIAN OR PORK AND BEANS 335 c BUTTER iSilverbrook Print, Lb.. 23ci Country Roll. Lb. 22c V A a® All Popular Brands $* .00 A A JEifiP Package 10c Carton Ji = GRAPE NUTS FLAKES Breakfast Cereal 2 Pkgs. 2IC BOWLENE Cleans and Deodorizes Lge. Can I7c A&P APPLE SAUCE Delicious Chilled 3 Xo - 2 (:ans 25c SUGAR PURE CANE 25-LB. BAG sl*27 ill IMA I CMP Regular Cabinet Size Can r ,ee Pkc. 9I I* UUIDhLINC 0 f gowlene Free with Each Purchase wlw OXYDOL Ask About SIO,OOO Prize Contest Lge. Pkg. 19c DEL MONTE PEARS Bartlett's 2 N ’ o - Cans 35c SOAP p£ g Regular Size 10 Ba ” 27 c HOMELIKE COOKIES National Biscuit Company Lb. 12c , CHASE & SANBORN COFFEE Lb 27c l/QACT PUCCCC American. Brick. Pimento. Velveeta Plain 0 ’o-Lb. 33c IvnMr I On I-Lou Velveeta Pimento and Lim burger Pkgs. Lima Beans ,m Bt 4 ca “ 19* 80SC0 The 3 Food Drink Jar 19c nKflllir.K 9b Seconds from Package to Oven I'kg. 32c CHUM SALMON 2 “ c *“ 21c Bokar Coffee - -23* OUR OWN TEA Delicious Iced 2 1- 9'Lb- 25c SAUERKRAUT 2 21 * Cans CAMPBELL’S BEANS . 3 c*"* 17c PICNIC SUGGESTIONS FOR LABOR DAY Potato Chips Bulk Lb 49c Soda Crackers £ b ; 24c Cracker Jack ‘ ,k * 5c Dill Pickles Qt lar *sc Yukon Dry Ginger Ale six 0 24 B oz tle ßot h s ars 4 12 * " " ~ Green Beans “ 10* ORANGES t-l',"””.? M C” 2 35c LIMA BEANS Lb - 19c POTATOES I® Lb - 29c SWEET POTATOES 5c Tomatoes wKjec-. 5 10 i These prices good in Greenwood and Moo res ville as well as Indianapolis City Stores.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CARPENTERS ON : UNION SCALE TO FACE[BOYCOTT Contractor Says He’ll Use No More, Pending Costs Change, v Only nonunion carpenters will be employed by Leslie Colvin, contractor. he declared today, until building costs “more fair to the public prevail.” Colvin, head of the local contractors’ organization, took the stand as union carpenters continued to remain idle, following a walkout Tuesday as a result of a wage dispute. The organized workers charge con- | troctors are failing to live up to an agreement for a wage of $1.14 an hour. Colvin asserts carpenters can be obtained to work for much less than the union scale. He said he had no knowledge that employers of men at the $1.14 wage are receiving rebates of 25 to 40 per cent weekly, but declared that plenty of carpenters will work for wages coinciding wigh the lower figures.
RESIGNS SCOUT POST
|L V w ~’ ppl! *r Si
Miss Jean Adamson (above) has resigned as director of Indianapolis Girl Scouts to begin advance study at the University of Alabama A successor will be announced Oct. 1. Miss Adamson began work with the local group as a secretary, and served as field captain, assistant director, and director, for five years. The great planet Jupiter has nim moons.
LEAGUE PALACE IN GENEVA SOON TO BEJFINISHED $5,000,000 Building Will Be Ready for Occupancy by August, 1935. BY lAN FRASER. I'nltrd Pres* Staff Cormpondrnt GENEVA, Sept. I.—The exterior of the League of Nations’ new $5,000,000 palace, the world's largest parliament building, capable of housing more than 3.000 statesmen, diplomats, experts, officials, pressmen and public, is completed. The building, which is about the same size as the Palace of Versailles. will be ready for occupancy in August. 1935, at which time the secretariat will be moved from its present cramped home in the Hotel National. More than 300.000 sacks of cement, 700,000 bricks and 4,700 tons of steel girders have been used in construction of the league palace. It measures 572.000 cubic yards in volume and contains 36.400 cubic yards of French, Italian and Swiss
■KB How Much to Feed llfffi A Hungry Family? ■ <■....V- We welcome the question at Stores We find it a sane, healthy H? s■: % JsV Jg inquiry into a subject which is our life work. We know -.ve au help Hi A. Ja JyaH solve it. By prices '■ Ves: But more than that—by ideal harmony Tfe wS*/M< JKlB| of priee anci quality. BS& 9 Everybody reenznizes the truth in the statement that you can e a less WTO.'' * IB in good food and gain more In health, vitality and satisfaction than figjpf, ||j||y v ; . H if you ate poor food — food that has been robbed to meet a price — in 3g|l| v raSAKpI Talk it over with ns. Let us help you solve the prohlem of serving three meals a day full of goodness and health, strength and relish and I Buy Extra for I ]|||P ! Prices Below for j Monday, Labor Day | 1 Indianapolis Only j W| OO OU* PART POST TOASTIES 2 -13 c RED CHERRIES -3" 35c SWANS DOWN a -27 c Shredded Wheal m 12c Matches 3 B x “ 14c An N. B. C Product. Searchlights. Rumford 12 02 Can 23c Fly Swats Each 7c Baking Powder. Long Wire Handles. Baking Chocolate 12V2C Brooms Ea h 33c Hershey’s Cake. Special 4-Sewed. Bakers Coconut can 12c Lux Soap 4 Cakes 2sc Southern Style. F° r Toilet or Bath. _T7jj Tomato Juice —EHIRm&nnM— r Shts 4 can> 19c _ Raspberries Peanut Butter 2 -29 c 2to 25c Kidney Beans Queen Olives Qt Jar 35c gal Can 5 C *“ 25 ‘ Del Monte Coffee Marshmallows 17c u. 27c Campfires. ■■ ■ P, l " Canada Dry Mayonnaise 15 -° 2 Jar 23c °£f r 9 39c , Regal—Pure, Wholesome. w w Plus 5c Charge per Bottle GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 24-* ■*< $1.17 P .* G •' KIRK’S SOAP 9 •** 25, SHINOLA Shoe Polish (Jet Oil. Bottle. 12c) Can 8c BOILED HAMS “ Lb. 25c BUT TTR Wafer Sliced. Lb.. Me. . “ OL D BROOK Ground Beef and Pork for Loaf Lb. l2>/ 2 e . Fresh Picnics. Lean, Meaty Lb. 8c Lb. /JC Fresh Tasty Loaf Lb. 23c u****:r paM Fresh Cottage Pork Lb. | oc Hoosier Gold Cream Cheese Lb. |7c *-° f 21C SMOKED HAMS ul4y 2 c POTATOES ™°ch, 10 Lb*. 29c *f- “ „. , Lbs i Can of Bowlene Green Beans Strmgless 3“• 10c With a Large Pkg of New Sweet Potatoes 4 Lbs. /5 C Pllmalann celery, Mich. 2 stalk* 9c blimalene White Onions 2 Lt>s. 9c Both 01 * APPLES m 5 18c - |C — EACH REGAL STORE IS INDIVIDUALLY OWNED ...
masonry placed against 500.000 tons of reinforced concrete. The general lines of the league palace represent an extreme simplification of classical Roman architecture inspired by modern architectural tendencies. Around the assembly hall, like boxes at an opera and only just above the heads of diplomats, are a series of rooms exclusively for the use of movie men and press photographers. Behind the presidential chair of the assembly, a tall screen will probably be built with letters “SDN" in gold with blue background. Pressmen have been well provided for in the new palace. They have three bars, fifty telephone boxes, 676 seats in the assembly and
STRICTLY FRESH mm Wk PULLET EGGS V Doz. 25c BOILING CHICKENS Lb Q c Roasting Chiokons, Lb.. 12c. FRYERS Leghorns Lb. I FREE DRESSING Hoosier Poultry Market I 107 N. Alabama St. I I 1881
SEPT. 1, 1933
council halls, two big writing rooms, two telegraph offices, radio office, broadcasting studio, and fifty-five information offices. American architecture has influenced the construction of the new league palace, according to Julian Flegenheimer, Geneva architect and first prize winner with Ninot. Paris, for a design of the new league home. First Trolley Car Retired BRISTOL, Conn., Sept. I.—After thirty-eight years of faithful service, the first trolley car operated by the Bristol Traction Company has been retired. The car mounted on special wheels, was towed by a truck to Lake Compounce, to be set up permanently.
