Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 118, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 September 1933 — Page 4

PAGE 4

I] rXZZIFree Parkins for Star Store Patrons E Record Breaking Values mtw M WEDNESDAYS^^^^T /'I PERS N VHk ss| I Sizes - wif!i ami £|Cj 'Sg 4HBW ■BBEk mmtSl I without 9^jp ’@|jp ffgHflA I oach Sj.—'ial TV- iln—(lay. j & Jll H n INFANTS' OUTING pf F I Choice—- ■ .A, I R\ Jacques g A H r Y Gertrudes 1 1 1 0 Sj ’ ■'tar —Ind Floor jaw An Outstanding Demonstration o£ Money- |§ — Saving Bargains From Our Busy Second Floor Our Storks Are At Their Peak! . . . Selections Are At Their Best . . . The smartest and best styles of the year . . . gpl quality merchandise at prices you can afford to pay. Take advantage of the “STAR STORE”’’ second floor Wednesday Specials Tomorrow. You’ll save many dollars if you do. . >%4; Tremendous Variety! Luxurious Furs! Unusual Quality! pi I 0%- FUR TRIMMED l K^mCOATS K R HONESTLY! Goats Are Included in This Group That p HL Will Never Be Offered al This Price Again. H We’re proud of our values, and you’ll be mighty proud of your purchase if you’re 3BT U—..B :.lucky enough to get one of these beautiful ccats at this price! Fashioned of fin? Ht-" wool crepes, every wanted color; silk lined and inner lined. Sizes 12 to 20 and l£j mw 38 to 52. Select the coat of your choice with a small down payment. 2nd Floor. MW / W■ W UNTRIMMED SPORTS COATS A If ri ; For the woman or miss who wears 14 to 20. Ideal for general Fall 4t ■Ha *7 r and Winter wear, for school, business and outing, attractively w ww ■ I Q | ANOTHER WEDNESDAY BARGAIN! I o>, N I 300 Charming FaU Uj? N bninidflf U Sheers • Prints • Crepes \fß| - 1 ■ 1 —-— !iiJ —• m NHK Yes! The New ‘Rabbit Hair’ Wool £ y 0159 mm\ dresses | V ctm • if jHRF f§|| Also Rayon Crepe Dresses u M • GREENS J ll llfS * For Street .igffßl , , W G <m • I Ml :e:esli9B H II • PRINTS •mm §g • For School OW • | N y _ KpL. 1| • For Outing v 1 M j|g 2 DRESSES FOR .... $7.00 It I I rial, each one smartly dm j ____ ________ ___________—— ———————— WX&S styled. Hutton trim, lowk- f aRg . .. _ is' les. pique and self-trim- J I " < Pecnuse we bought w< at Ip '''M Jfjf||lj J 1 ?*' popular full I Special. >econil_Fdor I H “Star Millinery Week” Brings Exceptional Values In J U Brims • Turbans • Berets • Also Large Headsizes I I g ** ( I Yomhfu] gay models that portray the spirit of the Fall season. I Bf V;3L e ' -4P; Styles for matrons included. Every color included, brown, black, ! K| j j navy, wine, green, and hundreds to choose from tt f Misses’ WOOI J rsey DreSSeSJ 1 CQ Worn.. Misses' I Misses’ Knit I I Women's I Q H J J Sweaters U. SUITS RAIN- PI y Girls' Chinchilla COATS $4 AQ All Wool Rayon Striped COATS B| y • ’••• : ' '■• —— $ 1 .00 lOe RT.Og U Pi Child’s Wool SWEATERS $4 |)() OiT ■kl All-wool, plain colors and novelty patterns. Every site. I _ Slipover style sweat- Waist style knee or Women’s heavy jer- % ! HH to With fancy collars " ers, plain colors and trunk leps In sizes sej ' raincoats. In IPV P ———. fancy patterns. Sizes 2 to 32 years. popular shades. I j U Girls’ Printed Blouses, 8 tOl6. . .59C n w ‘ S f4-Vnd oor Si rta^nd 4 F.oor H Girls’ Wool Skirts, Bto 16 SI.OO charming Style. Girls’ School o*. M U Girls' Leatherette Sport Jackets 7Q Vll Wind pr •'( sn'l rain-proof, flannel lined. In colors. Sizes jf ~V~ W Brother and Sister SUITS $4 nfl Siies I *° 14 Yea ll M I. M . , * I 111 l Os lovely printed ffla- ■■ I / j,_n • \V y j&M Ul lafl Matched colors for little boys and girls of -to t> years. | II IJ terials washable, of am m \ YjfiiM ■pa AlPwool jersey materials ww W ide ranse Adjppgl VI U Tots’Chinchilla COATS $4 jq S—VW*’ hP-H Si |M With beret to match, pink, blue, green. In sizes Ito I JJ star—tnd Floor fj s' v l-A A ■ 1 - rt 4 year*. A real ralu* ■ w

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ROOSEVELT TO BE SECLUDED IN NEW NRA STUDY President Goes to New York to Map ‘Over the Top’ Effort. ! ByTnitcd Pre e* WASHINGTON, Sept. 26.—Complex adminisration problems were shifted to New York today as President Roosevelt sought the seclusion of Hyde Park to work out a program to put the recovery drive over j the top. Indications pointed to an unusually busy week free from interrupi tions as the chief executive turned i northward for his final 1933 stay j at the summer White House. Friends looked for him to complete plans to bolster commodity prices by expand- ! mg credit and releasing billions of dollars in bank deposits to increase purchasing power for a wave o'* : buying. Bids Son Good-By The President’s first stop was to |be New York tonight, where he planned to bid farewell to his son ! James, who, with his wife, is sail- | ing for a European vacation. After | a night in his east Sixty-fifth street | home he will motor to Krum Elbow on the banks of the Hudson. Observers believed he would work i first of all on the banking situation, I with emphasis on the steps he has | in mind for further strengthening I the financial structure. Mr. Roosei velt feels that frozen assets in ! solvent banks should be released as soon as possible. Considers “Little Fellow’’ The determination to make cash available to the “little fellow” was regarded here as just one of the cogs in a wheel of credit expansion which is looked upon as the administration's reply to the demands for outright currency inflation. It was insisted that there was no change in the President’s policy so far as actual inflation was concerned. He was interested primarily, it was said, in seeing a steady j rise in commodity prices to serve as a basis for a return to normal. LEGAL TEST IS SLATEDFOR TAX Oil Company Is Plaintiff in Supreme Court Litigation. A declaratory judgment and interpretation of the state gross income tax law is sought by the Wadhams Oil Company, Milwaukee, in a suit in which state officials are named defendants. Constitutionality of the law is at- | tacked in the complaint, which is against William Storen, state treasurer; the state treasury department, and Philip Lutz Jr., attorneygeneral. According to the complaint, filed in superior court five, the Wadhams company owns a refinery at East Chicago, but does the majority of i its business outside the state. The declaratory judgment is sought to prevent collection of the gross income tax on receipts of the company o* out-of-state business. The suit also alleges that state officials are attempting to collect ; tax on funds received in collection j ! of federal and state gasoline taxes, and on transportation costs prepaid by the company and collected from i customers.

Cut Rate Extortionist Asks Only $lO of City Man. INDIANAPOLIS extortion note writers evidently believe in being reasonable in their demands. Police today were investigating a note received by Paul Rich, proprietor of Rich & Cos. plumbing and radio shop. 1524 North Illinois street, reading: “At 9 p. m. Monday if ther aint 10 blocks under the plumbing tank with the sign, or else.” Rich said evidently the tank referred to was one outside the shop bearing an advertisement. 2 TO 21 FOR SLAYER Killer of Brother Sent to State Prison by Baker. On a plea of guilty. Crawford Wilson, Negro, 31, of 1120 East Twentysecond street, was sentenced today by Criminal Judge Frank P. Baker to two to twenty-one years in Indiana state prison for manslaughter. Wilson shot and killed his brother, Edward Wilsgß, Nov. 21 of last year, following a ’parrel, during which both men wthe sail to have been intoxicated.

Bouncing Knife Court Does Not Believe Cutting Story. ECHOES of a tomato battle resulting from a family row were heard in municipal court 3 today when Mrs. Eva Ford, 945 Chadwick street, was convicted of cutting her father, Robert Whitlow, on the leg with a butcher knife. The battle, in which tomatoes were used as missiles, occurred in the Ford kitchen last week, witnesses said. Whitlow charges his daughter was intoxicated and cut him with the knife when he remonstrated with her for scolding Mrs. Whitlow. Mrs. Ford said she was sober, but her father was intoxicated. Her story that her father knocked her down and then threw the knife at her, the knife hitting the wall and bouncing back to cut Whitlow’s leg, failed to impress Judge Dewey Myers. Mrs. Ford was fined $1 and costs and sentenced to serve thirty days, all suspended.

MEDAL OF SOCK GOES TO UNKNOWN

ft 1 1 *

After all, they couldn’t let a perfectly good decoration go to waste. So here you see the solemn presentation—over an empty chair —of the medal struck as a tribute to the so-far-unnamed man (or men) who hit Senator Huey Long in the washroom of the Sands Point Club on Long Island. Shown during the ceremony are, left to right, Owen P. White, principal donor of the medal; Edward Newell, president of the American Numismatic Society, and George De Zayas, designer of the award.

‘Stop and Go’ as Only Reading Is Poor Alibi

Truck Driver’s Story Fails to Impress Court in Traffic Case. “Judge, I couldn’t pay the bill because I lost my job as truck driver and couldn’t get any other job because I can’t write and all I can read are the words ‘stop and go’ on traffic signals.” This was the alibi presented to Charles Karabell, municipal judge pro tem., today by Grant Wilson, 1324 Lee street, for failure to pay for damages to an automobile struck last May. He said his truck driver’s license ■was revoked in August by another municipal judge, follwing a collision with a street car, in which he was injured seriously and the automobile demolished. He was fined $25 and costs and sentenced to sixty days in jail, all suspended, when he promised again to pay for the damages to the car, which was owned by Mrs. Helen G. Lee, 227 West McCarty street. .

1 AFTER 64 YEARS %f P P jj Sander & Recker Furniture Co* | O One of America’s Finest Stores O jj EFFECTS A RADICAL DEPARTURE* g From the “Old Order of Things” in Exclusive Furniture Store q D Management. We Are Inaugurating Our “New Policy” with H a Sensational g 110-DAY SALE! Q of the World’s Finest D o o fl Furniture, Rugs, Lamps andg jj Reproductions o M to Acquaint the General Public with Our Six Floors of Marvelous Furniture || SAT PRICES UNBELIEVEABLE!§ 0 O | Starting Tomorrow at 9 A. M. 5 D Three Spot Light Specials Are Quoted Here. jj jj There Are Thousands of Other Items; All Bargains! Q Q 1 1 27-inch 1 1 Living Room I[| h a big 6 | Carpet | Suite IQ JJ MAYFLOWER m ,Woo, Velvet) y ® S O nprmrn.nn I Choice of Jungle Green or g Tapestry, sofa and | Z n REFRIGERATOR § E chair siaa.so I Q U Selling Reg. at $155 I Ipr ced at g | B q D 599.75 I , . 95c I 549.50 |y B Sander & Recker ß 3 Meridian at Maryland o S * i 1 n

NRA BOARDS IN STATE_ASSAILED Complaints on Hammond, Ft. Wayne Bodies May Go to Capital. Complaints of dissatisfaction with both the makeup and the methods of the NRA compliance board at Hammond, has been received from that city by Francis Wells. Indiana representative of the United States department of commerce. These may be sent to Washington, it was said. Wells also announced that complaints against the personnel of the board appointed at Ft. Wayne has been received. The complaints have been given to the district board for action before the matters are taken up with the national recovery administrator.

SEPT. 2fi. IMS

CUBAN CAUCUS FAILS; CHIEF IS WITHOUT HELP Political Agreement Still Remote: Government Not Threatened. By United Pre** HAVANA. Sept. 26 President Ramon Grau San Martin's newest conference with political leaders broke up in complete failure early today. He still was without political support. bu f there was no real threat against his government. Grau, gaining moral strength in the minds of the people as he continued in office, embarked on a campaign against Communist agitators trying to foment discontent in mines and on sugar plantations, including some owned by Americans. With no political party aligned behind -him. Grau faced the problem put before him by the federation, which seeks concessions which would strengthen it and weaken the system of clinics built up in the country by Spain. CITY MEN GET LIFE IN GIRL'S ABDUCTION | Jury Deliberates Only Nine Minutes to Convict. By United Pres* TERRE HAUTE. Sept. 2fl.—Garfield Kelly. 27. and Elmer Davis. 22, both of Indianapolis, were seni fenced to life imprisonment today , on charges of kidnaping Miss Evelyn Hvslop, 17, Terre Haute waitress. A jury in Vigo circuit court found them guilty after only nine minutes of deliberation. SLAYER FOUND INSANE | Woman, 27, Killer of Mate, 80. Is Mad. Rules State Jury. PETERSBURG. Ind.. Sept. 26. I Mrs. Maude Price. 27, confessed slayer of her 80-year-old husband. Thomas Price, was found insane Monday night by a jury in Pike circuit court. The slaying followed an argument over a 10-cent bag of cookies. “He was starving me to death,” Mrs. Price cried when questioned about the shooting. LONG NAMED TREASURER Elected to H. A. C. Post Succeeding A. F. Westlund. John J. Long, member of the Hoosier Athletic Club for more than ten years, has been elected treasurer of the club to succeed A. F. Westlund, who held the position for three years.