Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 232, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 February 1934 — Page 10
PAGE 10
M'NUTT SPEECH INTERPRETED AS RAP ATCRITICS Judge Baker, Vaguely, and Estill, More Plainly, Seen as Targets. BY DANIEL M. KIDNEY Time, Staff Writer Although he did not mention them by name. Governor Faul V. McNutt was being credited today with having criticised two of his critics—Criminal Judge Frank P. Baker and Prosecutor Robert G. Estill. Judge Baker is from Marion county and Mr. Estill from Lake county. Although Democrats, both have been outspoken agam*t the McNutt administration at various times. Judge Baker s remarks have made many a Headline and only last week Mr. Estill was charging that Captain Matt Leach of the state police was handling the Dillinger capture with an eye for state administration publicity. Poe With Dillinger Hit Later he himself appeared in widely published photographs with his arm around John Dillinger. Both were smiling, although as prosecutor, Mr. Estill will demand the death penalty for the gangster, who Is in Crown Point jail charged with murder of an East Chicago policeman during a bank robbery. In a recent talk on improved law enforcement. Governor McNutt cited the need of electing competent lawyers to the criminal bench. "Unfortunately we have in some courts in Indiana, men whose showmanship destroys the dignity and usefulness of the bench, "Governor McNutt declared. "They are, however. a small minority.” This was the critical dart said to have been aimed at Judge Baker. The Governor was more specific in his criticism of the Lake county prosecutor. He cited Warden Lewis E. Lawes' comment on the bad effect of the Dillinger-Estill pictures, which also appeared in news reels. McNutt Praises Leach "Such friendly poses of prosecutor ancj, criminal are in extreme bad taste and add nothing to the concerted effort to stamp out gangs and aid in law enforcement," Governor McNutt declared. He paid high tribute to the conduct of Captain Leach in handling the Dillinger case, and also the aid in extradition given by AttorneyGeneral Philip Lutz Jr. and the Governor of Arizona. Reaffirming his stand for placing the state police force on a "merit basis," Governor McNutt said the personnel mu#t be increased so that there is at least one officer to every county in the state. He approved the plan of A1 Feeney. state safety director, for a state-wide radio hookup for the force. RICH WISCONSIN MAN SEEKS GOLD BY PLANE Canadian Y'uknn Scene of Search for Precious Metal. By Vnilrii Prr RACINE. Wis., Feb. 6.—An airplane search for gold in the Quie£ lake region of the Canadian Yukon will be resumed soon by Lynn Staples. 27. member of a socially prominent Racine family. His Fox Moth plane will be equipped with skis for winter and pontoons for summer. Staples will meet members of his expedition at White Horse, where seventy tons of placer mining equipment and fifteen tons of food and utensils will be loaded on scows for transportation up the Lewes River to Lake Leberge, made famous in Robert Service’s poem as the .pot where Sam McGee was cremated. Last year Staples and a group of friends staked out diggings on three miles of claim along Iron creek. He returned to arrange for equipment to reach the gold channel which he believes is covered by glacial drift.
SUSPECTED PROWLER IS NABBED BY POLICE Alleged Threats Lead to Arrest for Carrying Concealed Weapons. Chased through city streets last night as a suspected prowler, Milton C. Dillon. 34. of 3015 North Meridian street. Apartment 308, was arrested by police and charged with vagrancy and carrying concealed weapons. Harry S. Brown. 5228 Central avenue. who reported the prowler, said that Dillon was in his employe and had been demoted by him. Mr. Brown claimed that he had learned that Dillon was going to attempt doing him bodily harm. Police searched Dillon's car and found a blue steel automatic pistol, they said. SAD END REACHED FOR PACKET STEAMER Once Proud Craft Will Be Used as Wharf Boat. Bn I nitfd Press PITTSBURGH. Feb. 6. The Queen City, one of the packet boats which plied the rivers between Pittsburgh and New Orleans, is being reduced to a humble wharf boat. Once it was the most magnificent of the packet boats claiming Pittsburgh as their home port. It is being dismantled on the Monongaheia river, just above the point where the Allegheny and Monongaheia rivers jom and form the Ohio. Built in 1897. the Queen City still was in aervice last summer. STOP GETTING UP NIGHTS Lax the Bladder With Juniper Oil. Buchu. Etc. Drive out the impurities anti excess acids that cause irritation, burning: and frequent desire. Juniper oil is pleasant to tako in the form of BIKETS. the bladder laxative, also containing Buchu leave*, etc. Works on the bladder similar to castor oil on the bowels. Get a Jsc box from any drug store. After four day* If not relieved of "getting up nights” go back and get your money. If )oa are bothered with backache or leg pains caused from bladder disorder* you are bound to feel better after this cleansing and you get your regular sleep. Hook Drug Stores.—Advertisement.
AUTO EXHIBIT SHOWS ‘PUSH’—LOTS OF IT Dealers Report Many Sales; Midget Racers Thrill Crowds
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"xyo draft...knee action.. .airplane lines.. .eight cylinders... it just IN matches my wine-colored frock...aw! Dad, let's get that beaut ...now if you'd like a demonstration we’ll have one of our men... This is to the tune of Louis Lowe's orchestra and the scratching of pens in check books bulled the the auto mart in Indianapolis todayand yesterday as the annual automobile exposition at the fairground reached new sales heights.
Pocketbooks, for the first time in four years seem to be made for something else besides cardcases. dealers reported. One Dodge salesman reported orders for fourteen trucks. Oldsmobile. De Soto, Chrysler, Ford and General Motors booths reported a flood of prospects. “It’s about time,” was the familiar song heard by salesmen as visitors explained that their old car had worn out during the zero years, and with the business thermometer registering milder days, they hoped to get anew car. n a a 'T'ODAY was the first time the show was complete in exhibits. with the arrival of show cars from Chicago. Pushmobile races proved a wellattended side attraction at last night's show, and tomorrow night the races will be repeated, under the direction of Dave Evans and E. G. (Cannon Ball) Baker, race drivers. The midget pilots proved to be crowd pleasers, and in some private parties attending pools were made on the racers. And for the first time at an auto show the “Wurzberger” (or whatever your favorite brand is) flowed in a beer garden in the corner of the exhibition building. Doors of the show open daily at 10 a. m. and close at 10:30 p. m. or as late as the crowd stays. Motorists may reach the exhibition by traveling north on Meridian street to Thirty-eighth and thence east to the fairground, while tram patrons can take cars marked “Fairground” on the College. Central or Illinois lines. Auto parking is provided in the
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spacious cattle barn at the fairground. Last night’s results of pushmobile races follow: First race, won by Sinclair H. C. Special, Donald Wiltsee, driver; Lafayette-Nash in E. L. Shaver special. Junior Hargus, driver, second; Oakley Motor Sales in Hud-son-Terraplane special, Pete Davis, driver, third. Second race, won by Sinclair H. C. Special, Harold Hawley Jr., driver; Citizens Motor Company in Packard special, Paul Sanders, driver, second; Grover Winings Company in a Hudson-Terraplane special, Speed Alexander, driver, third. Xylose syrup made from corncobs and stalks has almost no food value and apparently does not have the bad effect of diabetics that ordinary sugar has.
There will be less leather and more foot in the 1934 shoe modes. The shoe men are doing their part to get America back on its feet. 00# A gift from the Rose Tire Cos. A complete First Aid Kit fitted in a metal container. Just the right size for the pocket of your car or medicine cabinet. Has a retail value of 50 cents. Given without cost with change of oil —'Veedol. Quaker State. Pennzoil. Ring Free, Kendall or Perfect SeaL 000 Some wives whose husbands promised to go through fire and water for them have the idea that it also includes bankruptcy. St u u CHIEF TIRE CHANGER MIIJ.F.R TIRE DISTRIBUTORS
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Pushing is the city’s favorite sport this week at the annual automobile show at the fairground. There’s just good old crowds pushing up close to new models of cars on display and then there’s the excitement and thrill of the pushmobile races. Last night the midget drivers vied for turns and medals and again tomorrow night they’ll race for glory. Upper Left—Paul Wiltsee, midget driver, In the Lilliputian racer of E. G. (Cannon Ball) Baker on display at the show. Mr. Baker stands approvingly in the background.
PUBLIC ROLLER RINK IT Hill POPULAR Relief Benefit Sessions Draw Crowds. The public roller skating sessions being held on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday nights at Tomlinson hall for the benefit of the city and county employes’ emergency relief work among the unemployed and for the maintenance of food kitchens, are proving successful, according to Gar Davis and Hendricks Kenworthy, who have been in charge of the enterprise. The supply of skates on hand has been exhausted many times recently, and new ones have been ordered, it is stated. Music is a feature of the sessions, and many other interesting features are provided under the direction of Elmer Lombard, floor director of the rink. Tonight, a skating party at Tomlinson hall will be sponsored by the First Ward War Veterans' Club, but the affair will be open to the general public. Indians of New Mexico and Arizona had learned the art of irrigating their fields before the appearance of the vhije men on the continent.
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Upper Right—The pushing of “Ma” and “Paw” as they crowd near booths to see their favorite car's new 1934 lines. | , Lower Left—Lineup for the pushmobile race. Lower Right—Ford’s V-8 roadster, on display, resembles Christmas night with its snowy silver and golden sheen. It is mounted on a revolving cylinder and casts glittering lights on passersby. Below—Spare a moment; For here’s Miss Doris Davis, 1226 North Mount street, making the wheels go around at the auto show, and the “spare” she’s hugging wouldn’t budge from the job on a bet.
Rackety Ax! Brave Firemen Will Go to College.
“y\H! For the life of a fire-V-J man! “Rah! Rah! Rah!” Some such combination of song and college yell may be heard in Hoosierdom shortly, for plans are afoot to send the firemen to college, A brief outline of the educational project is contained in the current number of the Indiana Fireman, official magazine of the State Firemen’s Association. The program is to be worked out jointly by the state department of safety and Purdue university, it reveals. Classes probably will be held at Purdue. The article advises firemen not to feel abashed at becoming college boys. TROLLEY WRECKS TRUCK Driver of Motor Vehicle Escapes With Head Injury. Driving his truck into the path of a West Indianapolis street car at Sheffield avenue and Howard street, John Bean, 20, 16 Richland street, suffered a head gash this morning. The truck was demolished. William Vaughan, 2188 Sugar Grove avenue, was operator of the street car. Mr. Bean was treated by a private physician.
NBA MANAGER CITES EMPLOYMENT GAIKS Wage Increase Since June Remarked by Speaker. Increase of 15 per cent in employment and 17 per cent in wages since last June has been a direct result of the NRA, members of the Economics Research Forum were told last night by Francis Wells, NRA Indiana manager. The speaker pointed out that an! additional 5,000,000 men were given j employment by the public works j and civil works administrations. SPRINGER WILL SPEAK Former G. O. P. Governor Nominee to Talk at Irvington. Raymond S. Springer, Connersville, will be the principal speaker at the Irvington Republican Club, Lincoln memorial meeting next Monday night, it was announced today. Mr. Springer was nominee for Governor on the Republican ticket last election. Claude H. Henderson, local attorney, was the principal speaker at the meeting last night, using as his subject the new registration law and turning the meeting into an open forum, with Pliny H. Wolford presiding.
IRWIN PREDICTS G. 0. P. SWEEP IN 1934V0TING Party Chief Sees Victory in State Due to Democratic Split. "I predict that the Republican party will sweep the 1934 election.” declared Don B. Irwin. Republican state chairman, last night at a meeting of the Young Republican Organization of MariorP county in the Washington. Confining his remarks to state
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.FEB, 6, 1934
politics. Mr. Irwin bitterly attacked what he termed “the three discordant groups” in the Indiana Democratic circles. “I say to you: The Republican party has an opportunity to cash in on the political sins of the McNutt clique, the Peters crowd and the Van Nuys group, by battling them with a solid and united front of both men ant. women, young and old.” he said. “Party harmony, plus a construe* tive program designed to cure our ailing state government under the maladministration of Governor McNutt, plus Republican candidates who are honest, fearless and fitted for their jobs—combine these three essential and component parts and victory is assured." Eastern Star Chapter to Meet North Park Chapter 404. Order of Eastern Star, will meet tonight at the hall, Clifton and Thirtieth streets.
