Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 240, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 February 1934 — Page 20
PAGE 20
WAR VETERANS GUARD JAIL AT GREENCASTLE Harry Copeland, Alleged Terror Mobster, Faces Bandit Charge. By Time* Sprtfnl GREENQASTLE. Ind, Feb. 15 - World war veterans armed with rifles and shotguns paced the Putnam county jail today as county officials prepared to arraign Har.y Copeland, member of the “terror mob'* of escaped convicts on charges of having patricipated in the robbery of the Central National bank here on Oct. 23. Copeland was brought here from the Indiana state prison at Michigan C:ty yesterday. Heavily guarded by local officers and state police, the trip was uneventful. The convict. according to state police, discussed his career freely, but refused to admit that he participated in the Greencastle “job.” Following Copeland's Incarceration in the Putnam county jail. Miss Bess Robbins, Indianapolis attorney, spent more than an hour conferring with the gangster. Police said that Copeland had been identified positively by at least lour persons as the man who stood outside the bank during the holdup. Dillinger and Pierpont also have been identified as two of the gang who took part in the robbery, according to state i#>lice. * Two large floodl/ghts illuminated the yard of the jail last night to enable armed guards to cope better with any attempts by John Hamilton or Joseph Burns, members of the gang still at large, in threatened attempts at release. FOUNDING PROGRAM SET Manual High School to Observe Thirty-Ninth Birthday. In observance of the thirty-ninth birthday of Manual high school Sunday, several special features have been planned for Friday at the school. Programs have been arranged for all roll rooms, during which the histoiy of the school will be recounted in different ways. In addition to this observance the June senior class will present to the school, as is the annual custom, flowers to be placed under an oil portrait of Charles E. Emmerich, I first principal of the school, which j hangs in the main corridor. The first issue this semester of ; the Booster. Manual weekly pub- ! lication. also will note the school's birthday.
Wanted-Old Gold Jewelry Broken or any condition, watches, rhaim, ring*, bridges, teeth. Ml your old sold direct to the oldest established sold refinery In Indiana. Licensed by t. S. <nx eminent. Cash paid immediately. Bring to Standard Gold Smelting Cos. 423 Lemcke Bldg., 4th Floor Fntranre I<W5 [ait Market St.
>r ipf/ II I n fi> v w ||§| mm I Open Evenings COME in and let us explain the IDEAL WAY to buy a Kelvinator —the finest in electric refrigeration. There is no down payment —ls cents a day—and before you know it, your ■FTS Kelvinator has paid for itself with the money it saves you. nni 20 th anniversary KELVINATORS Now on display ■■■■■■— 128*130 K Penn. SU Est 1873
ARMY FLIERS PRACTICE AIR MAIL TRICKS
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With the army prepared to fly the air mails, pilots in the service are brushing up in the technio.ue of handling the mails. Here soldiers at Mitchell Field. N. Y., familiarize themselves with the method of loading mail sacks.
CITY WOMAN TO SING AND LECTURE ON OPERA Mary Traub Busch to Entertain at Fellowship Dinner. Mary Traub Busch, local musician, will give an opera analysis and musical lecture on “Samson and Delilah'* at the Northwood Christian church fellowship dinner tonight. Mrs. Busch will sing the three contralto arias in the opera. Fred Wilson, Northwood Sunday school superintendent, will review a chapter of the Rev. Bert Wilson's book, "Know Your Church.” Barrymore Is 52 Today By United Prem HOLLYWOOD. Cal.. Feb. 15. John Barrymore was 52 today. More than twenty years ago he made his film debut.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
RAIL AND PLANE COMPANIES MAT MERGEJFFICES Plan to Abandon Circle for Union Station Joint Venture Studied. Federal officials of railroad coordination admitted today that a plan to consolidate ticket offices of four railroads and one transcontinental air line at the Union station was “being studied.” Present offices of the companies in the English building in Monument Circle would be moved as an economy measure, it was learned. The economy plan is said to be part of a measure advocated by Joseph B. Eastman, federal railroad co-ordinator appointed by President Roosevelt to reduce expenses in the operations of railroads. Offices affected are the Big Four, the Chicago, Indianapolis and Louisville Railroad, the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, the Pennsylvania railroad and the Transcontinental-
CRITERIA GASOLINES FOR LESS J2fi TV. lfilli Street Bel ween Capitol and Illinois
Western Air line, all occupying offices at 112-116 Monument place. While local railroad officials refused to comment, Joseph C. Turney, traffic expert for the government in Washington admitted that the proposed economy moves were being studied but could not say how far Mr. Eastman had gone with his plans. Labradorite is a gray mineral which flashes in rainbow colors when struck by sunlight.
.Loading a pipe, son, is like building a fire NO IF if you want to build a fire you’ve got to have the right kind of chimney, and you've got to have the right kind of wood, seasoned right and packed right in the fireplace. If you’ve got all this, it’s easy to "Ir’s pretty near the same way 9 // in smoking a pipe. Now if you’ve WH H MnUBH got Granger Tobacco the right kind of pipe tobacco any old "And if you put in a pinch at a time and pack it down good and tight—the way to load a pipe—all you need to do is strike a match. || \ ft "Granger smokes sweet and cool right down to the bottom of the bowl. j, • fßm "That’s pipe comfort, I tell you." (j[ ran g er Rough Cut the pipe tobacco that’s MILD the pipe tobacco that’s COOL folks seem to like it § 1934, Liggett & Myers Tobacco Cos. y
Oh, Pump No More, My Lady Can you picture yourself being in- your lighting direct or indirect; you convenienced today to the point illus- may live in an efficiency apartment trated above? Os course not! Yet it where efficiency is the last word or , , . , vou may live m quarters that osier was but a few years ago that many . . _ . . . . . spacious rooms. Then again you may houses had no indoor water supply, prefer a good old fashioned house no electricity, many not even gas. with a garden and an open porch. Those were the days when the true meaning of being modern was not Whatever your need may be it can be known supplied quickly and efficiently by; merely referring to the Rental ColToday there is an altogether differ- umns in The Times. There you will ent picture. There are many differ- find the most desirable vacancies in ent types of heating; you may have the city listed for your selection. And if you have a vacancy, it should interest you to know that more and more people in Indianapolis are turning to The Times for Want Ad results. Incidentally Times rates are the lowest in the city—Riley 5551 is the telephone number. AND—you can say, “Charge it.”
SUIT TESTING WEBB APPOINTMENT FILED Legislators as Executives Illegal, Is Claim. Suit to test the constitutionality of appointment of state legislative
officers to administrative posts un- ! der the 1933 state reorganization act was filed in circuit court yesterday by Herman L. Seegcr. Indian- ! apolis “taxpayer and citizen." j The suit seeks to test the legality ( of the appointment of John B. Webb as a member of the Indiana ■■ board of agriculture. Mr. Webb, j state senator from Marion and Johnson counties, was named to the ; agricultural post April 1. 1933.
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BAPTIST CHORISTERS TO PRESENT RECITAL Old Melodies to Be Featured at Concert Tomorrow. Memorial Baptist church choir will present an old melodies recital and chili supper in the church at 5:30 tomorrow night. Professor E. R. Gatto will direct the choir. Soloists will be Miss Lottie Mehaffy, Miss Bernice Hoover and Omer Rybolt.
