Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 18, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1934 — Page 4

PAGE 4

XT rr“- ~ * ijMßmilißimißigiMwiiiiiiaiuiilMgiiiuHiiHilijinjjMjiMiiijjuiaMMF ROOM LOTS OF Store Open Buy on Our j__ _f ti . . \ mai i PAPER Saturday 10-Pay Plan ji 1' mm jjj C PArtn 9 P.M. I weeklyHpayments and I ■ Neat patterns, all sunfast, large \ &Zr o'** o* A ■ I ■ 9 selection, suitable for any room *\ <&ir ° \ ; Saturday June pargainsßas^Jafel/^ 1 W V Cool Summer Dresses j U ... Also W ashable Suits and Smart . mgM&. f MT\>, £ \ 4 H"f 9Hfik H *9l L - ||p||k f Wa/'IHiY Jr*|P^ Washable Sports Frocks | || 1 | A Hi M l\wlt|\\ Laces and Cottons L 8 9 1 4 . , jp Presses for Vacation 1 Amazing Loll / J/ce |j) V li ' Dresses for Business • • C for Smartness, for cool- |lil?lll v| ' t bur 3 *■ Hr Dresses for street, Etc, |H ■ ness and because they’re I\yJOSfW :3lr > AU Sizes Included, 14 to 52 B 1 “ I’hte r JuBL fl| C .- \ B InhwV For the women who want better dresses, here’s a marvelous selection MBF B • f _„j T Uoi n rolor 8Eh983 1 X. ... and what a grand variety of selection, including plenty of white. MW M prints, arm pam luku HHU m pastels, jacket frocks, prints, etc., fashioned of adorable, cool, sheer 1 inm Wf Wo-n-sSheerCotton Women’s Washable ’"“JJ C.’x, * #*Qft f JliH\ x* If DRESSES Sport Frocks * pique 5 "ISO 1 7mZL I —TV ttX.k rs \ss I summery cht£-- f a ‘“ n KXTt-fc O Qfi & Waffle Weave C Jjj Ijfl /£&^SzW- \ 1 *pi 1 | 011 ' Ol6 reSSeS ’ ivO ter racks, sizes 14 O "Ww Sports Costs SHOP THE “STAR” FOR WHITE IS ALWAYS RIGHT J<^\ w. L. DOUGLAS Brimmed mSMmmm H H Straus! Linens! raUtt|aL 1 M 9 p L Crepes! & String Mesh! *T ; j ggggg Quality-Style and Comfort s* aS ■■ fll <jf y I £ Q 50 ea(^S^ZeS# Millinery Dept., Second Floor g Guaranteed Alarm June Feature—Silk Full Fashioned Silk SALE! White Leather 300-Yard jpoo^ W , ■ W CLOCKS SLIPS HOSIERY PURSES More quality for the price than any other shoe d c anf i aq m* numbers. Special Sat- O made. Vi hite, black and white, brown and black, kid and genuine calf, for men and young men. •‘r’TjL' n '"T 1 ! / it ' Gauge Q fjQ star. nr S t Floor Sizes to 12, AA to EE widths. ■ f H WpL} 111 Im| #■ C AM' O I vw Star. First Floor /”>k. iID ■“ j J \ : *X- SgWiW||j i MBl s sl*39 |ll aa j j colors included. I | 'J|I fl m! V: V S Wl Jt^^OUcic^l on Our ?l ack ’ - You 11 want sev- of fine pig grain, calf and YIT OPI 10-Pav Plan bionze ann ‘ eral pair of novelty grains; in - envelope, V^/^l ■ ■ blue. §£ sizes 34 to 44. U,fM thege at 4Qc pair po UCht large and small shapes „•,... JM Men’s and Boys’ Sport Oxfords i fF—rrrr — 111 - 19 White, washable kid oxfords, neat . Electric Clocks Mesh undies tj mis ps’ and II White Fabric Gloves I p star. First nwr j dressy styles with long wearing soles-S _45 F* t\ tic. Bri,,. Us iV.'. and ?™l-” 1 C With novelty |_ MBalaMaH>alMV ’ A " sizes and £V“ 0 C Sl'k" 1 -'^^l irL^|nn rLnnj- "X.-in ~i ‘siTui Bedspreads i\\\ °°T V ' T ANARUS" •"‘ } i's pjfap Amr Ft s^ r£ B9c Window Awnings I L~n - r\~M~in~v/ l | y z OQc 1 iiiiiYnf Men s and Yow,lg Me “ ,s |j pillows ance. Choice of color combi- 9|9 HB9 B I crld "w^tiT'cretonne 4j ~PORCH AWNINGS {gliyij 1 (ts== | Mj gbj^ ; pH PREP-GJRADUATION SmTS I gr^jy, jSH I RTS SLACKSjSHIRTS&I CHA k R q Sale! For June Brides I "^“HS 5 H ° *=SP 3-Pc. Bedroom Suite 9 c Pll SStwin p p ~ |An excep- H lli IIW 4i | I iftP 1C values. Tair- | lIC Buy Furniture on Jg OH ““*.<“>• NJU- - 1U 1 CjUr Easy Payment a V shirt at gL&J patterns, for sports;: ill The shorts are of I—^ m^ 15 , price and dress wear. VHBlil 1 broadcloth. Fancy | TjW ]J \'M BOVS' Bib Style l Bi line fy / gj Zes 29 to 42. A real \IPBp .3 patterns, tub fast, ii || nll|)CB _._ '_ . . _ B grade broad- value at this price. m shirts of fine I|| 1 ||lliß OVERALLS A thrill for June brides and all other brides, beautiful 3-pc. walnut B cloth - Sizes |fe^///l|^^4LX rf For men and young li combed cotton yarn. I 1 ill 111 l 9 Blue denim in bedroom suite, large poster bed, French vanity and large roomy 814B 14 to n - men. IM All sizes. I l|i| 1 iJB sizes 4to 12 years. "J ■■ chest of drawers with genuine maple trim, 5-ply American walnut H star. First fioo, star. First Floor b star. First Floor UriiißiidHMßW ideal for play, etc. C , veneer on flat surface. st,,r - F,rst F,oor

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

JUNE 1, 1934

LUMBER CODE IS DESIGNED TO CUTRRE LOSS Industry Anxious to Prevent Repetition of Costly Oregon Burn. By Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, June I.—One of the reasons why lumbermen are joining the new NRA code rules for forest conservation is the hope that there will never again be such a national disaster as the “Tillamook burn” of last August. Since the days when half this country was covered by forests—.only 25 per cent is now—there have been many terrible blazes among the trees. One in Wisconsin in 1871 destroyed more than 1,000,000 acres and 1,500 lives, another in Minnesota killed 418 and denuded 160,000 acres in 1897. and the great Idaho fire of 1910 swept over 2,000,000 acres and killed eleven billion feet of lumber. The annual estimated loss is seventy lives and $25,000,000 worth of timber. Tillamook burn, however, swept out eleven billion feet last summer over 300,000 of Oregon’s acres, embracing some of the richest virgin stands of Douglas fir, cedar and hemlock on the continent. The timber destroyed was equal to the whole annual production of lumber. The Are made a monster grate of 500 square miles and raged through dry forests for nearly two weeks, despite the efforts of thousands of fire fighters, including CCC boys from New York City's streets. The fire started Aug. 14, presumably from the friction of a steel logging cable being dragged across another, at the end of a long dry spell. Both the state law of Oregon and the new code rules of for- | est practice—the latter effective ! June I—enable the authorities to I halt all logging operations when the dry woods become vulnerable to combustion. The fire began in freshly cut j timber and was discovered almost I immediately by the logging crew, but the day was windy and the blaze spread rapidly, racing through cutover “slash”—the debris from logging. Under the code such debris hereafter must be cleared out by the logging operator. On the second day the fire leaped into the tops of old-growth DougI las fir, and spread until two sepI arate fires covering more than 5,900 | acres were raging. Then mist and fog helped the fighters, and the fire j was confined for four or five day* as the winds died down. The sires fighting crew was increased to 900. But then came a break in the i weather, with strong east winds. | Quickly the fire raced along mountainous ridges. The fires spread twenty or thirty miles in each direction through virgin timber until it embraced more than 500 square miles, covering most of Tillamook county.

FORMER I. U. MEDICAL MAN TO VISIT EUROPE Dr. V. H. Moon to Attend Conference in Germany. Dr. V. H. Moon, for several years head of the pathology department at the Indiana university school of medicine here, will sail tomorrow for Europe with his wife to attend the triennial conference of the International Association of Pathologists, of which he is the American director. The physician, who now heads the pathology department at Jefferson medical college, Philadelphia, will remain in Europe all summer. The association’s convention is to be held in Germany. Mrs. Moon will remain in Paris for musical studies When her husband returns next fall. Dr. Moon’s mother and sister, Mrs. Lida A. Moon and Mrs. J. M. Stearns, are residents of Indianapolis. RUSSIA MAY BUY MORE U. S. COTTON IN 1934 Reports Predict Probable Short Crop in Central Asia. By United Press MOSCOW, June I.—Prospects of increased cotton sales by the United States to Russia this year were seen today in reports of a probable short crop from Tashkent, capital of Russia's great central Asian cotton realm. Central Asia produces fully 80 per cent of all Soviet cotton. Last year the government obtained from the United States RFCA credit of $4,000,000, most of which was used to buy American cotton. NOTED EDUCATOR DIES William and Mary College Head Since 1919 Passes. By United Press NORFOLK, Va„ June I.—Dr. J. A. C. Chandler, William and Mary college president since July 1, 1919, and well known Virginia educator, died in a hospital here yesterday of a kidney ailment which had kept him confined to bed for many months.

Misery Is No Name for II When eczema or common itch is causing endless itching, smarting or dry scaly skin. “Jo-Da-Sol is a wonderful eczema medicine,” writes Mrs. J, Crabtree, Evansville, Ind. Use Jo-Da-Sol for all skin affections. “ m ™ At Any HAAG’S Drug Stores

iTjjigk SPEC!AIT THE PEOPLES DENTISTS 3i!i W. WASHINGTON ST.