Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 64, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 July 1934 — Page 5

JULY 23, 193f.

f| il mi inr li JBUJJJUL, J.lti .M'J .~, , m m .4 Beautiful Electric Clack! font.it** imp cxra.pecia a ues. | § ee jjjg “World's Fair” Movie—at Sears! it “Sessions” jCjJ| I All Steel (abmet New Circle Mirror | Modern Screen Dramatization of The L_ _ I “Century of Progress 7T17 >~u, > ( IN (P B visitors. A comprehensive review of the Century of Progress, including the “high spots” of the Beautifully finished in rich walnut, raised numerals in black + r I (] 1 \ J) I big exposition— a detailed view of the most interesting exhibits and shows—The Enchanted with gilt outline. An accurate timekeeper—Fullv guaranI jfc ] I M S B I 1 Island, The Midway, Streets of Paris, the famous pageant “Wings of a Century,” the wonder- | . , Ninth incr finor for a crift T P* I L ful lagoons. This is said to be the most comprehensive portrayal of A Century of Progress in t-teu. ± uinn & fc i I I H : l 1 ■ Au, „* se ver- SST& - “• --“• N ° ch “"- Eight-Day Kitchen Clock iJ ! Bhed m White Ssw ai when you see 1 Thursday Niyht, 7to9P. M. Friday, 10 to 11 A. M. and 2to 3 P.M. An unusually attractive clock with 5-mch glass r LV then, crysta, ' Saturday, 10 to 11 A. U —B to 3 and 7to9P. M. ivorTand Seen Gua “5/ 8“ v>- |B r mirrored j clear. A special —Radio Department, Sears. Basement. l\Ol\ and ft ieen. CiUaiantetd timexeepei. 1 door. ItS . value of this sale. ' s —Sears First Floor. t -• "' - "■ - ■— I* For Three Days Only-A New Low Price on This Fine | Mtm A New Three Candle I ' /filial T Now! ■ . Kenmore Washer *tS* Floor Lam P IID . ~ , 1 Uk - Blear,catty E mipt c* THrcuoHout M.BuMt.U.'*. Rig 6 COWSpOt 088 I § 4 ° Electric Refrigerator lN=®[i Jr) S3S2ST.*~ Priced Lifer a Four! B • ':';gße 1 $5 Monthly mented base in New Motifs. |K9 Small carrying plaited shades in gold I IIn’• IB f_; ■ Through sheer merit-proved bp more than candk bridge type. Gom- /x : >fg| r! ■ 200,000 women each year—This Kenmore Electric sH!|| plete Wlth shade at s4 * 9o ‘ |S $1 | C|so ,ias become Nationally famous as “America’s A Famous Piece of Pottery Reproduced ® nai ' | | / rWM Fastest Selling Washer in a Unique I ~ Designed for one specific purpose—that of doing Table Lamp || I _____ l 7 work equally as pood as uny other washer Amazingly Priced i " T “ i \| so Easy Terms "'ad*' regardless of name or cost. Nimrod, the -j :lf; * pi S', Down 87 , The fact that “every minute someone, somewhere, hunter ms| 98 —J H Monthly ft M buys a Kenmore Washer” proves it an outstand- the S fn- ;i S IBj N Small Carrying Thursday, High quality enameled tub... triple vane gyrator Base is of Wt HE , and Friday ■© ...balloon roll wringer ... powerful rubber B Se°”i 'I M !\i p . , At mounted motor .. . truly a great washer. Built white paper parchment A Z ZZZ'ZX j|H|p Jl CdtlirCS! • Hi Saturday for and sold exclusively by Sears in Indianapolis. _ I N— -n- ‘ j# V - / —Sears, Basement. a beauty. —Sears, Second Floor. •: 1 | Door Opener ________ —| |p|r Easy Release | Interior Electric Insulated Gas Range With Heat Control saver Plated ware | —I. .1 Marvelous I alue at This Price ftt J rv ym 26 Pieces Neatly Boxed mfM \ 111 Outside ■ II I \ |: Defrosting Switch •' f Beautifully designed to serve the needs of the # y/1 JO/fa r\ r- L j I ire Cubes and li, ,w fcVTi -i - j most exacting housewife at a small cost. The Ma X. x \ * Dessert Tray • { “ e Q ua l of any other 549.50 range we have seen. " ' A, i v . .v . . N Think of it! A “big six” (actual size 6.08 cubic - * i'./S * or e Outstanding Features “Lady Joan” feet) refrigerator with plenty of room for everyI f'■ . thing-andit only costs.but a trifle more than a Oven Heavy Gauge Steel. Porcelain Enameled Oven. Steel Knives 4-CllbiC-fOOt l€lllgeidtol 1 rihr.L DA 1 o Safety Pull-Out Even Racks. Porcelain Enameled Broiler. /i 6 Dinner Forks ONLY! A Smart, new model with every quality I*’/*/ e- if 4L.1 ■ Piano Hinged Lift Cover Over Cooking Top. . /If Jl f Butter Knife with an area of 11 60 SGUai’e feet Built 5o Down. So Monthly 11 Round Top Burners Concentrate 1-3 More Cooking Heat. * // L/ Sugar Shell butflv cs uu dil ett Get ui ii.uu squdit; 1001. CUIIL - : Small Carrying Charge u • for Veal’S of SatlSfaCtOlW SeiWlCe. u and i/ ii r- •l j • r n An attractive modern design beauheautit ully finished in Ivory Porcelain Enamel tifullv finished for the home, club, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Efj ttt yv restaurant, summer cottage for Order Yours Now! m fj' Wav Range —TITT ?lfts or for perSOna N„ s Fl , t n„. Don’t Delay-Free Delivery to Your Kitchen! **~" r ■ I-- ■■■ —Sears, Basement. la marvelous range w ith all of the mod- *^spWfaiMtaKgHwi ern features of much more expensive JT Shop at Sears and Save! Thousands Are Doing It! You, Too, May Profit by Sears Low Prices. k^ ovcs ; ‘ V /\J/J - - - - \/fr& of its outstanding features is the con- W- m v -— vV; -N|... • "-alt* i :ut\ Tank. Five hi-speed burners, six — y i |Rr T >WAI"j >1 | I Ltrge cooking holes—insulation over oven — ■■ 4 c \ Hr * B *4Wj aJ 9I H v 1 $ | $ J Fini.-i.ed in gleaming green porcelain enamel. S3 Down, S> Monthly - M a —Sears, Basement. Small Carrying Charge — -X- m

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 5

OiIUfSG'R AIDS ARE HUNTED IN CRIME CORRIDOF Hoover Defines Strip Where Search for Outlaws Is Centered. By Cn!t< and Prr** WASHINGTON. July 25—The hunt for John Dillinger s cronies and '''her “quick-on-the-trigger dcsi>et. oes ... ntered today in America s “c* np corridor.” That i„ Ahat Director J. Edgar Hoover of the federal law enforcement service terms a strip of territory running southwest from northern Wisconsin and Minnesota to Texas. It takes in the Twin Cities, broadens eastward to hit Chicago and fringes of Indiana, and cuts through lowa. Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma. In the northern part of this area, especially around Chicago, many [federal agents are concentrated in [the hunt for “Baby Face” Nelson. John Hamilton and Homer Van Meter, DUlinger gangsters; farther !south, special federal squads are hunting Charles (Pretty Boy) Floyd. Federal operatives all over the coun- ! try are on the alert for outlaws. [ But it is in the “crime corridor” that the trail is hottest. Mr. Hoover is certain that it is no mere coincidence that the “corridor" has been the scene of more bank robberies, more kidnapings and more killings than other sections. Hideouts Are Plentiful “For one thing.” Mr. Hoover explained, “the region abounds in woods that make it easier for the ' criminal to hide between raids. "Another factor is that few states j in this area have state police forces. The local police and sheriffs try to do their best, but the sheriffs often go out of office after a comparatively short term. The sheriffs find it difficult to operate effectively over a wide area to block roads and otherwise defeat roving desperadoes operating in high-powered automobiles.” The criminals hunted by federal agents are nearly all native-born Americans, despite popular belief that foreigners are responsible for most crime in this country. Many of the hunted men grew up in the “crime corridor.” In at least some cases, Mr. Hoover surmises that living in comparatively isolated communities where they felt they were a law unto themselves may have started criminal careers. Urges Teletype Link If each state had an efficient state police force, Mr. Hoover believes progress toward cleaning up the underworld would be much more rapid. If there were forty-eight state units, working in close co-operation and linked by teletype, criminals could be more quickly cut off from escape, hemmed in and captured. It was because of the need for unified national action that the federal government expanded its police authority, increased its force of agents and went after Dillingcr. DEATH PENALTY ASKED AT MATRICIDE TRIAL Jury Prepares to Consider Fate of Coast Youth. By United Pres * LOS ANGELES, July 25.—Amid scenes of open sobbing in the courtroom. a jury of seven women and five men today prepared to consider the fate of Louis Rude Payne, 21. charged with the brutal ax slayings of his mother and younger brother last May 30. Payne, a picture of despair, awaited the final ordeal after having collapsed in court , yesterday as Bates Booth, young assistant district attorney, demanded the death penalty. Court was recessed when the youth slipped into a jibbering hysteria, which gradually gave way to a fatalistic calm. At the boy's side was his sobbing father, Louis Rude Payne, St. Louis utilities executive, his head bowed in grief. ANNUAL PICNIC SET BY CONTRACTORS’ GROUP Sheet Metal Men to Hold Outing al Long Acre Park. The twenty-fifth annual picnic of the Sheet Metal, Warm Air Heating and Roofing Contractors Association of Indianapolis will be held Saturday at Long Acre park. Committees in charge of the picnic will be headed by Robert Renick. Henry Geiger, George Joslin, Macus Fcinburg. John Henley, Frank Sink, H. B. Peterson, Elmer Muffin, Paul Jordan, M. L. Thompson and A. A Nemec.

MORALS CASE JURY STILL IN DEADLOCK Panel Still Deliberating on Fate of Film Pair. By United Prcss LOS ANGELES, July 25.—A superior court jury considering the guilt or innocence of Dave Allen, casting bureau manager, and Gloria Marsh, film extra, on morals charges, remained deadlocked today after several hours of deliberation. BARGAIN IS OFFERED FOR LICENSE PLATES Price Halved Starting Aug. 1, Finney Announces. For those who have put off buying an automobile license, here’s a chance for a bargain. Frank Finney, state auto license department chief, said today sale ol auto license plates at loalf pries start Aug. 1. CONSTABLE FILES WRIT Accused Officer Seeks Freedom on Kidnap Charge. Cunning Stewart, Franklin town ship constable charged with kid napmg, yesterday filed a petitio: for a habeas corpus writ in supenoi court three. Stewart, together with A. W Howard, another Franklin township trustee, are alleged to have falsely arrested Miss Oda Morgan, case proprietor, on liquor charge*. I