Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 96, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 August 1934 — Page 29
Aro. 31, 1034.
SATURDAY SS 9A. M.-6 P. M. 1 I'illlM'lls! \\ i<l<‘ S(‘lH‘li<ii! DRESS SPORTS J rafl f Wgffl * yi; i;i| | |7%|tllßtf rovls M,A,S | SS/SH fl IVi I m | ,1 i fl .fl flfl WMfl V All the Wanted vies with Plaid-bat un/neri sp< | //£/. : v> L "* • w ** ™ A ™ ™ ™ ™ *■ -F manv new fur trims .. . coats. Expertly tailored. fftyffirfrej French Beaver. Sealine, Black, brown, wine, preen |||uwre|ggl HOB wjjfl ul I lovely silk crepe. school or sports wear. j ijJ i £,ks |* Fast color, fall shades, yard wide. Yd -23 l| PlfcJf /§ USE OUR LAYAWAY ■- ™ RAMONA SUITING Yd. •• •> I * Bark •Boucle • Wool Crepe flflPMf 'asanas** b . ~,,, | riH'tnttttl ( I‘fiß J p |p Shop Saturday for Little sister! Smarf Frocks for Larger Figures — Penney’s 1: ; isiv‘ Dresses L Wm Stylish Stout Dresses Printed Percales and Broadcloths MM JPfl" .T Wtih Slenderizing Lines! I Cute little printed percales iM,W fflpjFPH KV* j p"ald s b dhec C teand J R 1 TRAVEL CREPES—FLAT CREPES || younges’ I locking. We carry an exception- S M .98 | | PenneyV—Little Sisters’ Shop—Second Floor \ > • travel crepes and dressy flat / HB|| Children 8 Cotton PPv|L... but at very low prices. Little Tots'and Growing Girls’ SHHHRXS *r~ni h „„ , m HOST i Fl SIZES 44-56 WINTER i y*‘ - d l # | C 6 flf ft* cf 1 q,, i; .ts- usual selection. Come early_ jfl mWw*W j | Unusually Good Selection! *’ . IS 13f S /Si <IH .•*' Children’s \ew §| - <r ’ ; ? ‘ rs P. BERETS types in the bet- v I ooattnirs des ig nod as " jrjfl t| |lt|j|Pure Silk llosc Also snappy IIMMMIEIIS illli?iH® Tull Fashioned /fl S(\ sports styles. >u:os n-lh. fl3llti ll^ 1 * Xew Fall s h < ldcs Li Jfc i % ws 1? til fiiii m * spiendidvai z fi„ a Second Floor 16 J fB C Second’ 5 wC 1 jjiSlji'j Wmlfi ■ Floor. kij;, 1 *ii?i ; lli)i!8 [ S:^.w: ;pM i s i oi T r fe- itSl (S Staler’. h°p "arch 3 ” Supports 4^t~Jk s| Rj ■ duamyaannel sizes 7-14... HO l|l. fOT Tired Feet! /VJ^7 / *I * * ' K Wool Sweaters, | IQ I ill. Smart new attrac- £- t ' Ifcfc AQ M? I Plt fl coat style, sizes 10-16 ■ m "•¥ J 8 tive styles, soft ffip J / mu'it i kill sla fl " kid and suede up ' MB? ■ ftPt ■■■ * r fl Printed Blouses, Til W h pers Wlth built ' m jfl short sleeves, sizes 8-14 .... # W fli I/* a b featllies. - ’ , t C ou d gh n ' w'ear S an n d [\ W ■ij//, *^ A I NOVELTY SHOES, many nett styl, w?ather Elk - heavy UK Ravon Plaited Hose, •'J T Itt Black, brown, Pair SL9B • ” *** **- ;JJ| for extra wear £ C 1 \ 1 * 1 ° J Sl.ajJl l B Slip-over Sweaters, Qf£ 1/ h ICS* ~S vl\Rl\ fIL . Vis short or long sleeves 1U # Lovely fall styles that S<*lil Oxtonls 11 f Children’s Pajamas, TCk jl/HU I I Imade and finished. I 1 fl outing flannel, sizes. 2-6... *W *W * M'[ j /fl 17 JgGf • ■l/ Smart kid, calf and dull Xv Bcst-seiiers for the 1 | fl Hl> 13 Jtßßr suede leathers. Black ’ A (fkiTl f^ 1 ch:ldr<>n - Blark Is 1 W u * 1 T ,.£,• Ciic 4k M \ J and brown. Sizes 41/2 y eik i Brother and Sister) B . / eBBW n an' 9 Oo—iistairs Shoe Dept.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
EAST MEETS WEST
1 """‘ pS - / ... * 4 ’ © *
Kipling was wrong, as East and West have met and a September wedding in Shanghai. China, will be the outcome. Romance of Miss Karin Broemmelsiek, above, of Ladue, Mo., and Robert Horiguchi began when they attended Missouri university. The bridegroom-to-be is a son of a former Japanese minister to Brazil. They’ll live in Shanghai.
ATTENDANT FIRES ON OIL STATION BANDITS Trio Flees With SSO Cash and Cigarets. % Three bandits, one of them armed, held up and robbed Gene Carter, Rockville road, Hoosier Pete Oil station attendant at Twentysecond street and Capitol avenue, early today of SSO and $27 worth of cigarets. As the car was driving away. Mr. Carter picked up a rifle and fired fifteen shots at the fleeting automobile. He said that he thought some of the shots took effect. Basil Swineheart, 32, of 1712 Southeastern avenue, attendant at the filling station at Southeastern and State avenues, was robbed of sls later in the morning. Two six-foot Negroes, one of them armed with a razor, robbed Fred C. Shepard, 24, of 1012 North Beville avenue, Gaseteria oil station attendant, 320 West Michigan street, of sls early today. AIR TOUR OF STATE WILL START SEPT. 10 Lieutenant Carpenter Heads Annual Expedition. Lieutenant Matt G. Carpenter, One hundred and thirteenth observation squadron, Indiana National Guard, will be tourmaster of the sixth annual all-Indiana air tour. A fleet of at least thirty-five planes with a personnel of eighty will leave Indianapolis Sept. 10, returning six days later. Fifteen to eighteen cities will be visited. Master Sergeant Russell Long, also of the guard squadron, will be in the plane with Lieutenant Carpenter and will act as starter. Lieutenant Stanton T. Smith, commander of Schoen field, will be field marshal and Herbert O. Fisher, aeronautical secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, tour director. HOOSIER YOUTH WINS HIGH COLLEGE HONOR Sheldon Sommers Listed With First 12 in Harvard Class. Sheldon C. Sommers, Cold Spring road, has been ranked among the first twelve in the freshman class at Harvard university. The class numbers 987. Mr. Sommers made a record of straight As and also was active in athletics. Son of Charles B. Sommers, he was graduated from Park school in 1933, and was awarded the Sutphin trophy, the highest school award. He will return to Cambridge, Mass., Sept. 15 to enter his sophomore year. His present studies are preliminary to advanced work in chemical research.
Crown Jewelers—2l So. Illinois St. Bui I "' , Ii Jf li.amor.i] in a heaitifully SB —5 <nera"<l mount- EES W-m+£* £t:'A a mm _ :<1 *voMinp r.r._• *. JoBK . |- f*i IM<■ P tit# "'in k sEB . Z RINGS J* YELLOW GOLD. HU fIVfWMILI $10.73 Diamond Engagement King |gggf”, $7.30 Sol and Gold Wedding King BOIH FOR 519.85 j||ipfllß w K^ l 01 rot th QT tm I ILLINOIS Ola
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NAZIS TO OUST WORKERS UNDER 25. UNMARRIED Older Unemployed Citizens, Men With Families, to Get Job. By I'nited Press BERLIN. Aug. 31.—Unmarried office workers and laborers in German industry under 25 years of age will be dismissed on Oct. 1, to make room for older unemployed citizens, particularly married men with large families. Dr. Friedrich Syrup, president of the reich labor board and the government's re-employment bureau, issued a decree today to make effective his plan for redistribution of ■ employment. The decree makes an exception of youths who are married or who are supporting one or more dependents. The decree provides for a national subsidy from which employers may receive as much as fifty marks a month an employe for losses caused by reduced production due to the employment of “slower” workmen above the age of 40. In the future no person under 25 may be employed without the approval of the bureau. Jewish Order Issued By United Press BERLIN. Aug. 31.—An order virtually prohibiting any relationship between members of the Nazi party and Jews has been prepared by Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hitler’s deputy leader of the party, and awaits distribution, it was learned today. Three million copies of the order have been printed. It was believed the order was the result of resolutions passed by the world Jewish conference at Geneva and was intended as a warning against an intensification of the boycott of German goods abroad. MODERN FOOD STORE OPENED BY STANDARD New Emporium Will Serve Residents of West Sido. Opening of anew modernized food store for the west side was announced today by the Standard Grocery Company at 1245 Oliver avenue. Covering 4,000 square feet of floor space the new super-market features a high ceiling with perfect ventilation and the latest improved cases and daylight lighting. Stainless steel is used effectively as a method of sanitation, i Parking space abounds. Older west side residents recall that during the 1913 flood the Stan- ! dard Grocery opened its stores to the needy and homeless. The company consists of an organization of approximately 1,200. men and women and is Indianapo-lis-owned and operated. Steamer Sinks; Scores Missing By Ini ted Press ANTUNG, Manchukuo, Aug. 31. The river steamer Taian Maru, with 120 passengers aboard, capsized at the mouth of the Yalu river here today, with heavy loss of life. The captain and twenty-two other persons, including some of the crew, were rescued. The others are bellieved to have been drowned.
has no terror, for met. You never tried anything so comforting, so soothing, so completely effective for Hay Fever as this new scientific treatment—lllM R()I> MEDICINAL Cl (1A RETTES! Contain no tobarro, no narcotic*, non-habit forming. A few puffs bring relief. Quickly clear the nasal passages; lessen watery discharge* of nose and eyes; ease distress of Asthnuu Get a package today at t\ WALGREEN’S HOOK'S Depend- \i able Drue Store* or other eood drag >\ stores. Jfl
