Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 102, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 September 1934 — Page 9
SETT. 7. 103-1.
Von Hear It Everywhere! 2,400 High-Grade First Quality ■f-lj} FADE-PROOF QC</l QXICII 4/ ~ ~ keep your feet happy FOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN! ■-E j novelty Footwear Will Mr— 43l I II H I r ~ -m a Anolher vJjjiJff jP||ll pP B§P TREASURE ISLAND OiitstanJingJJ J| f|||§|| I • tMs€l* BOYS ' SHOP ®T7„„ '^XWs~~iM7; B!; . /*5- New ShipmenH 3,000 Fast Color, a )v f 4 G ~ JLP JJ ▼ ® 11l JL u' . a • 1 price of 68c! Can you imagine? Be here V I * Exti*a rS|ICC!IiI 31111 IS early Saturday and buy a good supply of K - / Will Rp PUrprl nn , , these for all your men folks. Fast-color .. . . / ' 7 111 De ridcea on An especially fine mercerized finished broad- |.| fancy patterns. Pre-shrunk collars. Many \/ m r i I cloth. Special attention given to tailoring de- ■ • 1 , .. , c ■ -\ a\ / 17 • ifVTpj) Men’s Fall SUITS s W\\ |Uj fjJt itta„ y J . u t„ r d" s e o v S Outstanding Quality! Fine tailoring! L / V / £ reco^n i z e the genuine Well-dressed men and gjssaß Igfev \ \ ) mB A va,ue in these plain and \ _ young men will be amazed ££ |l§ 4B gjp & 1 -ML fancy shirts ... at a sen- Ifgß § Jtfe that such good-looking BR JBr • ir’-J • IBjßk nationally low price. Sizes A suits are priced so reason- Bra 'ffZ 6-14V2. B Bfc ably. Designed much like _jgg|| Boys' True Blue MB* .®vs; gMHB * “Devon” Single Breasted • “Kent” Double Breasted. .1. lilt ESS 'SJSiyb SHIRT s V Pnini colors 01 wf either knickers or longies. B\lß 1 I „1 _ „ B broadcloth, \* Mad ? t 0 r>enne - v ’ s rigid fcl** r " p Fast color? Ccr- 1 |Sa V ( . BIIU specifications. You know R i - >: w tainiy. sizes to 144. they’re good! • I’ for Campus or Sports Wear . Jflßr -4 Popular favorite with boys in }*l .. Boys' Corduroy |t;Sp -ST.O K| |V; " , nl "“ r ;f3 *| •* fet' .41A4.1ES Boys' Worsted *“ BLUE MELTON , Wfo, 9 * S- ill knickers mW /jIPPEK MCK *J S J^r • * JL IHB \\ 1 W Navy blue weather-proof fabric. Rust- It II /; ' sjr\ Esm -EfflifeiS Goo <l quality. Full M.l ‘m proof fasteaer. Sizes 36-46. A "find” .\9r ' El lining. Knit cuffs. RR2m fl ii : I Bf among the bargains! BSllßlil Slzes tOl6 - mA w . .iTweaier§ i#f i m suedecloth KsTBWilh a Zip! BWg , Heavy Suedecloth #' ZIPPER JACKETS j )/ m WP eS|Si—l I % ■? r M y ftlnrk Sent Made of double SUPde clothnd they do luive a zipper ~gi _Kl| i. m L Mj J . signed to resist wind and rain^ front. Ail-wool. Tvpical9 B •St 9 {Train! Comes in attractive natural tan. , - ‘ ' B 4SI iS^^^ B ’hton style. Knit TI7 . rr-t Sizes 36-46. Men’s Shop J Penney value. B bottom. Aiifi B WinfjTip! • 'second Floor Warm and B - 1 - YOUNG HvfnFfltt WORK CLOTHES '' Boys' School Serr ™£ Boys, MEN'S "" S tPM dept. Cain as What shoes these are! All-leather | Super ‘'Pap I)ny ” I • • IPLIOLOS "u U >'r bTra' Anfsh cloth. i&L construction. And snappy styles. \LLS ' |,| .> II If It, ,H ~ For long service, a smooth fit, and Extra wear , R eg - T.ot the >oys “run and race ’ I • n g' looks .. . you can't choose more ular and extra sizes. • *£hese shoes can "take it.” ■ -4/so " And certainly a bargain! i \ >r brown. Corduroy Ztt " ( 69c-98c -’• 50.151 Knickers Boys'Elk G To“"' A * l °° cn ' Fit them ° nt for tfxiords JACKETS SI.U Oil treated leath-e”B 7A .... ttg C| er soles. BldCk Or BrOlVtl T - _*. _ . 1 Genuine “ Oxhide” jfWulpr AII-1% I Elk School FIXE AEL-EEATIIEII OXFORDS OVERAEES • • Jfcfß&W/f Sweaters SHOES *** "'* n JS*S.KS? 4Q E ™ hea 7- "2 nto welw ' - mr-Rf* JTY Plain *r..i nnrclty w P v*. wintry (lays ah<*ad in ■ .JfO as thfsp. €9 ■•' €R # N Sites >-IH. Warm and snug. Sturdv. ComDO- shoe* that are durable. ■ models that will wear a jKm fS m* k a 4 g |(} sit ion soles AA Swanky styles too. u,ne- •' I; | rr rw '“ : te, ®l ,ww • plai\ toe shoes t m* w niH Shin 1 Dept. Soft, black retan, shoes made with dry foot welt to § J .f)tt Held H ©ar • __ | M | keep out dampness. Sizes 6-11. J. Heav y wei s ht - Ver y sP€Cial- - k | *"■%# | STIBUV WORK SHOES 3 Ia B I IkJ # Soft and comfortable yet they can withstand a lot 9 Grey Covert • 8888 1 wR • of weather and hard Leather '&' ' WORK f T L I \d! RIGGED POLICE SHOES TROISERS m \& : Pre-shrunk. Saturday bargain. For the men who walk a great deal. Riveted steel£ a f)££ I fl -141 —Jy , r-. -p I ■ r- -p p. p. mmm mmm shank. Goodyear welt construction. Sizes 6-11. ’ J* IfNGTON STREEI i)own : tairsshoeDept -
THE IXDTAXAPOT.TS TIAFES
LEADS FIGHT ON FATHER
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Robert L. McCanless, whose views differ from those of his wealthy mill-owner father, is shown as he urged workers at Charlotte, N. C., to continue their strike until they win. TEN NOTED HOOSIERS ON HARBORS CONGRESS Woollen, McWhirter Are Named to Represent Indiana. B;i Timex Special WASHINGTON, Sept. 7.—Senator Frederick Van Nuys lias selected ten outstanding men from throughout Indiana to represent the state in the National Rivers and Harbors Congress it was announced at his offee today. They are: Evans Woollen, Indianapolis; Felix McWhirter, Indianapolis; Joseph Cravens, Madison; Samuel D. Royse, Terre Haute; Harry J. Arnold. Gary; John K. Jennings, Evansville; Cornelius O'Brien, Lawrenceburg; Vincent Bendix, South Bend; Joseph C. Hutzell, Ft. Wayne, and Judge Harry Crumpacker, Michigan City. DR. WICKS BACK HOME All Souls Unitarian Minister Returns from Trip. Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks, minister of All Souls Unitarian church, has returned from a three months’ trip to Europe, where he has studied sociological questions in England. He will speak at 11 Sunday at All Souls church on “The Year Before Us.”
' UNITED RUG & LINOLEUM CO.*™ I™™™’ 1 ™™™’ SEPTEMBER E| !| 1 R B Rubis) Americai^Orientals About This Outstanding OwlO Cj 7 A Rug Value! Tom reop the savings he - All first quality .. . woven <y/MBC ffe bought these through the back .. . the /? wr y S / before any beautiful reproductions of p . • Chinese and Persian rugs *' tce present a marvelous value! J) ue to the tremendous price Persian pattern rugs in reduction we are not permitSarouk and other famous ted to mention the manufacmotifs. Red, rose and rust turer’s name, but you will grounds. All rich quality, readily recognize this nationwith highlights woven in. ally advertised guaranteed Act at once! brand. ' AMERICAN ORIENTAL mTZA RUGS—9xI2 SIZE $ 1 Special for Saturday as low as ■ —— l l ' Bgjii Xo. 8 Cast li on 9x12 Lin °' Tex Polished Felt Base Rugs Ciril I ETC WITH BORDERS E PERFECT QUALITY Heavy quaHty A real saving in these attractive These skillets *U B serviceable rugs. Used in kitchens, _ was dining room*. a regularly at Me. M p b ed r ooms, etc. ft M ft ft Our special price iff %m m M Colors and par- Mm U*% only- wBM terns for tny V£jLaUW QUA NTITT LIMITED— d * ** r ** 1T e GET VOl KS EARLY! scheme. ■ L\ Jf it covers f/ieOftoor -We have it 139 w WASHINGTON ST. 1 open •• Oppoufe Indiana Theater . J s T n uP
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PEACE MOVES IRK MUNITIONS PLANT CHEFS •Business Is Business,’ Is the Tenor of Testimony Before Probers. j B’/ Scripps-Hotcarti Srurspaper Alliance WASHINGTON. Sept, 6 Busi- ' ness, and when the cause of peace steps between the munitions maker 1 and his profit he is not happy. So much, at least, the senate munitions investigators have gathered from a letter from an American armorer to a British colleague. “It is too bad,” wrote VicePresident L. Y. Spear in 1928 of the Electric Boat Company to Commander C. W. Craven, executive of Vickers-Armstrong in Enclanri, “that the pernicious activities of our stale department have put the brake on armament orders from Peru by forcing the resumption of formal diplomatic relations with Chile. “My friends advise me that this means that all contemplated orders must go over until next year . . .” Conduct Mas Protested Another highlight of the munitions inquiry involving another department of the government.—and in a less pacific light—was recorded in a statement interposed by Senator Bennett Clark (Dem.. Mo). Peru and Colombia were at the brink of war over a border dispute involving Leticia, obscure village on j the upper Amazon. During this crisis, according to j Senator Clark, the United States i naval mission to Peru worked out for its “pupils.” the Peruvians, a “war problem” which, according to Colombia, could have been applicable nowhere but in the dynamiteladen Leticia area. Colombia, Senator Clark said, protested to the United States against this conduct by the mission of a neutral nation. Barbour Is Their Pal The three Electric Boat Company officers found a friend at court in the person of Senator W. Warren Barbour (Rep., N. J.) It was known at. the time that the committee of seven was selected by Vice-President John Nance Garner that Senator Barbour was named lest the so-caleld “munitions states” complain that they were unrepresented. Senator Barbour already has risen to ask the three witnesses, collectively, if it was true that, the testimony so far concerning their trade methods would not tend to lose business for them, and if so, if that business would not be handed over to their European competitors. Mr. Spear conceded that many a prospective client might now tend to shun the Electric Boat Company on the ground that “you never can tell when the intimate details of our transactions will be laid bare to full publicity.”
