Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 164, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 November 1934 — Page 3
NOV. 19, 1934
LODGE PARLEY ON INSURANCE SET FOR CITY 400 Delegates of Congress Expected: McNutt to Speak. More than lour hundred delegates representing thirty fraternal orders will attend the annual Indiana Fraternal Congress in the Lincoln Travertine room next Monday and Tuesday. The congress is composed of fraternal organizations selling insurance on a legal reserve ha is. Its purpose is to foster legislation helpful to member organizations. great will include Governor Paul V. McNutt. <1 Philip Lutz. Insurance Commissioner Harry C. MeClain. and representatives of various fraternal life insurance ass>r.anon? Mrs. May Beaver, 3024 Fall Cr' fk boulevard, president and state manager of the Supreme Fore t Woodmen Circle, will preside at the morning and afternoon sessions. A banquet and musical program will be held Monday night. A school of instruction will be hela Tuesday for all fraternal field workers and state managers. Each organization will be represented by a drill team or some form of entertainment in a drill pageant at Tomlinson hall Tuesday night.
500 AT SAENGERBUND HEAR GERMAN MUSIC Program Is Presented in Knights of ( oiumhus Hall. A program of German music was prevnted last night by the Indianapt‘ha Saengcrbund in the Knights of Columbus hall before 500 members of the Sacngerbund and their fri nds. Soloists were Victor Dannacher, tenor; Miss Klla Buschatzky. soprano, and Miss Roberta May Bland, harpist. Rudolph O. Heine was conductor and both the men’s and women's choruses participated. J Kelton Whetstine was.pianist. FISHERMEN FEARED DROWNED IN MICHIGAN Sighted in Boat, 1 hree Suddenly Disappear. Hi l nit.a .“i. * SAGINAW. Mich.. Nov. 19—Three men whose fishing boat disappeared mysteriously from Saginaw Bay were believed today to have drowned. The three men were seen on the bay Saturday by other fishermen a mile and a half away. A few minutes later they and their boat disappeared. The men believed drowned are Edward Demning. Walter Dusty and Lewis Hartinan.
1.200 HEAR DEARING AT *Y* BIG MEETING Oakland City President Pleads lor "Rig h teousness.” Likening America’s financial rise i and crash to the building of the six ; tower.', of Babel. Dr. P. W. Dearing. j Oakland City college president, yes- j terciay told 1200 persons at the Y. M. C. A. big meeting in Keith’s theater the "way out” is along pathways ot righteousness. America. Dr. Dearing said, built a tower of wealth which it expected to reach to heaven; a temple of peace; a temple of knowledge; a temple of sex and a temple of religion. but all were founded on the wisdom of man and not the wi-dom j of God. All successively crashed, the speaker said MEDICAL SOCIETY TO MEET IN ATHENAEUM ( lun;r in Arrangements Announced by Head of Group. The Indianapolis Medcial Society clinic to be addressed by Dr. Henry L. Bock us. University of Pennsylvania graduate school faculty member, will be held tomorrow night in the Athenaeum. Original announcements of the meeting had said that it would bo held at city hospital. The change in place was announced by Dr. Henry S. Leonard, society president. THIEVES GET ORIENTAL RUGS VALUED AT 51.400 Enter North Side Home While Owners Are Absent. Oriental rugs valued at $1 400 were stolen from the home so Hal Bryant. 4907 North Pennsylvania street last night. The burglars broke glass in a side door and unlocked it to gain entrance. Bryant and his wife were away from their home between 5 and midnight. HOLD FOOTPAD SUSPECT Youth Identified by Young Woman as Pune Snatcher. Georee Smitherman, 18. Negro. 46 West Twenty-fourth street, faced vagrancy charges in municipal court today after his capture and purported identification as a purse snatcher Saturday night. Police say that Smitherman was identified b> Miss Betty Cramer. 27. of 110 East Vermont street, as the man who snatched her purse at Meridian and Twenty-fourth streets. S7O in Tools Stolen Walter Post, 3526 West Morris street, reported to police today the theft over the week-end of S7O worth of special tools from the W P. Shay Chrysler Sales Cos. 3209 East Washington street. Burglars had broken a side window to enter the building. Stops Grandma’s Rheumatic Pain For rrat quick relief from the cruet pain at ihruniatisn-.. neuralgia, lumbago, neurit i*. and torturing muauter acr<s an.l luist, simply take fast-acting Nurito. 1 .ua amariagiy rpredy relief, a doctor prescription, contains no opiates, or narcotics and is harmless. If you want to feei aga n the >o of relief from ia.n and avoid needle* suffering that prevents sound •Wp. get Nurito at once. If the eery first three doses ot Nurito do not relieve even the most intense pain—your monev will be refunded Ask your druggist for Nurito oa Uus postUv money-hack guarantee. —AdrerUsetaeau
Today’s Drawing Lesson
SlO. 2 INDIAN WUTWAM ~~7~nr r - t-^ 17V i A j / \ \/i \! praw a sqi'aae. auizxs sioes, TOP Also BOTrOM OP WICWAM. LET a ( poles stick, our at roe. ' ! ■— VINAL SKETCH " SHOWS YOU MOu/ To USE WICU/AaA in A LANDSCAPE/
All you need in materials in The Indianapolis Times drawing lessons is a soft pencil and some paper like typewriter paper, and then a big smooth board like a drawing board or your mother’s bread board, or a large, smooth book. You will need an eraser. The best kind is a kneaded eraser. VV’ith it you will not make such a mess on the floor. Qit out these lessons each day, paste them in a book, and you will have a drawing book to keep and show your friends. Do you have some friends who are interested in drawing? Be sure and tell them about these lessons. They will be running in THE TIMES for several weeks. Now read these rules carefully: 1. GRADE SCHOOL PUPILS ONLY are eligible for prizes in this contest. Any grade school pupil, boy or girl ( except children of Times employes* may enter. 2. Your drawings must be made
Celebration Arranged for Shrine Anniversary Murat Temple to Begin Fiftieth Year Dec. 14, with Gigantic State-Wide Ceremonial. The fiftieth anniversary of Murat temple, to be observed here in a state-wide ceremonial Dec. 14 will be discussed at the Murat temple of the Mystic Shrine tonight in the local Shrine mosque.
PRELATES MASS TO HONOR MUNDELEIN Cardinal Will Celebrate Silver Jubilee. By United I’rrst CHICAGO. Nov. 19.—Chicago became the Roman Catholic capital of America today with arrival of scores of the church's prelates to participate tomorrow in celebration by George Cardinal Mundelein of the silver jubilee of his initiation into the hierarchy. The celebration in Holy Name cathedral will be the culminating e\ent in America of the Catholic holy year and one of the most impressive religious spectacles since a mass of the eucharistfc congress filled Soldiers' Field in 1926. Chief among the early arriving prelates in congratulating Cardinal Mundelein were Patrick Cardinal Hayes. Archbishop Edward J. Hanna, San Francisco: the Most Rev. Leopold Ruiz Y Flores, exiled Mexican prelate, and Bishop Joseph M. Preciado of Colon. Panama.
ADE PLAY TO FEATURE SCOTTISH RITE PARTY Dancing and Music Also Included on Program. A dance and entertainment, including a one-act comedy by George Ade. will be given by and for Scottish Rue Masons at the Scottish Rite cathedral at 8:15 Friday night, it was announced today. The dancing will be held in the grand ballroom from 9:15 until midnight. and the entertainment will be given in the auditorium from 8:15 until 10. The entertainment program will open with a number of musical selections by the consistory orchestra under the direction of Frederic A. Barker. The play by Mr. Ade. “Speaking to Father." will be presented by the Consistory Players under the direction of Horace Mitchell. Those in the cast include Avon Breyer. Miss Ivy Ann Fuller. H Foster Clippencer Jr. Miss Dorothea Craft and Clark Roggie. The program will be concluded with a concert of old melodies by the Consistorv choir and a number of selections by a vocal trio. Dry Goods Store Robbed A thief, unconvinced by the present warm spell, stole twelve jackets and two dozen scarfs valued at SB4 50. socks and ties of undetermined value and $5 cash from the dry goods store of I. Davidson. 441 West Washington street, today, Mr. Davidson reported to police. Burglar Escapes With S3O Roscoe Hauze, 1146 Villa avenue, last night surprised in his home a burglar who had ransacked the house after gaining entrance through a rear door. The man escaped. Search of the house revealed that he had taken S3O from a bureau drawer. Burglars Get Jewelry, Cash Jewelry valued at SBS to $7.50 In cash were stolen yesterday from the home of Mrs. Alice De Fabis, 3308 Newton street, she reported to police last night. The burglars gained i entrance through a rear door.
tree hand, without the aid of instruments. 3. They may be made with pencil, crayon, or pen and ink. 4. Drawings must be submitted clipped together in complete sets of six, one for every day beginning with Saturday of each week and ending with Friday of the following week. 5. Drawings must be at least 7 inches in depth on standard size B’-xll inches) white paper. 6. BE SURE to write your name, address, school and grade ON EACH DRAWING. 1. Your set of drawings for the first week < beginning Saturday, Nov. 17, and ending Friday, Nov. 23) must be in The Times office not later than 9 a. m. Tuesday, Nov. 2”. You may deliver them in person or mail them to the Drawing Contest Editor, The Indianapolis Times. 8. In case of ties, neatness will be a deciding factor.
Special committees appointed by potentate Herschel M. Tebay are working with the general anniversary chairman, Carson B. Harris. Ed Hart, restoration committee chairman, has announced that several hundred former members have been restored under anew ruling and that more than 1,000 will be added before the jubilee. Among the out-of-town delegations expected to attend the ceremonies are the Hadi temple, Evansville; Zorah temple, Terre Haute; Orak temple, Hammond; Antioch temple, Dayton, o.; Syrian temple, Cincinnati; Aladdin temple, Columbus, 0., and Kosair temple, Louisville. Merchants will be asked to decorate their stores in the Shrine and national colors for the parade Mr. Harris announced. The banquet committee is preparing to serve thousands with a Moslem feast. "This will be the biggest fraternal event in Indianapolis since Murat temple and this city entertained the Shriners of North America in June, 1919, on the occasion of the imperial council session here,” Mr. Harris said today.
CITY POSTAL CHIEF ISSUES CHRISTMAS CARD INSTRUCTIONS
The lowest postal rate this year for Christmas greeting cards is 1 ! ; cents for weights up to two ounces. Cards sent at that price will be third class and envelopes must be unsealed. They may contain penned messages consisting of no more than ‘ Sincerely Yours” or "Merry Christmas” or "With Best Wishes,” but no informative note of any kind. Cards in sealed envelopes will go first class for 3 cents postage for weights up to one ounce. These are forwarded or returned without extra charge. Postmaster Adolph Seidensticker suggested today that expensive cards, or those sent to an address of which the author is not certain, should be sent first class. First class cards are subject to 1 and 2-cent drop letter rates where they apply, but the 1-cent drop letter rate does not apply to third-class cards. LIFT ROAD 31 DETOUR Run-Around at Franklin to Be Removed Wednesday. Removal Wednesday of a one-mile detour on U. S. route No. 31 between Franklin and Whiteland will be removed "Wednesday, it was announced today by the state highway department. Resumption of travel there will throw the highway open from Michigan to the Kentucky state border. The part under detour was resurfaced with brick and next spring another section in the same district will be so surfaced. Decatur Man Killed in Accident fly l nil (4 Fret* FREEMONT. Ind., Nov. 19 —Fred Deitsch, 34. Decatur, was killed instantly, and Brock McNaughton 28, Freemont. was injured critically when the automobile m which they were riding left the road and overturned one and one-half miles north of here yesterday.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
WALLACE WILL DISCUSS FARM POLICIES HERE Bureau Convention Also to Hear McNutt, Townsend_ and Others. The Roosevelt administration's farm policy for the coming year will be explained to Hoosier agriculturalists here Wednesday, Thursday and Friday at the annual Indiana farm bureau convention. Henry A. Wallace, secretary of agriculture, will be the principal speaker, discussing “Farmers on Guard.” W. H. Settle, bureau president, will preside. The convention will open Wednesday and continue through Friday. Governor Paul V. McNutt will deliver the address of welcome Wednesday morning and Mr. Settle will review the bureau's work during the past year and outline next year s program. Secretary Wallace will speak at 1:30. A night session devoted to bureau organization work will be held on Wednesday. L. L. Needier, bureau organization director, will preside. Speakers on the Thursday afternoon program will include LieutenantGovernor M. Clifford Townsend, Clarence Poe, editor of Progressive Farming, and Miss Mary Sue Wigley, New York, who will speak on The Romance of Planning.” The annual business meeting will be held Friday with the hearing of committee reports and the formulation of farm bureau policies for tho next year.
LEGION TO BE PAID JRIBUTE Belgrano Speech to Be Broadcast Over 40 • NBC Stations. Forty National Broadcasting Company stations will join Station WKBF at 1 tomorrow to broadcast the speech Frank N. Belgrano Jr., American Legion national commander. will make at the Chamber of Commerce appreciation luncheon in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Decision of NBC officials to pick up the address was announced today. More than 400 reservations have been made, it was announced by William H. Book, executive vicepresident of the chamber, who arranged the luncheon in recognition of the fact that the legion's headquarters are located in Indianapolis. In addition to Mr. Belgrano, more than 125 legion and auxiliary officials expected to attend with national officers, state commanders and adjutants from every state, national officers of the auxiliary, the Forty and Eight and other allied organizations. Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and Louis J. Borinstein, chamber president, will be among the speakers.
PETERS WILL DIRECT STATE HOUSING DRIVE Ft. Wayne Man to Be Given Complete Charge. By United Press WASHINGTON. Nov. 19.—R. Earl Peters, Ft. Wayne, is to be given complete charge of all federal administration affairs in Indiana and his office divorced from that of Fred Hoke, national emergency council director. This announcement was made today by the office of James A. Moffett. national director of FHA. "In establishing the setup in a hurry, the FHA put all state NEC directors in charge of their state programs.” it was explained. "Later assistants were appointed and as the program has become more and more expansive it is to be divorced entirely from NEC directors.” SPEEDWAY VETERANS INSTALL NEW OFFICERS O. L. Envert Takes Over Duties as Commander. New officers of Speedway post, No. 2839, Veterans of Foreign Wars, today had taken over their duties after installation ceremonies last night in the post’s new clubrooms, 1506 Main street. Speedway City. O. L. Envert is commander; Otto ; D. Harb. senior vice-commander; Russell A. Long, junior vice-com-mander; Fred Wolfe, quartermaster; Harry C. Clark, officer of the day; Wallace Fifer. adjutant, and John Woerner and Ben H. Green, trustees. GIRL IS ENROLLED IN ENGINEERING SCHOOL New Jersey Miss Is Only Co-Ed Among 145 Students. By United Press DURHAM. N. C., Nov. 19—For the second time in Duke history, a girl has enrolled in the Duke university school of engineering. She is the only co-ed among the 145 students in the school. Her name is Miss Verna Birdsall of Farmingdale, N. J. Her father is a civil engineer. Several years ago a girl enrolled in engineering at Duke, but climaxed her education by marrying c*ie of her fellow students. GIRL. 16. DASHES OFF SONG IN 40 MINUTES Attracted by Ad. She Gets $125, Plus Royalties. B'l T :mes Special ANDERSON, S. C.. Nov. 19 —Virginia Todd. 16-year-old high school senior, has officially crashed into the ranks of song writers. Attracted by an advertisement, Virginia said, sjie dashed off a song, "You Broke My Heart,” in forty minutes—twenty for the words and twenty for the melody. A New York publishing house accepted it. Virginia will receive $125 besides 10 per cent royalties. f?
ELECTED LEADERS OF SHORTRIDGE'S RADIO CLUB
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New officers of the Shortridge high school radio club, announced today by H. H. Seimers. physics instructor and club sponsor, (left to right,) are: John Ray Clark, treasurer; Marguerite Call, vice-president; Louise Beechey, secretary, and Burton Fielding, president.
GET READY FOR THE BIGPARADE It’s Going to Bea Dandy, That Great Festival of Santa's. In New York City, Detroit and many other of America’s large cities, the annual Christmas parade has become a virtual institution witnessed by tremendous crowds each year. And now Indianapolis, too, is to have a Santa Claus parade . . . the first of its kind ever presented here. The colorful spectacle will be held Friday, Nov. 30, under the sponsorship of The Times with the co-op-eration of various civic, business, fraternal and religious organizations. Plans are under way that promise to make it a gala occasion worth coming miles to see. There’ll be unusual attractions galore. Os course, there is Santa Claus in his sleigh drawn by real, live Siberian reindeer. There” be floats a-plenty ... all of them beautifully and artistically decorated. And each of them representative of some well beloved nursery rhyme character. There’ll be beautiful girls in gorgeous costumes. And a group of well-known comic characters. It's going to be a great day in Indianapolis. It’s going to be a parade you'll remember for a long time. Better draw a heavy ring around Nov. 30 on your calendar now so you'll be sure not to miss it.
GRILLING CONTINUED IN CALLAHAN PROBE Divorcee Faces Fourth Day of Police Questioning. Mrs. Theo Horney Sherman, 43, divorcee and mother of six children, today faced a fourth day of questioning by police, who charge her with being an accessory to the murder of Bert Callahan, 45, wealthy and eccentric Indianapolis real estate man. Mrs. Sherman, arrested Thursday in her Cincinnati home, has admitted knowledge of the murder, but, despite earlier reports that she had admitted being in the Callahan apartment, 1636 North Illinois street, at the time of the crime, has denied this since. At the same time, police pressed their search for Charles G. Streeton. alias C. G. Davis, under indictment as the actual murdered. Mr. Callahan was shot through the heart and beaten brutally the night of April 6. GIRL SCOUT COUNCIL PLANS TRAINING PERIOD National Leader to Conduct ThreeWeek Course. Miss Ann Roos, national Girl Scout staff adviser, was to arrive here today to begin a two weeks’ training period for the Indianapolis and Marion county Girl Scout council. Mrs. Montgomery S. Lewis, training and personnel committee chairman for the council, announced that a troop progress course in advanced work for leaders would be given at 12 and 7:30 today, Wednesday and Friday at 218 Board of Trade building. OLD AGE PENSION PLAN WILL BE DISCUSSED Townsend Theory to Be Subject at Two Meetings. The Townsend plan, proposing a S2OO monthly pension for all persons over 60, will be explained at 7:30 tomorrow in Winamac hall. Twentyninth and Clifton streets, and at 7:30 Thursday in the Olympic clubhouse, Pruitt street and Riverside drive. One of the conditions of the proposed plan, sponsors pointed out, is that recipients of pensions were to spend all the money each month. J. E. Forster, L. B. Dyer and L. L. Hopkins are the committee arranging the meetings. LIONS TO HOLD DINNER Club to Stage Entertainment at Washington Saturday. The Indianapolis Lions Club will hold a dinner and entertainment Saturday at the Washington for its members and their wives, it was announced today. According to the program committee, there will be attendance prizes and favors for the ladies. Bullets Send Prowler Fleeing When he saw a man prowling around his home last night. Charles Johnson, 1246 South Illinois street, grabbed a shotgun and fired at a retreating figure. Mr. Johnson told police that he did not know whether the two charges fired struck the man.
$14,200 AWARD FOR DAMAGES REVERSED, BRAKEMAN APPEALS
Attorneys for Joseph R. Kelly, 2515 Guilford avenue, have asked the United States supreme court to review Mr. Kelly's damage claims against the New York, Chicago & St. Louis railroad. Mr. Kelly, a brakeman, was injured in the Indianapolis yards and subsequently was awarded $14,200 damages by the Indiana northern district federal court. The seventh district circuit court of appeals reversed the decision. Mr. Kelly fell from a freight car during switching operations in making up a train for interstate shipment. He charged that the accident was due to the absence of equipment required by the federal safety appliance act. The appeals court ruled that the trial court should have directed a verdict for the railroad, because the freight car had been withdrawn from use and was not applicable to the federal act.
BANK BANDITS' BOOTYISSI.2OQ Armed Trio Forces Cashier to Open Vault of Institution. By United Press SHANNON, 111., Nov. 19.—Three armed bandits raided the Shannon State bank today, forced the cashier to open a vault and escaped with $1,200 after binding and gagging three officers of the bank. The bandits broke into the bank during the night and waited until President D. S. Hoy, Vice-Presideril C. T. Wilhelms and Cashier Frank Woessner arrived. Covered with a machine gun and two automatics, the three officials were forced into a cloak room where they were held prisoners until the time lock on the bank’s vault could be opened. Mr. Woessner then opened the safe. After seizing the $1,200, the bandits bound and gagged Woessner and his companions and fled. DISCUSSION PROGRAM PLANNED FOR CHURCH North Side Methodists to Hear Meyer Tomorrow Night. Howard M. Meyer, Indianapolis attorney, will discuss "The Principles of Jesus in the Economic World" at the Fifty-First Street Methodist Episcopal church, Central avenue and Fifty-First street, at 7:45 tomorrow night. A fellowship supper will be held at 6:30 Wednesday with the Rev. Noibert C. Talbott of the Broad Ripple Methodist church speaking on “Vital Religious Living.” Thursday night, the Rev. Wilbur D. Grose, pastor, will speak on "Life’s Supreme Choice.” SHAREHOLDERS’ GROUP HEARING POSTPONED Master in Chancery Sets Dec. 3 as New Date. The reorganization hearing on the Shareholders Investment Corporation, a subsidiary of the defunct Fletcher American Company, today was postponed until Dec. 3 by Albert Ward, special master in chancery. At that time the majority stockholders and Homer Buley, a stockholder, will have presented audits to John Rabb Emison, trustee for the corporation. Don Mote, attorney for Mr. Buley, has charged that the reorganization plan presented by the majority group is not sound. FACES GAMING CHARGE Indiana Avenue Man Is Arrested in Police Raid. Joe Mitchell, 32, of 416 Indiana avenue, today was to face municipal court charges of operating a lottery and gift enterprises and of keeping a gambling device as a result of a raid Saturday night at the Indiana avenue address, where Sergeant John J. Haney and his squad reported they seized twentyfour books of baseball tickets. U. S. JOB TEST "LISTED Vacancies Exist in Alcohol Unit, Civil Service Secretary Reveals. Frank J. Boatman, local civil service secretary, today announced special rush examinations for district and assistant supervisors and investigators-in-charge for the alcohol tax unit of the bureau of internal revenues. Applications must be in Washington not later than Nov. 22.
THEDFORO’S BLACK-'g DRAUGHTS, FAMILY LAXATIVE^
NAB SUSPECT IN HIT-RUNMISHAP Bridgeport Youth Suffers Fractured Skull In Accident. Arthur Smith, 20. Bridgeport, was suffering from a fractured skull in Methodist hospital today, while police held a-motorist they believe caused the accident in which he was hurt early Sunday in the 4400 block, West Washington street. At the hospital, Smith's condition was described as “good.” Russell Servies, 43, Plainfield, with Smith when the car is alleged to have swerved to the edge of the road and hit them, was not injured. The driver was captured after he had turned out the lights of his car and attempted to escape from the scene, police said. He is Donald E. Warren, 37, of 212 South Illinois street. William T. Lewis, 18, of 518 South Keystone avenue, was in city hospital with his skull probably fractured, and a companion, John M. Lockwood, 16, Oxford, was suffering with head and body injuries, after their car collided early Sunday with one driven by Albert Walle, 57, of 246 Hendricks place, at State avenite and New York street. Thomas Davey, 72, of 1174 West Twenty-seventh street, received a fractured skull last night when he was struck by a car driven by John Max, 32, of 2410 East Eleventh’ street. The accident occurred in the 2000 block of North Capitol avenue. Rufus Williams, 32, Negro, whose home is in the vicinity of Twentyfourth and Yandes streets, died yesterday in city hospital of a fractured skull received Nov. 16 when his auto was struck at Nineteenth street and Columbia avenue by one driven by Leland Parker, 36,*>f 324 North Denny street. His was the 113th auto traffic victim this year. “Mike” Broderick, 34, of 1520 Wade street, died yesterday at city hospital of a blood poisoning which attendants there understood resulted from an accident about two weeks ago. It was believed the accident was industrial, and the coroner has not closed the case.
FOURTEEN KILLED IN PACIFIC COAST STORM Heavy Rains and Snow Fall for Third Straight Day. By United Press SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 19. Heavy rains and snow fell today for the third straight day in the Pacific coast area in a driving storm which already has accounted for fourteen lives in automobile accidents and drownings. An unexpectedly heavy snowfall in the high Sierras trapped seventyfive motorists attending the dedication of the Tahoe-Ukiah highway. State highway snowplows whirled into the drifts separating the motorists from their destinations. The car carrying Governor Frank Merriam broke through the blockade before winds made the drifts impassable. ANNETTE TAKES LEAD IN QUINTUPLETS' RACE Yvonne Loses Five Ounces, Drops Into Second Place. By United Press CALLANDER, Ontario, Nov. 19.Annette, long the runner-up to her sister, Yvonne, for the heavyweight title of the famous Dionne quintuplets, today was in the leader's position for the first time. Yvonne, losing five ounces over the week-end, was passed by Annette yesterday. Annette tipped the scales at 11 pounds, 2>2 ounces, lVi ounces heavier than Yvonne.
EATS rrf&A GOOD FOOD YET UNDERNOURISHED J\ New chewing gum provides Vitamin "D” Essential to Strong Bones and Sound Teeth If all the vitamins were removed ORBIT Vitamin "D” Gum is a from our food, we would starve delicious, refreshing confection to death, even on three full withnaturalYitamin”D”added. meab a day. Each vitamin has It provides an easy, economical its job to do. Without Vitamin way to secure a beneficial "D” children cannot have strong amount of Vitamin "D”. bones or sound teeth. Os the For convenience and greater six known vitamins, Vitamin economy, buy Vita* "D” is almost totally lacking in min "D” Gum by the box of our every day diet. 20 packages.
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BUSINESS BOOM COMING, BELIEF IN WASHINGTON Promise of C. of C. Aid in Recovery Drive Assures Quick Upturn. By United Prrsn WASHINGTON, Nov. 19 Promise of the United States Chamber of Commerce to co-operate with the administration practically assures a moderate business boom in the next five or six years. Better business will center around the best Christmas trade since 1929. The forecast after that is for gradual employment and business improvement provided strikes can be avoided. Official opinion is optimistic. But there is no assurance that the economic armistice moved in October by the bankers and seconded last week by the chamber will obtain the hoped-for permanent national recovery co-operation. The chamber and the bankers will be compelled to surrender on some big issues before the armistice becomes a formal peace. And there are factors more or less unpredictable, such as the seventy-fourth congress, which will take office Jan. 3. If Mr. Roosevelt fails to control congress business will desert him for more conservative leadership. Organized labor doubts the chamber could approve a recovery program “fair and just” to labor as well as to capital. President William A. Green of the American Federation of Labor is suspicious of the chamber's motives. What will be Mr. Roosevelt’s practical reaction to the chamber’s plan is unknown. Donaldl R. Richberg, chief of New Deal policy makers, hurried Saturday to the chamber's headquarters to bless the co-opera-tion movement, increasing thereby labor's anxiety about the direction of his sympathies.
CAR LEFT HERE MAY BE MURDER VICTIM’S Police Holding Machine Believed That of Slain Man. Police here today were holding a Chevrolet coupe which may be the car in which W. A. Solomon, 25, Detroit, salesman for the Continent 1 Razor Company, New York Cit* ,* was murdered Friday night near Evansville. The car was left with Russell V. Duncan, 404 Fidelity Trust Company, by a man who gave his namq to Duncan as Joe Munson, 35, Evansville, Mr. Duncan reported to police. Mr. Duncan brought the matter to the attention of police after a car which he was keeping for Edward Hansman, a convict at the Indiana state prison, Michigan City, had been stolen. He believes "Munson” took Hansman’s car, police say. Mr. Solomon stayed at the Severin here Wednesday night and left alone. Evansville police believe he was murdered by hitch-hikers. SHORTAGE OF $5,888 IN ' ACCOUNTS IS PROBED Crawford County Trustee to Be Called On for Explanation. William P. Cosgrove, chief examiner in the state board of accounts, today announced a shortage of $5,888.60 had been found in the accounts of Ben R. Jeffries, Ohio township trustee in Crawford county. Mr. Jeffries lives in Fredonia. The largest single item in the shortage, Mr. Cosgrove said, was overpayment by $3,971.73 of Mary Jeffries, a school teacher. The board set Nov. 22 for Mr. Jeffries to appear and explain the shortages which occurred, Mr. Cosgrove said, between Jan. 1, 1932, and Sept. 29, 1934. MISSING CHILD HOME; GIRL ABDUCTOR HELD 4-Y’ear-Old Boy Is Returned to Parents, Unharmed. By United Press CHATTANOOGA. Tenn., Nov. 19. -Four-year-old Jackie Gibbons was returned to his parents in Lexington, Ky„ today and a girl, who gave her name as Bernice Lou Givens, 20, of Cincinnati, was held on a charge of kidnaping. Lexington detectives took Jackie to his home last night. Department of justice agents were expected to follow today with the girl. The federal officers were expected to withdraw from the case, since no ransom was involved in the alleged abduction. 0. E. S. WILL MEET Broad Ripple Chapter to Honor Past Officers. Past matrons and past patrons of Broad Ripple chapter No. 315, Order of Eastern Star, will be entertained by the chapter Wednesday at a meeting at which degrees will be conferred, it was announced today. Lillian De Mars is worthy matron and Frank Brown is worthy patron.
