Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 177, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 December 1934 — Page 4
PAGE 4
NELSON'S END IS PICTURED IN. TIME? REEL Universal Also Shows Shots of Princess Marina in London. Ehe end of Baby Face Nelson Is to be seen In the current* Issue of The Indianapolis Tlmes-Universal Newsreel. The late John Dllllnger s lieutenant lies on a marble slab in the morgue at Niles Center. 111.. 17 slugs from the guns of Federal agents in his body. Other important events to be seen In the current reel include the arrival of Princess Marina at Dover, England, where she is met by Prince George, and her reception in London by the King and Queen; Princess Barbara Hutton Mdivani returning to New York after an extensive honeymoon tour; the complete wreckage of the village of Cerro Gordo. Okla.. razed by a cyclone; military maneuvers in Budapest. Hungary, and a colorful fete in the Austrian Tyrol as the two peoples celebrate memorable events; and a New York Jeweler who distributes 200 to 300 dimes a day to the "down and out.” The current reel also shows the world’s largest floating drydock arriving on the West Coast; the roundup of overfed cattle on an oasis-ranch amid the droughtburned areas of Arizona; the effects of a terrific gas blast which wrecked a Chicago apartment house; a chest expansion of 13 inches exhibited by a boy in New York; a 20-months-old acrobat who performs at Manchester, N. H.; the latest models in airplanes on show at the Paris Exposition, and the unhappy landing of a Verona <N. J.) boy who tests his new "flying” bicycle.
East V T 12 East Street JLJ H A JLj Street fast -^ofOiour/ Kline’s “Going Out of Business Sale” Ends Wednesday Evening at 5:30! Prices are drastically cut because every single piece of merchandise must be sold by tomorrow at 5:30! Costs have been forgotten! Everything is new, seasonable and desirable in every respect! Come early! Nothing reserved! All must go! Save as you’ve never saved before! Sorry, no C. 0. D. orders or layaways! Every sale final! Hurry! Last Day! Entire Stock of Coats, Suits, Dresses and Millinery (25) Silk, Wool Frocks, J J yf <l>) (3 °* ew es ’ aU types PPJ| (5) New Sunday Night Frocks, tfr ii usually $7.95, now , IP || *i|’ (25) Street, Formal, Sunday Nights, A A II were $7.95-$10.75, now pO*Trrl R (15) New Street Frocks, $7.44 . Wmms (8) Furred Coats, black, brown? tfl A QjJ green, were $16.75, $lB jFj f l 6) Furred Coats, black, brown, CIC QC * llljP ms green, were $25, $35, to clear )lDi9j (8) Furred Coats, black, brown, <J*OQ ' ksnOE fvfl. s > . green, were S3B, S4B, at (6) Winter Swagger Suits, Jl A nr J| were $16.75, $lB, now vlUtJj j (14) I ntrimmed Sports Coats, sl9 QC >- Jk were $16.75 to $25, now Bg (7) Vntrimmed Sports Coats, slf| QC k JR were $16.75, $18.95, now PlU*I/D wRJ*L * 75) New Hats, new fabrics, rn l ''t p "Pi e $1 and $1.84, to clear DUC Odd lots of hats, mostly 25c 1 s E. Washington
Indiana in Brief
Bp T mn Special MUNCIE. Dec. 4.— “l’m no welsher,” Mayor George R. Dale of Muncie remarked in announcing that he would not attend a meeting ir Indianapolis today of 19 mayors defeated in the November election who are considering steps to continue in office despite expiration of their terms on Jan. I. The protesting mayors take the stand that the law passed by the 1933 Legislature postponing city elections is in alid, and as a consequence, those elected mayor on Nov. 6 this year are not legally entitled to hold office. It was suggested to Mayor Dale that Dr. Rollin H. Bunch, Muncie mayor-elect, might not be eligible to hold office. "There might be some question about Bunch’s eligibility.” Mayor Dale remarked, "out I'm not giing to raise it I'm no weigher.”
a a * m Anniversary Passes Bp Time* Special CRAWFORDSVILLE, Dec. 4. The First National Bank, oldest financial institution here, has entered upon its seventy-first year. Sol Tannebaum is president. Four other men have headed the bank during its seven decades. m m m Puff Ball Grows Big Bp Time* Special NOBLESVILLE, Dec. 4—A puff ball nearly three feet in circumference. found by W. K. House on his White River Township farm, is being displayed here. ana Bridegroom Accused Bp 7 imet Special BLOOMINGTON, Dec. 4 Charged with stealing an automobile to bring Miss Dorothy Merrick, Indianapolis, to this city to become his bride, Raymond Worthington, 21, Indianapolis, w’ill be tried Dec. 28 in Monroe Circuit Court. At a preliminary hearing, Worthington, accompanied by his weeping bride, entered a plea of not guilty. Bar Group Honors Boss on The Indianapolis Bar Association honored the memory of the late William Bosson at a memorial meeting today in Superior Court, Room One.
BANK LAW PRACTICE WILL BE PROTESTED Bar Group Seeks Meeting With Clearing House. The Indianapolis Bar Association’s committee on unauthorized practices today was planning a meeting with the Indianapolis Clearing House Association to attempt to arrange an amicable settlement under which the banks will abandon certain services which, the lawyers long have protested, put the j financial institutions into the practice of law. Such action by the committee was authorized last night by a special meeting of the lawyers’ organization at the Court House. If the financial institutions do not assent to the agreement, the committee is authorized to appropriate money for a legal test of the question if this is deemed necessary. In the past, the lawyers have objected particularly to banks and trust companies offering to draw up wills and other legal documents without charge under certain circumstances and to the giving of what the lawyers claim is purely legal advice.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
JUDGELAYMON TO PRESIDE IN. SAUNDERS CASE 4 Prosecution and Defense Attorneys Agree on Selection. Prosecution and defense attorneys in the trial of Mrs. Naomi Saunders, 36, charged with plotting the murder of her husband, the Rev. Gaylord V. Saunders, here last Feb. 2, today agreed on Circuit Judge Paul E. Laymon, Frankfort, as trial judge. The case was to have been heard by Circuit Judge John W. Homaday, to whose court at Lebanon it was moved on a defense motion for change of venue, but Judge Hornaday notified County Prosecutor Herbert E. Wilson and defense attorneys that he was ill and could not preside. Selection of the jury to try Mrs. Saunders, whose husband was a member of the Methodist Episcopal clergy, will begin tomorrow and probably will be completed Thursday. Also charged with the murder is Theodore (Ted) Mathers, 19, to whom, the state charges, Mrs. Saunders gave $lO to hire an assassin to kill Mr. Saunders. The state charges that Mathers was the slayer. ' Testimony against Mfs. Saunders will not be presented until Monday. Greene to Attend Parley Edward E. Greene, Tech High School vice-principal and vocational division head, will attend the American Vocational Association annual meeting Wednesday in Pittsburgh. Mr. Greene is Indiana Vocational Association vice-president.
PASTORS NAME LEADER Dr. John B. Ferguson New Head of City Ministers. Dr. John B. Ferguson of the Irvington Presbyterian church yesterday was elected to fill an unex-pired-term as president of the Indianapolis Ministerial Association, a post vacated by Dr. W. W. Wyant, who recently accepted a pastorate in Pittsburgh.
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-DEC. I, 1931
