Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 223, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1935 — Page 2

PAGE 2

NAME LEADERS FOR CAMPAIGN ON HOUSING ACT Two Division Heads Picked for ‘Education’ Drive in Indiana. Two division heads for a campaign t/O educate Indiana residents in the benefits of the national housing act were appointed yesterday by R. Earl Peters, state director for the Federal Housing Administration, E G Ralston, executive vice president of the Indianapolis Power and Light Cos., was named men's division chairman and Mrs. Paul T. Hurt, vice chairman of the home department, ot the Indiana Federation of Clubs, is to head the women's division . Appointments Announced The appointments, came after a Series, of conferences on launching an insured mortgage clinic. Mr, Peters and Thomas McConnell, assistant Indiana director, met, with a group of Washington experts including L. Karl Gilchrist, special assistant to the national administrator; David Casern, staff executive; Reese Wolfe, special financial representative and Miss Helen McGrath, head of the women’s division Mr. Peters said the Indiana campaign will mean use of the entire Indiana staff in an effort to surpass figures achieved in cities of similar size. The campaign will have both local and Washington speakers. They will explain the act, and details of the mortgage clinic tentatively scheduled for Dec. 4 to 7, possibly on the ground floor of a Monument Circle building. A mass meeting will be held at 3 Dec, 3 at the Claypool for discussion ol the clinic. HOLC Chiefs Meet •Servicing problems connected with collection of Home Owners Loan Corp, loans are to be discussed today at a meeting of Indiana HOLC managers in Detroit. E Kirk McKinney, Indiana manager. will go to Detroit from Washington where he has been in conference with Administration leaders for several days. Other HOLC leaders who will attend the meeting are George T. Wheldon. Indianapolis manager; J.

HIS POCKETBOOK CALLED A HALT! —.~.—. fej B -•isiwbssw. . HOW NATION VOTED! AMERICA MARVELS! SAYS SENSATIONAL ; WHISKEY WORTH AT LEAST 40% MORE! 77. r h!,r!' O/d Drum taste, quality, value Avail yourself of this sensible wh skcy mKglXjft renna. acclaimed by thousands Hailed that sells at a “cenls-ible” price .. . mu as greatest whiskey “buy” on lh . a, ' s distilled from the same pre*u~ •_. .. . mium grain used for costliest whiskies. //**ir h J°/ ASTE * liP ■ Ask f° r Drum. Compare it with Inmo'ntol * Straight aeross the country, Old Drum any “straight” or “blend” in its price n<*r-otimaf* oiri i is revolutionizing old notions of whis- class. Smell the difference. Taste the mor^in*. P '" key value—bringing to American difference. Pocket the. difference. You drinkers a whiskey' so much better can t beat Old Drum! • ESTIMATESSI. SO PT. average of 409& too high in nation--1 Avery ntetlotr flavor • l 1 "~ fl t'W’.V *ood /rod- lllC ,>oll Os ■ lirf,** declares /.. 2§3BK|i& m S \ ./IliLw Patens, Springfield, ■ —T"~~'.~ ~~ITZ 11 ~T ‘“"JIZ rrrr.TTTTTTT .'." L';T* T. : j_ ••- ■■j--_—j J .""1 9 \ Illinois. JWWWAIAWAIAItWWWVA(tWWWWWWWWWWWMWWWWWt(IWWWWWWWWW fA J®" VOTES $1.25 PT. • /" "It should be the responsibility of every l egiti- 8 W Old Drum in "a mate distiller to produce whiskies so perfect, S PINT smooth and pleasant f at * P rICC ®° l° w that the public Can have ■■ * ■ dnnk . state* Harold no reason for patronizing illegal distillers llarry t .\et€ ork City. £**, who defraud our National, State and Local A Governments of their just revenues.” Q '.9Mk Maryland Distillery, Inc.. Relay, M<l. * [JJL*J Uf][ IJ If -WH Distributor: U. S. Liquor Wholesale Cos., 39 E. Georgia St. Phone RI ley 1121

FHA OFFICIALS IN CITY TO CONDUCT ‘CLINIC* FOR HOME OWNERS

In Indianapolis today are mortgage experts of the Federal Housing Administration who are conducting a clinic for the benefit of home owners. Left to right seated above are David Casern, staff executive, Washington; R. Earl Peters. Indiana .hate dnector; Miss Helen K. McGrath, women's division, Washington, and standing, left to right, are om McConnell, Indiana association director, and Reese Wolfe, special financial representative. Washington.

STALEMATE REACHED IN BRAZIL COAL FIELD Shaft Aline Operators and Union Chiefs Can't Get Together. flit I uiU'A I’n h* BRAZIL, Ind.. Nov. 26.—Negotiations between shaft, mine opera'ors and United Mine Workers of DisClinn Ellyson. Hammond manager; William A. Butler, South Bend manager: Stephen R. Fleming. Fort Wavne manager; Lawrence Hanley, Richmond manager; Leonard Rauscher, Evansville manager; Walter Maehling, Terre Haute manager; Wendell M. Hicks, Indianapolis, state servicing manager, and Robert L. Mason, state conditioning manager.

trict No. 8 for anew contract for the Brazil block coal field faced a stalemate here today. A.s the conference entered its second week, officials admitted but little progress. It was believed the ouestion of working conditions was delaying settlement. ORDERS CANOPY REPAIR Works Board Takes Action on Commission Row Structures. The Works Board, has authorized William Hurd, building commissioner, and Louis Brandt, a member, to investigate and order necessary repairs to canopies on commission row. Maryland and S. Delaware-sts. Many of the canopies are in a dangerous condition, the board was told.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

OVERCOAT SPRINTER DEFEATS PROFESSOR j Non-Matriculator Wins All Bets in Butler Contest. Prof. Ray Friesner of the Butler University botany department looked in Room 343 yesterday afternoon and saw a man who hadn't even matriculated and so he asked what he was doing there. The man, who had picked up an overcoat that didn't belong to him, replied that he was “looking for D. C. Stephenson.” Prof. Friesuer made a snap decision that something was amiss and went to call for help. Out the door the man ran, and Prof. Friesner was after him. They ran through several alleys but the prowler escaped.

BENEFIT GROUPS TO END SESSION WITH PAGEANT 86 Lodges Represented at Fraternal Congress Here Today. The thirty-seventh annual session of the Indiana Fraternal Congress, composed of representatives of 86 fraternal benefit organizations, was to end tonight with a pageant in Tomlinson Hall. Degree teams from several lodges I were to take part in the affair. Several hundred persons are expected to attend. This afternoon the delegates are to elect officers for the coming year and the resolutions committee is to report. Addresses by fraternal executives on technical subjects occu-j pied the morning sessions, attended by about 75 persons. The feature of the afternoon program was to be an address on "Fraternals and Legislation” by | Mart.n Miller, Indiana representa - i five of the Brotherhood of Railway ' Trainmen. FHA CLINIC INDORSED BY CENTRAL LABOR State Labor Officials Meet With Washington Representative. The Central Labor Union indorsed plans for a Federal Housing Administration clinic here Dec. 3. at a meeting last night in Plumpers Hall. Speakers included Reese Wolfe, | FHA representative from Washing- | ton; James If. Donovan, district ' No. 6 regional labor adviser of WPA; Carl Mullen, Hammond, presidentelect of the Indiana State Federation of Labor; Charles Lutz, state representative from Marion County, and Miss Mary Garner. State Federation of Labor vice president.

JBw Bl j|l y-8 PERFORMANCE is one luxury of millionaires p that millions now enjoy thanks to Ford engineer- * $ \) > ing. But the Ford Motor Company was not satisfied to stop there. It insisted that every feature of the Ford car must he in keeping with V-8 engine quality See how successfully this purpose has been carried ' * out. Examine and drive the Ford V-8 for 1936. You'll agree that not one luxury-class feature has Behind Every Feature of the been overlooked. In every detail the new Ford 1936 Ford Is the Standard of measures up to the fine-car quality of its engine. V*B Engine Quality Onler-Poi*e do.ign rrarllf. all pa‘enger* between the ,pring A W i^i. rnnn .c >i -it. . I-nng. flexible spring* on 123-inrh *pringbae I? I I Itt r. (I. K. Detroit. Standard accessory group, including bumpers Af A V l nusual body room and wide seats A>D UP an, l spare tire, extra. All body types have Safety (ilas throughout at no additional cot. Convenient terms through Universal Credit Go. ON THE AIR ford scndat fvfmsc hour, r p. m. (C. s. t.). frfo vrxßiNr. snd my AUTHORIZED FORD DEALERS rc ™ x ™ HIZ tZZ "' “ ’ T * Only One Car Gives You V'B Luxury at Low Cost FORD V-8 for 1936-

LINTON GRAND JURY MAY PROBE DEATHS Suspected Poison Death and Murder Has Coroner's Attention. H\! I nitrrl FrttM LINTON, Ind., Nov. 26.—Grand jury investigation of the deaths of John R. Hill. Owensburg, and Ves Gill, Linton, 72-year-old retired mine superintendent, may be asked this week by Coroner George Porter. Hill died Nov. 16, presumably from poisoned flour contained in biscuits he ate. Gill's battered body was found stuffed into a sewer outlet here Sunday. Hill's body has been exhumed and the stomach sent to Dr. R. N. Harger. Indianapolis, state toxicolo-

INDIANA'S BEST SHOE STORE SALE' Queen Quality Footwear An Unequaled Presentation of Nationally Famous Style and Comfort Shoes Sold Regularly at $6.50—57.50 and $8.75 —Now Offered While 678 Pairs Last at All Sizes and $C 35 /““Id Widths J Up Values, Now

gist, for analysis. If the examination reveals poison, the case will be turned over to the grand jury. EMERGENCY TAX CLAUSE ATTACK HIT BY MAYOR Would Cripple Indiana Cities. Kein Tells League. Eradication of the emergency clause in the $1.50 tax law will cripple Indiana cities members of the Indiana Municipal League were told yesterday by Mayor Kern at a meeting of the league's executive committee at the Claypool. The mayor's comment was made during a discussion of the possibility of a special session of the General Assembly. County and state taxation ot

NOV. 26, 1035

municipally owned plants and tre Federal income tax on town utilities were discussed.

ENTICING sJdnsi permanents Inrlua,., Hair ( ut, / y jBH frs%y. hlearhel hair pec?a!i*^. 'lh Murrav or Shirley Temple, jt) .00 M \ *lie Permanent. 2 C omplete. S? fi| SS \ nine Permanent, 2 complete. $3.01 Facial and \rch. Both for S&c Hair < ut. Shampoo, r _ Hn*c r Wave, all . O TOT 25C NO CPPOIMMKM NM K3S \R \ k ZL O 1 K>nae\ elt Bl*!t. FI. §*H4 * I Illinois at Washington