Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 February 1937 — Page 15
THURSDAY, FEB. 18
TWO ARE HURT IN FIVE MINOR
AUTO CRASHES
46 Arrested in Day, 16 for Running Preferential Streets.
MARION COUNTY TRAFFIC TOLL TO DATE
TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS February 17 Accidents Injured TRAFFIC ARRESTS Preferential street Running red light Speeding
ssc entsnesn
Ymproper ps ‘ee Reckless driving Others
Only neither
two persons were injured, seriously, in five minor
1937 .
TransAtlantic F liers Chat
traffic accidents yesterday and early |
today. their drive on erring motorists with
Meanwhile police continued |
46 arrests, 16 of them on charges of
failure to stop at a preferential
street and five on speeding charges. Thirty drivers drew fines ranging | from $3 to $10 for traffic law viola- | tions today when appearing before | Judge Dewey Myers in Municipal | Court. Costs were cases. of speeding and one of drunken | driving,
suspended
Safety Legislation Is to Be Discussed
Six speakers are to discuss “Safety Legislation” at the People’s Con- | gress forum meeting in Cropsey | Auditorium of the Public Library | tonight. The meeting is sponsored | by the Indianapolis Junior Chamber of Commerce. | Speakers are to be Municipal | Judges Charles Karabell and Dewey Myers; Traffic Captain Lewis John- | son, Dr. Silas J. Carr, Public Safety Council chairman; Edward Gal- | laher of the State Safety Department, and Todd Stoops of the Hoo- | sier Motor Club. The meeting tonight is the fifth | in a series of seven forums on pub- | lic welfare subjects. City Clerk Dan | J. O'Neill lll is | to preside.
MOTHER WILL BEGIN FIGHT FOR HER CHILD
New York Woman Seeks!
Custody of Daughter, 8. | S—— A mother’s fight for the custody, of her 8-year-old daughter was to begin this afternoon in Superior Court, Room 2. Mrs. Grace Summers Spector, Buffalo, N. Y., filed a writ of habeas | corpus yesterday for Phylis Jean | Summers, her daughter. Mr and | Mrs, John T. Summers, 3920 E. 10th St., the child's grandparents, were named defendants. The petition charges that Phylis | Jean was taken to the Summers home last September for a visit and | that the grandparents retained custody of the child since that time. Judge Joseph R. Williams is to hold the hearing on the writ.
DUST STORMS NEW HAZARD IN SICKNESS
By United Press HUGOTON, Kas., Feb. 18.—Dust storms, sweeping sections of five | states in the dust bowl area, today became a serious threat to human | life. Pneumonia and influenza sufferers fell easy victims to the dust which made breathing difficult. There have been nearly a dozen deaths here in the last few days.
Doctors say the dust does not cause | disease, but that it adds a serious |
hazard in all illnesses. Householders hang wet sheets | over doors and windows and plug the sills and door jambs, but ev ren | these precautions cannot keep out | the fine silt. There is dust on every- |
thing. It covers even food on tables
and the sheets sheets on beds.
ARRESTS AT LINTON MAY SOLVE THEFTS
By United Press LINTON, Feb. 18—With the ar-| rest of four young men and confiscation of a large quantity of merchandise in a raid on a house here last night, Greene County ties today believed they had solved a number of robberies.
Those held were Glenn Lifford, | 29; Edward Lifford, 27; Ray Lifford, 25, brothers, and Dan Houser, 24. The Lifford brothers are reported to have confessed to robberies in Linton and Sullivan County. Au-
thorities found a number of stolen |
articles in an abandoned coal mine near here, they said.
in most | The drivers were convicted |
| eight-hour day for
| Notre Dame University,
| at | last night.
authori- |
The greatest of the American | (right), gether in Rome during a stop mad on their flight to Cairo.
and Italy's most celebrated flier,
_ SON ARRESTED AFTER AUTOPSY ON HIS FATHER
‘Fred Stanley Held Under $5000 Bond on Charge Of Manslaughter.
Fred Stanley, 22, 1229 Chester St., |
was held under $5000 bond today on |
coroner's report that his father, | | James Stanley, 47, died of a brain | | concussion. | The father’s body was exhumed | | yesterday by Coroner E. R. Wilson. | Deputy Coroner Frank B. Ramsey | performed the autopsy and reported | that there had been a hemorrhage { of the brain caused by concussion. | Coroner Wilson said the man’s | heart was found to be normal and | that the hemorrhage had been suf- | ficient to kill him. He said there | was no way of telling what caused the hemorrhage. | James Stanley died Jan. 29. Heart | disease first was given as the cause.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
|.
ET EE CN GR IN WRT TON I NE
PAGE 15
Exhibit Judge
a manslaughter charge following a |
of the department of architecture at the University of Illinois, is to speak and serve as an exhibit judge at the annual meeting of the Indiana Society of Engineers in the Hotel Lincoln on Feb. 26. Prof. Francis W. Kervick, head of
| The case was reopened when a 14- | (year-old neighbor girl testified | father and son had an argument be- | fore the elder Stanley: Ss death.
‘BAND MEMBERS AT TECH ARE APPOINTED
Members of the Arsenal Technical | High School concert band for this | | semester have been announced by | | Frederick Barker, director, They | are: Paul Benz, Tom Boyer, { Atha Bruns, Emory Bryan, Robert Burford, | Emerson Callender, Lewis Clark, Jay
{ Dougherty, Keith Elliott Carlos Engle, Gene Fisher, Leslie Fleck, Robert Flem-
aviators, Col. Charles A. Lindbergh Air Marshal Italo Balbo, to-
e there by Col. and Mrs. Lindbergh
Norman Bess,
| | | |
SUGAR GROWER
CUT WORK DAY -
11,000 Workers Affected by Hawaiian Planters’ Association Order.
By United Press HONOLULU, Feb. 18.—The Hawai-
| ian Sugar Planters’ Association has
establishment of all field workers and believes it is the first Amer-
fcan agricultural industry such a step. Trustees of the association adopted the new schedule for all 37 plantation members in the territory. It will become effective Jan. 1. Affected are all workers in plantation factories, shops, stations and similar The announced plan particulaily stipulated that shortening of any employe’s hours would not reduce
n ii
announced
| the rate of pay.
11,000 Workers Affected
Approximately 11,000 of the 45,000 | employes on Hawaiian plantations |
[are in the classes covered by the |
resolution. The remainder are in Geld work, which for many years has averaged eight hours a day, | depending on conditions and subject | to emergency.
| Maj. Gen. Briant H. Wells, secre- | | tary of the association,
said the | new policy was the culmination of | ‘wo years’ study by special commit“vere following an established reputation for fa fairness to labor,
PROFESSOR CONDEMNS
TOTALITARIAN STATE
The Rev. Norbert C. Hoff, ligion and philosophy professor at
the totalitarian state in a lecture
“The government has tha of intervention, but no one wants bureaucracy, nor regimentation, nor | despotism, nor class | but an adequate power to make | secure the rights of men,” he said.
A ‘special musical program was |
| presented by the Cathedral Schola Cantorum. The services closed with
| ment.
CLOAKROOM LOOTED
While employees of the Bicknell | & Jackson Co. 19 W,
| the cloakroom. A coat valued at | $60, belonging to Mary Martin, 811 | Mulls Drive, Woodruff Place, and | another valued at $15, property of { Lulu Browii, 806 W. 28th St. were | stolen, police were told. Fred Schroeppel, 1335 S. Tre- | mont Ave. said his house was en- | tered and cash and a radio stolen. | Olivia Ringer, 636 E. 36th St. reported theft of a $150 watch and a | revolver,
PUBLIC SALE—The following gellnquept pledges will 2 2 Saturday. February . | 1937. at 8 . by. Wolf Sussman. Inc.. 235 ‘Ww. Washington St.. Indianapolis, Ind.
Pledge Number © | +ahae%S 1826 *6572 *4176
| 78 “3 +3405
WHEN KIDNEY TROUBLE CAUSES YOU TO GE UP NIGHTS
When Bladder Is Irritated When Backache Bothers Flush Poisonous Waste and Acid From Kidneys
GAIN IN HEALTH
It you aren't feeling just right—are nervous—have dizzy spells and occasional backache—study your kidneys and learn more about yourself.
Through the delicate filters of the kidneys, acid and poisonous waste are drawn from the blood and discharged from the body through the bladder—sométimes
these filters become clogged with poisonous waste and kidneys do not function properly—they need a good cleaning. One reliable medicine, hi and inexpensive is OLD DAL Haarlem Oil Capsules—you can't go wrong ou this grand medicine for ic has been helping people for 50 years—to correct their aches and pa.ns and to banish uric acid conditions, the aggravation of sciatica, neuritis, neuralgia, lumbago and rheumatism,
ney trouble as backache, nervousness, getting up two or three times during the night, irregular or paint elimination— leg cramps—moist palms or puffy eyes get a 35 cent package of this grand and harmless diuretic at any modern drug store——it starts the first day on its errand of helpfulness.
Oil {Gaps ulensthe nal—the genuine— right from Be i Holland.—Adv,
Ejt be sure it's 7 ie MEDAL Haarlem
to take |
pumping | departments. |
re- | condemned | SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral |
duly |
domination, |
benadiction of the Blessed Sacra- |
AS EMPLOYEES DINE
9th St., were | | at dinner last night, a thief entered |
hly efficient | E
So if you have such symptoms of kid-|
{| ing, Robert Glass, Robert Green, George
H. Keller, Bruce Kimberlin, Eugene Kiser, Morgan Kuetemeier, Clifford Lane, Allan Lawson, William Lewis. Billy MecDonald, Chester McKamey, Don Mason, | Paul Morris, Ralph Muegge, George Myers, Robert Parsley, Rodney Phelps, | Brescott, Herman Reece, Louis Ralph Schnabel, Hal Schornstein,
ited Press SEV YORK, Feb. 18.--Peggy Gar- | Short, James Siefert, George D. Smith, Byron Taggert, Robert S. Weber, Rope]
cia, former night club hat check girl | | Tarplee, Oscar Wacker. Harry Weber who wants $500,000 for the love she | | Ralph. ‘Woerner and Joe Zane. wie. says she gave to David Rubinoff,
{ violinist, in a Philadelphia hotel, returns to the witness stand today to COLLAPSE IN wid
IN RUBINOFF TRIAL
| tell a wide-eyed jury more about it. | She indignantly denied a defense | charge that she's only an experi- | enced gold digger to whom a man | Is persona non grata unless Le writes checks freely and frequently. Rubinoff promised to marry her after the hotel episode, Peggy Said, / { but he stuck to ) his violin instead.
| family life are
BAFFLED YEGGMEN [i os MUSS UP OFFICE Wve
| Church last night.
: Dr. Woods is head of the Mar‘Scatter Paper and Files r. Woods is head of the Mar
riage and Home Department of the | Federal Council of Churches After Destructive Entry. | Federal Council o urches
By Floods, Is View.
| Divorces and the breakdown
Dr.
Presbyterian
Christ in America. His lecture was | sponsored by the Indianapolis Federated Church Women. Safe-crackers caused Max Selig | “All dead marriages should be { no end of trouble at his tire store, terminated, but most marriages that 23 S. East St, he complained to| reach the divorce courts are not eld today. dead but only sick and should be treated as such,” he said. Trying to break in one side of| Mrs. Wilbur D. Grose, Home Relathe building, the burglars broke a | tions Committee chairman, prewindow only to find their path ob- | sided. | structed by a fire door. | They then tried the other side, | | breaking a transom to gain en- | trance. They found the safe un- HONOLULU, Feb. 18. —United locked but void of cash. So they| States weather officials have ascerproceeded to strew papers, records, | tained that frequently with temperpencils, erasers and files from one | ature at 80 degrees on the ground
end of the office to the other. | show was forming five miles above Finally they located the cash |the city.
drawer, broke it open and obtained | 50 cents. Ugly Eczema Makes Life
SNOW OVER HONOLULU
By United Press
DBERGHS LAND |
LINDBERGHS LAND ON BAHREIN ISLAND
The itching torment of eczema is
By United Press de Bo to make anyone wretched
BAHREIN ISLAND, Persian Guif, | | Feb. 18.—Col. and Mrs. Charles A. | Iindbergh, on a nse holiday to | India, arrived at 1:30 p. m. today | from Rutbah Wells, Iraq. | Ointment, 35¢ They said they intended to spend application a ES oy the night on this little British island | money refunded. Petersons’ Ointoff Arabia, and fly on to Karachi, in northwestern India, tomorrow.
from eczema, itchy pimples,
| to external causes, get Peterson's
| feet, cracks between toes. —Adv.
EXTRA
TROUSERS INCLUDED
Friday Night—Saturday Only
Men's 4-Pe. Suits
For the men who want the best in clothing. Exce ptionally fine 100% all-wool suits full celanese lined, at an unusually low price. ; you can be sure of a smart ap- 21 pearance! ————
Pn at CAPITOL {
You'll be surprised at the splendid fit, the tailored details, the selection of colors and patterns. Regardless of your size-—or build
NO INTEREST
CARRYING CHARGE.
PEGGY TO TELL MORE Howe William" Jefirics. Alvin odin, Reb: |
Worse Than Hava Wrought
of | “more devasting than |
Foster Woods told members of the |
of |
Wretched
the Notre Dame School of Architecture, is to be the other judge.
SCHOOL TOGIVE 'ONE-ACT DRAMA
‘Warren Central Arranges Program to Observe Founders’ Day.
Presentation of Zona Gale's oneact play, “The Neighbors,” is to | feature the Founders’ Day program | at 7:30 p. m. today.
| bers. It includes: Dorothea Hope, Meredith Brown, | Don Cartwright, Jean Furry, Herbert Fall, Jean Claghorn, Mary Lt. Golden, Robert : Heath, Kruse, Limbach, Marcy, walk, Margaret Pebworth, Perlee, Prange, Carl Puhlmann, Reich, Rubush, Shields, | Trotter and Edgar Surface. Music is to be provided by the Warren Township Choral Club un- { der leadership of Mrs. A. G. Matzke, |and a township grade chorus under | supervision of Miss Thelma Biddle. { Mrs, C. E. Trueblood is to pre- | side, and the Rev. Malcolm McNiel, { Prentice Presbyterian Church pas- | tor, is to give the invocation. Mrs. | W. M. Thompson. hospitality com-
Pauline James
Dorothea Hope Charles
| mittee chairman, is to announce at-
| tendance awards awards.
and anxious for relief. If you suffer |
angry | red blotches or other blemishes due |
ment also wonderful for itching of |
Bk SERVICE
THIEVES TRY TWICE,
L. H. Provine (above) director |
Central School !
| auditorium. The cast is to be com= | | posed of oral expression class mem- |
Violet | Lottie] Ted | Jack Nor- |
Marion | Ellanor |
Orban |
STANDARD RED CROW
| | | badly, Patterson told| UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN DEAD | police. | The identity of a woman, abou$ Yesterday afternoon, Mrs. Patter- |60, who died yesterday ares Jaliing to the pavement in the 14 oc | on said, a young woman wearing » Washington St. had not been | breeches and lace boots came to her |jaayned today. Tae body was in the { home, 837 N. New Jersey St, told | City Morgue.
her aged mother she used to play | - . THE ITCH
with Mrs. Patterson's daughter, and | Prevalent in Indianapolis
Mrs. Pearl
FINALLY KIDNAP DOG
‘Woman Fails, Owner Says, | But Man Succeeds.
| asked if she could take the op. | Ronny, for a walk. | The mother refused. Later a man | AnvR . : entered the Patterson yard, grabbed | Thieves must have wanted her | Ronny, and fled down the alley in Claranteed ta 1 i i yi i §t 1 barrassment an scor Canadian wirehair terrier pretty | a yellow roadster, police were told. ITCH. "600 large bottle. —Advertisement.
Go to Hook's or Haag's and get a bottle of Gates Sanative Lotion. Cuaranteed to
FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY—7:00 to 9:00 En —
MOONLIGHT SALE |
9x1 2 RU GS O95
Now vou can recover your kitchen or breakfast room floor at the very lowest cost. Each rug is fresh, new and perfect and with a heavy enamel surface that will give longer wear, They're drastically underpriced for this special Moonlight Sale. Come in and select yours early!
OPEN AN ACCOUNT
45¢ DOWN—50c A WEEK
NO INTEREST NO CARRYING CHARGE
“THE JRASH Neiron PEOPLES
CORNER”
PEOPLE'S
OUTFITTING COMPANY
Toll
N GIVES
s vevee. WITH THE ». HIGHEST POSSIBLE WINTER MILEAGE
\
“You're a mite previous with that furaiture, Fella. The house ain't—| mean isn't—half built. Using Red Crown gos? Yeah! Well, it got me here, too, before the architect had drawn his plans. Had to lay around here three days—on me own time, too!”
We're starting a movement to suppress Cartoonist Lichty for exaggerating the speed of Standard Red Crown gasoline. His only basis of truth is that this winter gasoline starts an engine in good condition in one second at zero; delivers quicker warm-up even than last year when it was 35% faster; and gives your car full steam ahead without costly choking. It does all that plus the highest possible winter mileage.
If that's your idea, too, of extra good gasoline, STOP IN AT YOUR NEARBY STANDARD OIL DEALER’S STATION FOR A TANKFUL,
PAGING ISO=VIS “D”! Standard Red Crown’s fast start-up, quick warm-up with full steam ahead, calls for motor oil which lubricates instantly, thoroughly —and lasts! That means Standard’s famous ISO-VIS “D” Motor Oil.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
