Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 March 1937 — Page 42
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1987
PAGE 39
THUGS HUNTED |
Stenographer Inherits Control of $250,000 Corporation at 35
AFTER ELUDING POLICE SQUADS
By FRED A. M'CABE | United Press Staff Corresnondent LEVELAND, March 12.—Mrs. | Nellie Kazar, a 35-year-old] stenographer, looked up from her | | typewriter in a law office today to
Pair Gets $80 From Woman, tell just how it feels to be the vice But She Saves $180 in | president and treasurer of a $250,- . 000 industrial corporation. Handkerchief.
She laughed, too, at how her em- | = ployers are working for her while she works for them. Two Negro thugs who escaped a Mrs. Kazar recently inherited the | police trap after holding up Mrs. | controlling interest in the East
Stel ; ; | Shore Machine Products Co, when | hy 16 Shath afiQ HONING her of yoo} her father, the late Henry C. Gott- | in her apartment at 201 N. New
| | | schalt, owner and founder of the Jersey St, were hunted today by| firm, was killed in an automobile ; i police.
{ accident. Police cars surrounded the viens | Mr. Gottschalk left no will and ity shortly after the holdup, but Yoo azar,
an only child, after a the bandits escaped. jie of comparative poverty, was the Mrs. Sharp, 37, told police she | SO'® heir. opened her apartment door when she heard a knock and was confronted by one of the armed] bandits. “Let's have all the money you've | got,” she said the bandit told her as! he entered. An accomplice stood in | the hall, she told police. Saved $180 | | Mrs. Sharp told police she had | $180 wrapped in a handkerchief she | was carrying. She hurriedly svi | it under a radiator, but $80 Sn
zn n ER parents had separated and
it was necessary for Nellie to!
Townsend
rome
”
out on the floor. The bandit scooped up the $80, joined his accomplice in the hallway | and fled, police were told. David | Sharp, husband of the victim, was] in the basement at the time, he told police. | Daniel Rector, manager of a gro- | cery at 742 W. 11th St., broke up an | attempted robbery last night when | he swung a meat cleaver at two] thugs who had pointed a revolver at | him. The bandits fled. Two boys, both 16, were arrested | yesterday after police said they were | caught stealing merchandise at the Western Auto Supply Co. 301 E. Washington St. | Lard and Meat Stolen Andrew Gunsleman, 219 S. Wal-| reported that burglars broke | into his garage last night and stole | a 30-pound can of lard and some | meat he had stored there, Mrs. Dora Pilz, 825 S. Illinois St., reported that her white gold diae| mond ring valued at $250 had been | lost or stolen. | Two men were arrested early to-| on vagrancy charges for ques- |
da tioning in the robbery of Miss Ann | Curtis, Gary, in the Greyhound Bus | Terminal on W. Market St. ! Police said Miss Curtis fainted and | a man grabbed her purse, which | contained $4.50 in cash and a bus ticket to Dayton, O
PETROLEUM GROUP CLOSES CONVENTION
cott St.,
rounded by the agents. send experimental trial.
«a."s CLAIMS RING OF FAKE sropocd EYE DOCTORS CRUSHED
to owners |
Independent Pe-
urged, at
The Indiana troleum Association was convention yesterday Hotel Severin, to combat legislation unfavorable and operators of trailers. | By United Press Estimating that approximately| BOSTON, March 12. —Arrest of 300,000 individuals now live whole | {wo alleged ringleaders at Nashville,
its
| court settlement had been small,
| finally was able to purchase a mod- |
GETS STATE POSITION
support herself so she could com- | plete her schooling. Determined and completely inde- | pendent of her wealthy father, she prepared herself for a business career. | She took any sort of employment, | always with the view that some day | she might relieve her mother of] some of her financial burdens. The |
Her business education completed, she found a job in the law firm of
| Davis & Young. Her starting sal-|
ary was $18 a week. Over a period | of 17 years her raises came gradu- | ally until her salary reached its] present $40. | Through rigid self denial, Nellie!
{
|
est home for her mother and herself. | us n ” IGHT years ago, Henry Gottschalt by then worth approximately $500,000, offered his daughter a place in his firm.
|
en | ;
Cash Looks OK
|
Word that he had 200 “Townsend dollars” brought salesmen with vacuum cleaners, radios and even a farmer with a cow to the front porch of Henry Folz, 78, shown above at his home in Eugene, Ore., surThe money was to be spent as part of a Town=
| postal inspectors with crushing the ‘ring that he said once included 200 | to 300 fake doctors. | The two arrested men, Raymond
'B. Hall and Ernest Mendel, were alleged to have taken $500 from a | Bernardston man for a fake radium
| Florida.
She rejected the offer. Her father offered to name her sole heir to his estate. Again she refused. She chose to stay with her mother and her work in the law office. Gottschalt, angered, destroyed his will. On Jan. 16 he was killed in an automobile crash on his way to Investigation revealed he had left no will. Mrs. Kazar automatically was named executrix of the estate and vice president and treasurer of the company.
GEORGE T. O'CONNOR
Succeeds Thomas L. Neal as Tax Collector.
Governor Townsend today appointed George T. O'Connor, City Plan Commission president, to the post of Marion County Inheritance Tax Collector.
| L. Neal, who resigned to become | | 0
County Welfare Director. Mr. O'Connor is to retain his Plan Commission post, which he has held for nine years. He is a former president of Thomas Madden's Son & Co., furniture manufacturers.
FRATERNITY BANQUET TO BE HELD TONIGHT
The annual Founders’ Day state
| banquet of Phi Delta Theta, col-
legiate social fraternity, is to be
held tonight at the Columbia Club, | and leaders estimate 400 will attend. |
John D. Ellis, Cincinnati, city attorney, will be the speaker. Chapters from Indiana University, Purdue University, DePauw, Wabash, Butler, Franklin and Hanover will attend.
HE took a little time off at first | they work for me. It’s an odd arfrom her law office duties to | rangement, isn't it?” assume control of the $250,000 cor- | The stenographer = industralist, poration. Her first move was to| who last summer became Mrs, John grant a 10 per cent increase to her | Kazar, said she doesn’t believe in employees. | letting marriage interfere with an “They deserved it,” she said, her interesting business career. blue eyes twinkling, | Of course, if my new duties at | She placed the corporations legal | the machine products company take affairs in the hands of her lawyer up too much time, I'll have to give employers. | up my job here. but I like this work “I still work for them even though | so much.”
Packing Industry Wage Raise
May Mean Higher Meat Prices
| By United Press CHICAGO, March 12.—A thick, juicy steak like the one you have for dinner tonight will cost considerably more in a month or so, meat | packers have predicted. Employees of the “Big Four” of the meat packing industry, Armour, | Swift, Wilson and Cudahy, have been notified that effective March 15
| they will receive 9 cents an hour more for hourly and piece work, a na- |
| tional total of $14,000,000.
Accompanying the announcement the four-company pay raise
of | dicted a raise in the price of meat® balance the increased cost of | lieve, only as long as the women | labor, | who do the buying are willing to | “Our employees’ wages are now | pay the higher prices. at an all-time peak and livestock More than 92,000 employees of prices too, are very high. Meat |the four companies will receive the | prices reflect the price of livestock | benefits of the higher wage scale, {and the cost of preparation—labor | which will give piece and hourly to see af | workers a base of 62's cents an
| —and while we expect advance in the price of meats to| hour, $25 for a 44-hour week. A increase also was
meet these new conditions, we do | proportionate | not believe the advance will be out | announced for other workers, paid
|
{of line with growing consumer in-| weekly at the Cudahy and Wil- |
| come,” Mr. Cabell’s statement read.
| son plants.
Women Have Last Word
(would be in line with recent ad-|the plant conference boards, come vances in cost to the consumer of (posed of equal numbers of em{all grades of beef and lamb, but, in | ployee and management represen[the opinion of commission men, | tatives, established in 1921 to pre- | housewives will have the final say- side in all matters pertaining to |so. Prices will rise, these men be-'wages and hours of labor.
He succeeds "Thomas | was a statement by R. H. Cabell, Armour & Co. president, which pre- |
| | The increase, second to be given | | packing house employebs since No- | Such an increase in meat prices | vember, 1936, was agreed upon by |
IN 2 SECONDS
Drop a Bayer Aspirin whet into a ass of water. ’ By the time it hits the bottom of the glass it is disintes grating.
What happe
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Own Eyes Tell You How Bayer Tablets Work
f A Genuine Bayer Tablet Starts | to Disintegrate and Go to Work
ns in these glasses happens in your stomach
BY STOP WATCH
Genuine BAYER Aspirin tablets start “taking hold” of pain a few minutes after taking.
For Amazingly Quick Relief Get Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN
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LOOK FOR THE BAYER CROSS
TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES, THEY BRING QUICK RESULTS,
Sirauss says
STORE OPEN SATURDAY
NIGHT TILL
9
or part time in trailers, A. L.| Stallings, oil division manager of | the Indiana Farm Bureau Co-
Tenn, has broken a ring of fake eyewash for his daughter and eye doctors that swindled Massa-|swindled a Southampton man out of chusetts residents of $5,000,000 to |$2000 for a “magic belt” worth 50 $7,500,000, Chief Postal Inspector |cents that would “cure everything
Operative Association urged the association to put a united front | against discriminatory legisiation.
John J. Breslin asserted today. He credited state authorities and
from athlete's foot to cancer,” according to Mr. Breslin.
—
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