Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1937 — Page 6

PAGE

TOWNSEND TALK 16 Die Violently in State; 8 Are Victims of Traffic;

4 Hurt 1 in Mishaps | Here

Franklin Condition of Motorist Is

T0 END PURDUE POLICY PARLEY

Pitkin Will Substitute for Amelia Earhart at Closing Banquet.

Times Special LAFAYETTE, July 2-—Governor Townsend is to speak tonight at the banquet which is to close the Purdue | Institute of American Policy and | Technology. More than a score of authorities and leaders have cussed world-wide ural problems at sessions during the last two weeks. Dr. Walter B. Pitkin, and author who already has made several addresses, also is to speak tonight. Substituting for Amelia Earhart, originally scheduled to speak, he is to outline the possible results in the Lafayette area if it were handled as a regional planning unit. He is to localize in summary form the various factors of population, | residential, agricultural and indus- | trial trends which have been presented before the Institute.

President Elliott to Preside

President Edward C. Elliott Purdue is to serve as toastmaster. “The Necessity of Budgeting” was discussed this morning by Dr. Lillian Gilbreth, consulting engineer and Purdue staff member. “Budgeting should become a habit and the budget should be a servant and not a master,” she said. “It should free one from unimportant | repetitive decisions, thus from rou- | tine, and save time and energy for constructive planning and work.” In his address last night, Dr. O. E. | Baker, population expert, warned that America, like Rome, may disintegrate and become extinct. Unfavorable trends he cited were the erosion of soil. the declining birth rate, the centralization wealth and the domination of the cities in the navion's Social System.

national | dis-

of |

ANOTHER ROOSEVELT ROMANCE IS HINTED

John Escorts Boston Soci- |

ety Girl to Family Home.

(Mrs. Roosevelt, Page 19)

By United Press HYDE PARK, N. Y,, July 2.—Pos- | sibility of another Roosevelt ro-| mance this one between John Roosevelt and a blond society girl— | was seen today when the name of | Ann Lindsay Clark appeared on the | guest list at the family summer! home. John escorted the Boston debu-

tante to the Roosevelt estate after | they had attended the wedding of | to Ethel |

his brother, Franklin Jr., du Pont. He is a student at Harvard and the last unmarried member of | the President's family. The possibility that a romance might be in the making drew addi- | tional interest from the fact that

Hyde Park featured in Franklin's |

and Ethel's courtship. The newly married couple spent election week

last November here with the Roose-

velts. John's friendship for Miss Clark

showed he was following the prefer- |

ence of his other brothers for

blonds. James married Betsy Cush- | ing, a blond. Ethel du Pont Roose- | Elliot married a |

velt is brunet.

HAPGOOD RELEASE

one, too.

LIKELY TOMORROW

By United Press AUBURN, Me. Hapgood, New secretary, and six other leaders of the 94-day strike, may be released from jail tomorrow.

July

A hearing to fix bail has been set |

for 10 a. m. at Portland by Justice Sidney St. Felix Thaxter State Supreme Court. The seven organizers,

strike injunction, Jail were

sentences May 7. imposed by

who issued the injunction.

When you select your GLASSES at MilLLER’'S we make it a person a | issue to see that you derive satis faction in every way.

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MILLER

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2 Doors from Power & Light Co.

social and nat-

economist |

of |

2.—Powers England C. I. O. |

Auburn-Lewiston shoe |

of the |

convicted | by a jury of contempt of an anti- | began six-month | Sentences | Justice Harry | Manser of the State Supreme Court, |

Crash Near Costs Lives of Two Local Residents.

(Continued from Page One)

critical: Mrs, Fila Abel, of 2142 | Schreiber Place, wife ot the dead | man, broken leg and arm and Pres- | ton Cosby, 25. of 818 W. Morris St. son of the other dead man and nephew of the Abels’, head and back | injuries. | Four St. Louis persons were killed | instantly when their | struck by a Pennsylvania Railroad |

| passenger train at a crossing two a; automobile yesterday They | walked around the side of a fire MTs. | truck at Central Ave. and 26th St.

| miles west of Valparaiso. George Buckley, 45; and Ida and

| were: | James McClelland, | Eve McClelland.

Witness said Mr.

|

‘Critical After Crash With Truck.

(Continued from Page One)

Municipal Court today on drunken driver charges. Five others were - arrested last night. Four persons were injured in auto accidents overnight, none seriously. Lydia Andersons, 69, of 825 N. New Jersey St., cut and bruised in.an accident at Alabama and 13th'Sts. last | night, was recovering in, City Hos-

auto was | | pital today.

James Wade, 35, of 4059 Park Ave, a city fireman, was knocked down by as he

The driver of the car, Leon Coleman, 18, of 4022 Boulevard Place, was arrested on charges of reckless

Buckley Was | griving, having improper plates and

| headed east on Road 30, and turned failure to display a driver's license.

south onto Road 49 directly into | | the path of the train. and James Pasher, 17, | Mich, were killed when the car in| which they were riding left the] | highway near Monticello and | crashed into a tree. Robert Merzinger, 14, Royal Oak, Mich. also a passenger in [injured critically. The Michigan youths were hitch-hikers. Harry Moore, 47, Gary, Was drowned when he fell from a boat while fishing on Lake Shafer near | | Monticello.

Ralph B. Smiley, 24-year-old |

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Fix, Bryan, O.,

| injured in an auto collision at 30th

the automobile, was |

Eugene Graham, 19, Remington, | St. and Northwestern Ave. yesterPontiac, day,

were reported in fair condition lin City y Hospital today. today.

PERU MAN TO MEET SISTERS FIRST TIME

Vacation to Be Family's

Initial Reunion.

| Rushville filling station attendant, Times Special

| was killed and his fiancee,

| Janice Stevens, 22, Orange, was in- | Bushkuhl,

Miss |

July -2.—Albert Kessler 33, local shoe merchant,

PERU,

jured when their auto was struck by | expects to meet his two sisters and | a Big Four locomotive at a crossing |a brother for the first time in his

at Sandusky, | Rushville. Waldemar Horstman, ville, died from when his bicycle was struck by a | | truck driven by Marion Guinn, | Martinsville, Albert Hiatt, 40, Newcastle, died | from injuries sustained when he fell | from a load of hay. Merle Martin, 15, Vincennes, was [Killed in a fall from the rear of an auto while returning home from a fishing trip. Everett Keller, 51, farmer living near Warren, was gored to death | by a bull while driving stock from a | pasture. | Ford Wareham, 52, Mishawaka, died after inhaling live steam, | escaping from a boiler at the Mishlawaka Rubber & Wollen Manufac- { turing Co. where he was employed. | Oscar Finch, 68, farmer living | near Princeton, was fatally injured

19, Evans- |

| when kicked by a horse at his farm. |

NO COUNCIL MEETING |

dent, announced today that next

| postponed a week because of the | holiday. During the summer | | months the City Hall is to close aby 4p m.

Monday's council meeting has been |

Edward Raub. City Council presi- |

10 miles south of [life July 26 when he goes to Mis-

| souri on his vacation. His mother died when he was

injuries received | born in Ashley, Mo.,, and he was

| adopted when only a few days old. His foster parents then moved to Tiffin, O., and he lost connections with his sisters and brother. Mr. Bushkuhl located his relatives through correspondence to St. Louis, where he found one of his sisters.

The other sister, who lives in New.

York, has planned to B in St. Louis for the reunion. The brother lives near St. Louis.

MERCHANTS ORGANIZE WABASH, Ind, July 2.—Thirtyfour Wabash business firms have organized a Retail: Merchants’ Association. More are expected to join before a membership campaign, started last week, is BRIAR.

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GINGER ALE

Assorted Sodas ¢ or Cola

Ex-Judge Dead

Charles Remster (Story, Page Three)

300 POSTAL CLERKS TO CONVENE SUNDAY

By United Press LOGANSPORT, July 2.—Approximately 300 delegates from Indiana and guests from Illinois, Ghio, Michigan and Kentucky branches of the United National Association of Post Office Clerks will attend the

36th annual convention of the Indiana branch here Sunday and Monday, Loren Z. Fateley,

| president, said today. | Monday ¢ afternoon will be Fred Lan- | dis Jr., Logansport. Activities Sun-

{day will include golf, registrations |

land an opening business session.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

state |

Principal speaker on the program |

TVA ASKS COURT T0 DENY PETITION

Opposes Review of Georgia Power Company Case.

By United Press WASHINGTON, July 2. — The Tennessee Valley Authority today filed a brief asking the Supreme Court not to review a petition by Georgia Power Company. to enjoin TVA activities in Georgia. The case involves a dispute over Jurisdictions of rival circuit courts. On April 30, 1936, the power com= pany requested an injunction preventing the TVA from constructing a power line across one of its own lines and a permanent injunction prohibiting such TVA activities in Georgia. The case was taken before a Georgia court and the injunction request refused. The power company then asked and obtained an injunction from a Tennessee court. At TVA request the original Georgia court ordered the company | to cease prosecuting the case because the Georgia court claimed prior jurisdiction. This was supported in an opinion of the fifth circuit court of appeals at New Orleans. The power company is now asking the Supreme Court to hear the case and reverse the circuit court decision.

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FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1937

TEMPTING

And

DELICIOUS

If you have an ambition to place before your family unusually

tempting desserts in the form of pies, tarts and pastries, you will find

in the new Booklet prepared by our Washington Service Bureau exact-

ly the suggestions and recipes you need.

The PIES AND PASTRIES Booklet contains recipes and complete

instructions for making pie crust and pastry and nearly one hundred

different kinds of pies, tarts and party pastries; some you never heard

of, and all of them delicious concoctions guaranteed to make the

mouth water.

Send the coupon below, with a dime enclosed, for your copy:

CLIP COUPON HERE

Dept. B-155, Washington Service Bureau, THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES, 1013 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C.

| want the new Booklet PIES AND PASTRIES, and enclose a dime (carefully wrapped) to cover return postage and handling costs:

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