Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1937 — Page 23

PAGE 6

‘LIFE-AT-DEATH’ BABY

NT

Dominick Boccassini,

DIES

"_N 2D

father of tiny Fanny who was born just after her mother died, watches his daughter's fight for life under an improvised oxygen

tent. The child died early vesterday.

FIDELITY TRUST Ohio Reserve Officers to Take ADDS T0 CA CAPITAL Over Instruction at atC. M.T.C.

With Lieut. Col. Frank A. Hunter in command, an Ohio regiment of reserve officers is to take over Citizens Military Training instruction at

Bank Sigs L Long-Term Lease on Market St. Building.

An increase in the capital and re-

Ft. Benjamin Harrison Wednesday.

It is to relieve the 329th Infantry. Three Kentucky reserve chaplains also were to report.

| today.

McMillan.

The Ohio officers were to report

SILK INDUSTRY

serve structure of the Fidelity Trust |

Co. to a $500,000 was announced

today as the bank revealed plans for | moving from 148 E. Market St. to the |

J. F. Wild Building, 123 E. Market St. The pleted after Sept. sary by an expanded business, cording to Frank E. McKinney, president. The company’s resources placed in excess of $4,000.000. “The astounding growth of institution.” Mr. McKinney “along with other banks in the city, bespeaks the confidence the citizens of Indianapolis place in our banking system.”

move, which is to be com1, was made neces-

are

Takes Long-Term Lease

The Fidelity has taken a long-

term lease on the Wild Building and |

plans complete remodeling. The main lobby is to be occupied by the savings and commercial departments. A modern vault is to be installed in the basement with facilities for more than 4000 safety box patrons. The trust, insurance, property management oy tate departments are to mezzanine. The move brings back into banking activities a building which was built originally for banking purposes. Marion County Welfare Department offices have been in the building and they are to be moved to the former Washington Trust Co. Building, Washington St. ate Ave. in an economy

3 MISSING AFTER PLANE HITS WATER

I'nited Press HONG KONG, Aug. 9. —Eight survivors of the crash of a Chinese National Airway Sikorsky flving boat were brought to Hong Kong today bv the British Warship Thracian while customs cruisers searched pirate-ridden Bias Bay for three missing crew members. The plane crashed an hour after its takeoff from Hong Kong ior Shanghai. of Los Angeles, into bad weather. Mr. Smith and two Chinese passengers were sent tO a hospital. | Their injuries were not serious. M. Walsh, formerly of San Francis- | co, a pilot employed by the Canton | government, was among those res- | cued.

GIRL FLOGGED HIM HIM, WPA WORKER avs.

on the

move,

B

By UTnited Press

Kay, 47-vear-old WPA worker, demanded indictments today for Alfred Willis, 56, and his daughter, Louis, 17. Kay charged the

flogged him. The Willis’ admitted that had done so. Kay, through malicious untrue gossip, they said, had tried | to damage Louise's reputation. lice arrested them on a charge of | assault but freed them without requiring bail. Kay said he was going | to “camp on the District Attorney's doorstep” until he got justice. VENEREAL BILL INTRODUCED WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.—Indiana would receive $105.000 for venereal disease clinics under terms of a bill appropriating $4,000,000 for this purpose introduced in the House by Rep. Lyle H. Boren (D. Okla.)

THE OTHER WOMAN LIVES JUST AROUND THE CORNER

T may seem unreasonable, but most men cannotunderstand why a woman who is usually happy and loving should have recurring a het whole character seems changed. He cannot appreciate the distress, the discomfort that all women must endure. He does not know what it is to de housework with an and faili energy. All he does know is that other women seem more cheerful by comparison. wii you such a three-quarter

Don't let the ordeals that all women face cause you avoidable discomfort or endanger your home. as SO many wise women have —try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Far three generations one woman has told another how to smiling through’ with Lydia inkham's Vegetable Com und. Jt helps Nature tone up the system, thus the discomforts from the functional disorders which women must endure in the

to wi for motherhood. 3. ApSidite age.”

> Don't be uarter wife wake LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S a Go "Smiling

= He aavert A

at- |

our | said, |

real es- |

and Sen- |

father | tied him to a tree and the daughter |

they

Po- |

HIT BY STRIKE

6000 Mill Workers Idle at

Paterson, N. J., Center Of Movement. By United Press

PATERSON, N. J, Aug. 9. — A/ nationwide strike in the silk indus-

The oath of allegiance was ad- | ministered to candidates yesterday. | Brig. Gen. William K. Naylor, post | commander, welcomed the camp to | the fort, and Col. George V. Strong, {camp commander, addressed the enrollees. ok officers and 150 men of the | 1th Infantry have been ordered to | [ee Perry, O.. for duty at the

smilingly returns a birthday

| turned

eX ~ Tha i } : ORE LB

Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, widow of the late President, is pictured as she kiss from her great grandson,

AWAITS RETURN

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES . MRS. ‘T. R’ CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY

MONDAY, AUG. 9, 1937)

COLLIER TROPHY GIVEN PAN-AMERICAN AIRWAYS

William | line president.

‘Vernon Kellogg PASTOR'S BACKERS

TO PENAL FARM ° Is Dead at 69; Aided

‘Speedway City Boy aught

After Eluding Police |

And Sheriffs.

Myron Hinds, 17, of 1956 Girard | Ave., Speedway City, was to be reto the State Penal Farm today after a week-end of freedom | | that had State and City Police and

National rifle matches. Arrival date | | deputy sheriffs on the jump.

is to be Aug. 16, and the troops are to return to Ft. Harrison about S. 12.

PREDICT NEW K NEW HIGH ~~ FOR COTTON YIELD

try, called by the Textile Workers |

| Organizing Committee and centered here, started today when 6000 work-

ers failed to report at their jobs in |

Paterson mills.

and spokesman for local employers, said Paterson mills would co-operate

with strikers in the hope that bar- |

gaining on a nationwide basis might help to stabilize the industry. Mr. Cole said Paterson employers

would make n e Ib wttemph, 1 Operate | Cotton States Congressmen for Fed- |

their mills and would form a national organization to bargain with the union on a countrywide basis. The T. W. O. C., a subsidiary ot the Committee for Industrial Organization, is demanding a 40-hour week, averaging 50 per cent, wage of $15 a week for auxiliary { help and $18 for weavers, and time and a half for overtime work.

Carl Holderman, regional director |

of T. W. O. C. for the East, said about 50,000 workers throughout the nation would be affected by the strike.

By United Press { DETROIT, Aug. 9.—Twenty-one thousand men returned to work in| | the Plymouth Motor Co. and “feed- |

er” factories today under an agree- |

ment whereby there will be an in- | vestigation of an independent! Chrysler union and a hearing on the | discharge of four men. The Ply-| | mouth plant had been idle since | Wednesday following a brief sit-! down strike and a lockout.

Pilot Ed Smith, formerly said the boat ran |

By United Press SPRINGFIELD, Ill. Aug. 9—Po-| lice investigated the slaying of Glenn ! Stuffiebeam, 40, organizer for the] Progressive Miners of America, to-| |day as a possible new outbreak in the bloody Illinois mine union war which has taken more than 40 lives | |and millions of dollars in property | Cane.

DELAY MEETING OF KENT AND AND WINDSOR

By United Press VIENNA. Aug. 9.—The first meet- | ing between the Duke of Windsor | and a member of the royal family since his marriage appeared today | to have been postponed.

| NEW ORLEANS. Aug. 9—Oscar!

| were expected yesterday at Wasser- { leonburg Castle, where the Duke {and his bride, the former Mrs. Wallis Warfield Simpson, are honey- | mooning. But, instead, they motored to the Villa Raimund Vonhoffmari-

Izburg.

David L. Cole, Paterson attorney |

closed shop, wage increases | minimum |

The Duke and Duchess of Kent | JFO

sthal in the village of Kammer near | Sa

Forecast Expected to See,

Demand for Loans.

| By United Press

riculture Department today | mated 1937 cotton production at a six-year high of 15.593.000 balet | | presaging increased demand from

|ing a six-month sentence for | hicle taking. Yesterday his mother |

Saturday, Hinds slipped away

from the Farm, where he was servve-

( notified State Police to come after

|

| Grant Ave.

WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.—The Ag- | Marion County Jail. esti- |

eral loans to stabilize farm prices. |

President Roosevelt has said these loans will be forthcoming if he is | given assurances that Congress will | enact general farm legislation at the | beginning of the next session. Today's report. showing cotton | acreage at 11 per cent higher than {last year and prospects for the | highest vield per acre ever recorded

‘result in further weakness in cotton

her son. When two officers arrived, Hinds | | had left. Deputy Sheriffs Francis | Dux and Paul Gary visited the | Home of an aunt on N. DeQuincy | but their quarry was five minFh ahead of them. City police then joined the hunt. | few minutes later Patrolmen |

| Ward Pettijohn and Charles Taylor | Jean Kellogg.

caught the fugitive at 16th St. and He was turned over to! | the State Police and taken to the

i mss | 1400 LAYMEN GIVEN | PAPAL BENEDICTIO

Times Special NOTRE DAME. Aug. 9.—The lay- | men’s retreat had ended here to- | day. It closed as 1400 men received Holy Communion and the papal | benediction by the Rev. Fr. Leo| Flood, retreat master, in the Church | | of the Sacred Heart yesterday. At the farewell breakfast, Toast-!

Mich, introduced the following

| prics which already have sagged as| Speakers: Thomas H. Robbins, Ben-

traders discounted the high produc- | tion in advance of the report.

ton Harbor, Mich. attorney; | ard Bradley,

Rich- | Peoria; Chicago Mu- |

| The Department's Crop Reporting | nicipal Judge Thomas A. Green;

| Board said the condition of

the | Jean Kennedy, St. Vincent De Paul |

Resear ch Trial of Niemoller Delayed |

By Science Service

HARTFORD, Conn., Aug. 9.

known throughout the world for his

researches, writings and administra- | tive ability, died yesterday at the Hartford Retreat here after a long illness. He was 69. Dr. Kellogg was secretary emeritus of the National Research Council in { Washington and among the first | trustees of Science Service, with which organization he served, as honorary vice president, until his death. During the Worid War, Dr. Kellogg served as a leading member of | ex-President Hoover's staff and was director in Belgium of the American Committee for Relief. For more than 25 years prior the World War Dr. professor of entomology ford University. Dr. Kellogg wife, Charlotte,

to

at Stan-

is survived by his

and a daughter,

.U.DENTALAID GETS NEW DUTIES

Dr. Gerald D. Timmons, Indiana University Dentistry School secretary, has been named member of a national advisory committee to develop social security health administration. He was appointed by

|

DN. | { Vernon L. Kellogg, veteran biologist |

The Collier Trophy for outstanding servi ce to aviation was presented this year to PanAmerican Airways. Thomas H. Beck is the third.

| last night, almost without precedent | under the repressive activities of Kellogg was |

| Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins. |

Dr. Timmons served as adviser to the State Health Board and is secre- | tary of the American Association of | Dental Schools. The committee is tb work with the !

Childrens’ Bureau of the Labor De- |

by the Department, was expected to | master Lee Higgins, Grand Rapids, | partment.

Bu United Press

WINDSOR. England, Aug. 9.—

| crop on Aug. 1 was 81.3 per cent of | Society, Chicago; the Rev. Fr. John | Horace E. Dodge, Detroit speedboat |

normal, | pounds of lint cotton per acre. The Bureau of Census reported | | 152,983 bale§ ginned to Aug. 1. com- | pared with 41.130 bales in 1936 and | 94.346 in 1935. The yield per acre estimate was the highest ever recorded for the |

indicating a yield of 223.3 | Hackett,

Kalamazoo, Mich.,

| Father Flood.

‘KOKOMO SITE OF

SECURITY OFFICE (2 PRT] -

{ United States, the Department said. | | Rw United Press

| The former record was in 1898. when |

| the final yield was 223.1 pounds per | | curity

| acre.

COLISEUM SPONSORS ASK BOARD MEETING

CHICAGO, Aug. 9.—A Social Se- | Board office will be opened immediately in Kokomo, Ind. to serve six counties, Regional Direc- | tor H. L. McCarthy said today. Counties to be served are Howard, | Cass, Grant, Miami, Tipton and | Wabash.

Christian H. W. Luecke, Indien

In answer to the request of Mayor resident for many years, has been |

| Kern to receive all proposals on a | new munipical auditorium, Sidney Miller and his associates today had Vigay: the Mayor asking that he call a special meeting of the Auditorium Board. Mr. Miller, William H. Trimble, | William A. Brennan and Joe Rand

Beckett are members of the syndi- | cate which recently asked the Works |

| Board for permission to plan for a | priv ately owned colissum which | would be leased to the City. DIAMOND

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HAY FEVER AND ASTHMA TREATMENT ON FREE TRIAL

ST. MARY'S, Kan--D. J, Lane, a druggist at 1413 Lane Building, St. Mary's Kan, manufactures a treatment for Asthma and Hay Fever in which he has so much confidence that he sends a $1.25 bottle by mail to anyone who will write him for it. His offer is that he is to be paid for this bottle after * you are completely satisfied and the one taking the treatment to be the judge. Send your name and address today, stating which trouble you have.—Adv.

LOWEST PRICES ON

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This is an exclusive rug and linoleum store—consequently our prices are lower,

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Times-Acme Photos.

President Roosevelt is shown giving the trophy to Juan T. Trippe,

112 WATCH REPAIRING

ents of the opposition movement to Nagireation of the church massed | front of Pastor Niemoller's ley They openly defied orders | of the dreaded secret police to dis-

| perse, and remained even when | truckloads of them were arrested and taken away.

DEFY NAZI PALICE

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After Demonstration.

By United Press BERLIN, Aug. 9.—Trial of the Rev. Martin Niemoller, militant |

Get Prices Elsewhere and See the Difference

Niemoller's trial It was postthis

a

charges of defying the Nazi Gov-| A Beautiful PERMANENT ernment, was postponed indefinitely | cut ® Finger . ® Shampoo hy Trim sands of the pastor's followers last night Two Permanents Mae Murray or gnt. For only $1.75 Shirley Temple No Appoint- | was set for tomorrow. ment Needed. COmIBIEte oii poned without explanation B leached, Hard to Wave 40 ri a 3 rin rie The belief was that secret police oh for $5.01, rexuiar $2 " - ork. values each. feared there would be a demonstra NG APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

Evangelical church leader, on | Complete with % Fir. today after a demonstration of thou- O58 ® Rinse--All for only The Rev. Mr. No Permanents, $1 Gray, Dyed, 1 "i TR morning. Hair Our Spe- i cialty, Good tion before the courthouse similar to the astonishing manifestation of (®) 4 A BEAUT ACAD,

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JEWELRY SHOP

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Directly Opposite Statehouse