Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 August 1937 — Page 3

EL RY SS ST

TUESDAY, AUG. 81, 1937

TOKYO VICTORY | MAY PAVE WAY FOR NEW WAR

Attack on Russia Feared; U. S. May Send More Warships to East.

Tragedy Victim

(Continued from Page One)

| | | nm So he is putting people to death | wholesale. If the Kremlin is right, and trai- | tors are as common as all that, | then Russia is in no position to wage a foreign war. If it is wrong, the same thing applies. For that would mean a reign of terror in | Which Russians of all degrees are | being railroaded to death or the dungeon whether innocent or guilty, | whichever it is, Russia’s morale | must be at low ebb. Fear War Is Inevitable |

Japanese leaders know this. And, | as they are confident a second | Russo-Japanese war is inevitable, |

Earl Forehand

" =u =» the very ABC of military strategy dictates a blow at Russia before she

recovers. | . Rani Overs Wii Wave bid ‘Earl Forehand Believed to Have Suffered Cramps

studying Russia intensely in recent | years are convinced that Stalin | could not possibly fight a major war |

BUDGET ITEM FOR VENEREAL FIGHT STANDS

$12,500 for Campaign Given Tentative Approval By City Council.

(Continued from Page One)

Raub and Silas J. Carr, member, proposed enactment of an ordinance at a later Council meeting to assist the campaign. Other items in the Health Board's budget met with opposition last night, however. Among these were requests for traveling expenses. The Council cut $4675 from the Health Board's 1938 fund request of $145,330.

Reads Letter From Mayor

Dr. Morgan read a letter from Mayor Kern recommending an increase of $500 in the salary of the Health Board president, who now receives $500, and the same increase, for its three members, raising them from $100 to $600. After Finance Committee Chairman Ross Wallace had termed the old salaries “ridiculous,” and President Edward Raub had said “they

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 3

They're No Heroes to Live Ones

| lage,

CRASH INJURIES PROVE FATAL TO WILLIAM ATKINS

Wife and Mrs. Miskimen Reported Improved at Kankakee.

(Continued from Page One) family were summoned to his bedside and were there when he died. He did not regain consciousness. At the bedside were Mr. and Mrs. William Atkins, his parents, and Mr. Miskimen, father-in-law. The young wife had not been told of her husband’s death today. Mr. Miskimen said no arrangements had been made for the funeral, but that the body would be taken to Indianapolis for services and burial.

Plan Return to Indianapolis Dr. Bell was being aided in the case by Dr. R. Merchant, Lake VilDr. Glenn J. Pell, Indianapolis oral surgeon, and Dr. W. D. Gatch, Indianapolis, dean of the Indiana University School of Medi-

cine, It was reported here that Mrs.

38 Pay $209

Education Board Places! Kreml Book on List For High Schools.

The State Education Board today | made compulsory as an eighth grade |

safety text book “Living Safely,” | written by Earl C. Bowman, DePauw University, and Paul F. Boston, Greencastle Public Schools Superintendent, The book is published by McMil- | [lan Co. and costs 39 cents. | The Board put on the approved | list for high schools “Public Safety,” [by Franklin M. Kreml, nationally | | known safety expert; State Safety | Director Donald F. Stiver, and Dr. | | Thurman B. Rice, State Health | Board member. The book is pub- | lished by Bobbs-Merrill. | On the same list it pul “Safety, | Your Problerth and Mine,” by Wil- | ( liam A. Evans, Indianapolis Public | Schools Safety Director, and Mattie | | B., Fry, Anderson. | County school superintendents must see that every eighth- | grade pupil is equipped with the ap- | proved text by the beginning of the

®

William Coleman, grandmother of | second semester, which in most state Mr. Atkins, was on her way here | schools comes during the last two |

now. They believe his regime would blow up within 60 days, due to pentup forces within. For the present, therefore, they do not take very seriously the newly announced Russian-Chinese treaty of nonaggression. Its chief interest for them is that it represents the

future anti-Japanese trend of Russo- |

Chinese politics—if Japan allows them the necessary time. ; But that is the one thing Japan Is not going to do if she can possibly help it. If China can now be quickly eliminated from the combination— with a minimum of men. money and munitions—the field will be clear for a try at Russia. What Japan fears most from the direction of Russia is an air attack. It is certainly possible for a nation whose fliers have flown across the North Pole from Moscow to San Diego without stopping, to cross the Japan Sea, bomb and burn Japan's Vulnerable industrial and political centers, and return. The round trip is a bare 1800 miles. Accordingly, experts believe Japan would concentrate her Navy in the

Sea of Japan in the hope of inter- |

cepting the Russian bombers. Also, her Manchukuo forces would try to stop them before they left the region of Vladivostok. Failing both, her warplanes at home would have to battle them there. Such, at least is one of the reasons suggested for* the still relatively small number of Japanese planes in China.

serves of men, planes and munitions

exhausted, she will be in no position |

to tackle Russia. On the contrary, that might be Russia's opportunity to settle her score with Japan.

Japanese Planes

Bomb Canton

By H. R. EKINS {Gopyright, 1937, by United Press) SHANGHAI, Aug. 31.— Japan carried the war into South China today and began operations signed to close up the last great port of entry for Chinese military supplies—Canton. Big Japanese bombers, probably from an aircraft carrier off Swatow, roared over the ancient South China metropolis at dawn, and again later in the morning, and rained explosives on the airdrome and strategic railway centers jacent to the city. Scores of casualties were reported. Swatow other South China cities also were reported bombed. The great general offensive against an estimated 400.000 Chinese scldiers in the Shanghai area, pronised by the Japanese spokesman. was getting under slowly and the they occupied the strategic town ol

way

IN INDIANAPOLIS |

MEETINGS TODAY

Rotary Club, luncheon, Claypool Hotel, noon, Alpha Tau Omega, Trade, noon. Indianapolis Bakers’ Association, eon, Hotel Washington, noon. Gyro Club, luncheon, Spink-Arms Hotel,

luncheon, Board of

noon. : | Mercator Club, luncheon, Columbia Club,

noon.

Universal Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, |

noon. | University of Michigan Club, luncheon, |

Board of Trade, Theta Chi, 7 'm.

MEETINGS TOMORROW

Kiwanis Club, luncheon. Columbia Club,

noo meeting,

noon. ; | Lions Club, luncheon, Hotel Washington, oon

Young Men's Y. M.C. A,8D Purdue Alumni Hotel Severin, noon

m Association, luncheon,

12th District American Legion, luncheon, | ;

Board of Trade. noon. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon

Real Estate Bédard, Property Management |

Pivision, luncheon, Hotel Washington,

noon.

Marion County Teachers’ Institute, group |

meetings, John Strange School, all day Foundrymen's Association, dinner,

Washington, 6:30 p. m.

MARRIAGE LICENSES (These lists are from official at the County Court House. fs not responsible for anv names or addresses.)

Al 8. Stoner, 61, St.: Anna Roth Harder,

ye. i D. Hatfield, 33, of 2605 Roosevelt Ave.; Mary L. Brown, 19, of 1505 Brookside Ave. Cline 'C. Barkey, 25. of, ware St.; Ruth E. King, DeQuiney St. Willie Lee Johnson, 33, St.: Elizabeth Borton, 28, o

errors in

1627 Woodlawn

» 45 N. Delaof 4065 N.

5 27,

{ 218 Smith f 216 Smith St

George J, Sellmer, 38. of 842 N. Capitol | Wal- |

Ave.: Mae Rose Nigo, 21, of 115 W,

nut St.

Rufus H. Rose. 64, Bedford; Corine May

Mathias. 42, Indianapolis. Raymond Jenkins, 34, of nesota St.: Lena Loschky, New Jersey St.

1315 E.

28, of 1531 S

Benjamin F. Anderson, 24, of 424 Black- | of 426 N. |

ford St.: Mamie Simmons, 24, Blackford St Dalton Carl Folger, 25. of 344 W, Sixth St.; Carol Gannon Brown, 24, Indianapolis. BIRTHS BOYS Lowell, Tene Williams, at 920 W. 20th, .. Ruth Bruler. at 1521 W, Wilcox. Thecdore, Mary Hurt. at 311 Douglas. Carl. Elizabeth Hayes, at 951 W. 26th. » Charles, Gertie Graham, ut 437 W - ott. Tommie, Carrie Jenkins, at 1539 Yandes. James, Maybell Tipton, at Methodist. Elmer, Helen McGillem. at Methodist, Paul, Virginia Wittenbraker. at Methodist Meredith, Mary Smith, at Methodist. Carl. Irene Helms. at Methodist. John, Thelma McGinty, at Methodist. Richard, Velma Willoughbhv, at City, James, Bessie Davis, at City Leonard, Jeanette Foster, at City. GIRLS Louise Hall. at 916 Pomeroy, Ruth Thompson, at 2051 Yandes Walter, Nellie Williams, at 1041 N, Haugh

Raymond, Dorothy Carter, at 712 Linin.

coin

Robert, Willie

in |

Patently, if Japan emerges | from the Chinese war with her re- |

de- |

ad- |

and |

military |

Japanese claimed |

lunch- |

n, | Hotel Washington, |

Discussion Club, dinner, |

Hotel |

records | The Times |

of 2557 S. California |

Min- |

While Swimming. a Six-vear-old Mary Forehand and | her sister, Bernice, 3, took their | | dolls from the playbox this morn- |

|ing and then put them back. It wasn't any fun playing when | they knew their ‘big brother” | wouldn't be back. They were told

| he had drowned. { Earl Forehand, who was 12 and | | would have been in TA grade at | School 3, left his home at 29 S. | Tuxedo St. yesterday for a picnic ( with his Sunday School class along [| Buck Creek northwest of Shelby- | ville. He rented a bathing suit and left | his classmates for a swim in the | creek. His body was found some- | time later ‘by searchers. He had | drowned in four feet of water. Authorities said he probably had been stricken with cramps.

| Class Makes Search

| The class, known as the Tuxedo | Baptist Church Pioneers, had gone | to the Smith Camp on Buck Creek funder supervision of Daniel S. | Johnston, 404 N. Bancroft St. | When Earl was missed, Mr. Johns[ton led the class in a search. The body was found by Raymond Syl-| |vester, 35 N. Sherman Drive. A | | physician said the boy had not been in the water more than 15 or 20 min- { utes. His mother, Mrs. Earl Forehand Sr. said the boy was athletic and | [swimming was his favorite sport. He had two other sisters, Juanita, | 10, and Virginia, 1, and a brother, { Richard, 9. His parents also survive | him. Funeral arrangements were to | be completed today. —— | Woosung, at the mouth of the | Whangpoo River, north of Shanghai, (at 11 a. m. Chief developments of the last 24 | (hours included:

i | The bombing of Canton. which additionally angered Britons already | bringing pressure on Japan because of the unintentional shooting of (he British Ambassador to China, Sir Hughe Knatchbull-Hugessen, by Japanese military fliers. A Japan- | ese occupation of Canton, it was pointed out, would cripple the great British crown colony of Hongking, which lives on the handling of Chinese commerce to and from the big Chinese commercial city. Officials of the U, S. Dollar Steamship Lines, after yesterday's | unintentional bombing of the com-

| member, and Dr. Morgan. Dr. Mor-

|nicians were leaving because they | were underpaid.

should not have a board if they are not paid better,” Councilmen objected to the raising of the salary question at present. They earlier had agreed to discuss all the salaries at one time. Request of $1506 for street car tokens, to be used by nurses in calling on patients, caused a dispute between Dr. Silas Carr, Council gan claimed the cut in the appro- * priation last year made the fund inadequate. Councilmen differed but finally agreed to reduce it to $750. Dr. Morgan requested $100 to buy milk samples for sanitary testing and for use in court evidence. Atl first it was defeated by a 5-to-4 vote. Later it was taken under advisement. Dr. Morgan said in the past, inspectors had paid for the samples | themselves or money had = been |

longer, he'll be riding a horse of a

Dr. Carr suggested passage of an | 80ing to move him. \+

: i od { General and horse, they stand | eT A he submission . ’ I 13'5 feet high. For all their grace |

. | and apparent animation, they weigh | Dr. Cable said “$100 is too small |

: ; plenty, and it is expected six men | a sum to upset the entire milk in- will make a good 12-hour job of get- | spection system.” When Mr. Raub indicated he would switch his vote,

ting them aboard a truck, down to | Herron Art Museum, and off the] Councilmen agreed to hold up action.

truck. There will be no surgery this The Health Board requested $36,- time. Six years ago, when the mu592 additional funds for tuberculosis prevention and the Flower Mission. Under the request the Mission's capacity would be doubled to 100 beds. Food and other items in these budgets were marked for further discussion, Dr. Morgan declared the increased capacity of the Mission was “the final onslaught against tuberculosis.” Dr. Charles Myers, City Hospital superintendent, prefaced discussion of the hospital budget request for $95,325 more next year than last, a total of $699,426, by saying there would have to be increases if the same service is given in 1938 as In other years. He said thout $4000 increased funds would be required to carry out recommendations of the American Hospital Association, American Medical Association and the American College of Surgeons. They call for a reorganization in the staff at the hospital, he said. He also declared nurses and tech-

people on the grounds that a copy of one of the real masterpieces of | horse sculpture would fit in admirably with the motif there, the general and horse were cut in three | pieces, hauled that way from the | museum which they had outgrown, | and reassembled in the horse barn.

Resentment Grows

That was before Benton murals were transported from here to Chicago and back again. For that job, | the Capitol Transfer Co. buill a special trailer and it is this trailer they are using today. The Fair people called Wilbur Peat, museum director, this summer | and said that the general and his horse were making trouble in the barn and were doing themselves no good, either. Dust was getting on them, they said, and moreover, Mr. Peat said he was told some of the bolder live horses were barking the | general's hoise's plaster of paris | shins as expressions of resentment. | Mr. Peat got in touch with Her- | bert Foltz, the architect, and they | decided to weather-proof the statue,

build a pedestal for it, and set it up | |

|

|

Covering only a few branches of the hospital, the Council made tentative cuts totaling $4000 yesterday, and were to resume the hearing to-

| pany’s $8,000,000 luxury flagship, the President Hoover, and Killing of Seaman Lloyd Haskell, by Chinese fliers. | ordered other vessels of their fleet | to avoid Shanghai for the

: time | being. Tentative plans were rormu- |

lated to evacuate hundreds of

| | | |

Elizabeth Wright, Meth- | ist. Edward, Margaret Grebe, at Methodist. John, Marthalee Williams, at Methodist, | James, Mary Lee, at Methodist. Charles, Amy Holderman at 726 W. 30th. | Dobert, Anna Denny, at 540 S. Ingomar. | Francis. Florence Cox, at 526 N. Miley. | William, Faye, at 550 N. Traub. | Ernest, Ethel Hedges. at City, Danijel, Phoebe Hardwick. at City. Willard, Marie Gay, at City. Asa, Cleone Bloom, at City. Oscar. Delores Franklin, at City. Daniel, Sarah Troy. at City.

DEATHS 61,

lpuiiem, at

George pneumonia | John Gerdts, 69, at Elmer Shaner, 58. noma, Cornelius Morrow. | mont,

Guernsey, at City. carcinoma, at Methodist, carci-

28 537 W. Veracute endocarditis. eald Amman, one month, Riley, Wiiodping cough. : Ida aylor, Tl, broncho pneumonia,

City, lobar

at at

at Long,

OFFICIAL WEATHER

ee United States Weather Burean

Indianapolis Forecast Mostly unsettled | and occasionally unsetled tonight and tomorrow; continued warm.

6:49

Sunrise ...... 5:12 | Sunset

— TEMPERATURE > ils 31, 1936— a 1

1h. Mm. 8

BAROMETER 30.20 1 p.m, 30.18 .00 29.50 2:1

| | Precipitaion 24 hrs. { Total precipitation Excess .

ending 7 a. m.

WEATHER | Indiana—More or less cloudines i > less ss tonight and tomorrow, probably unsett imes continued warm. CHER ay ion: Ilinois—Generaly fair tonight morrow, although unsettled at cally, continued warm.

Lower Michigan —Generally fair t ) onight A morrow, except probably unsettled ex e nor portion; not much c¢ in temperature, ii Kentucky—Partly cloudy, possibly | showers tonight and tomorrow: change in temperature

and totimes lo-

local not much

| WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 5 A. M. Station. Bar, T \ Amarillo. Tex, .... 29.98 es" | Bismarck, N. D, Boston ... Cee Chicago Cincinnati ,....,. | Cleveland, O. | Denver | Dodge City, Kas. | Helena, Mont, | Jacksonville, | Kansas City, . | Little Rock. Ark. . Los Angels Miami, Fla. | Minneapolis | Mobile, Ala. | New Orleans | New York viele | Okla, City. OKla. | Omaha, Neb, Pittsburgh Portland, ~ San Antonio. Tex. ... San Francisco | St. Louiz | warmpa. Fla, Washington, D. C.....

“— |In some quarters here it was

in the lawn of the Museum, where its beauty could be seen to advantage. In the barn, after all, the general's head was pretty close to the roof and would have been bumped if his mount had so much as flicked a fly with its tail.

Wait Weather-Proofing

Mr. Foltz said that the problem now is to weather-proof the statue against the winter snows and summer rains. That will be done after it is set up. In case of rain between now and then, Mr. Foltz said the general and horse are pretty well

cruiser division to the Far East immediately to aid evacuation of | protected by shellac and would be

Americans from China, it was indi- | no worse for a moderate shower or cated today by authoritative sources, | tWo.

Official confirmation by the Navy | The statue of Collioni, who was - ’ lone of the great Italian generals of Jai SIRs Yeparinisan Ie |e Renaissance, was done by An- | reinforcements of the U., S. WL Verocchio, and it made him (fleet was lacking. It was not | famous. He did the human form | [ known whether a decision had defi- | Well, and also the animal well, and [nitely been made or whether the it’s the most famous of such com- | ships designated to be sent to China | binations. Seems that most artists | have been designated. who are good at one are bad at the | Reports from the West Coast indi- | Other. | cated, however, that the warships of | In 1916, the Chicago Art Insti- | | Cruiser Division No. 6. Scouting tute decided to have a plaster paris | | Force, U. S. Fleet, were being | Cast made of it and had to have a | groomed for some unusual service, |COstly machine built for the job. | pe- | Like they build two ships off the | lieved these may be the ships des- Same set of patterns and thus reduce | |tined for Asiatic service, the cost of each, the Chicago In- | Information that the cruiser |Stitute cast a sister statue and the squadron might be sent to the Far Women's Department Club of Indi- | East came shortly after Chinese Am- | @napolis bought il for the museum bassador C. T. Wang expressed his | here for $500. Government's regrets over the| Mr. Peat said he's glad to have | bombing of the American Dollar [the general back again. liner President Hoover by Chinese

| planes, and offered to make redress.

|

'W. C. FIELDS SEEKS RETRIAL OF DISPUTE

HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 31 (U. P).—W. C. Fields, the bulbous-nosed movie comedian, wants a new trial of the civil sGit that ended with his being ordered to pay Dr. Jesse Citron $12,500. He ordered his attorneys into Riverside Superior Court today to argue for retrial. Dr. Citron, who attended Mr. Fields during the actor's recent serious illness, testified he cut down Mr. Field's whisky drinking from more than a quart a day. Mr. Fields said the fee was too high.

aay.

|

Americans still here on U. S. warships if necessary. Police in the French Concession also announced today that they are doing their utmost to prevent a cholera epidemic, in view of the discovery of several cases in the concession.

U. S. May Send Cruiser

Division to China

WASHINGTON, Aug. 31 (U. P.).— The United States may dispatch a

FTC CITES 70 FIRMS

WASHINGTON, Aug. 31 (U. P) .— The Federal Trade Commission to- | day issued a complaint charging violations of the Robinson-Patman Anti-Price Discrimination Act by 70 wholesale baking concerns, their trade association and officers, a group of flour manufacturers and | “service organization.”

QUEEN MARKS BIRTHDAY

AMSTERDAM, Aug. 31 (U.P) .— Queen Wilhelmina celebrated her | 57th birthday quietly today. A national holiday was declared, but the Queen, accompanied by Princess | Juliana and the latter's husband, Prince Bernhard, spent the day at Het Low, the family country seat

near Apeldoorn, b

BER Sa aos on

It’s Back Home to Museum

By JOE COLLIER In the first place, if old Collioni keeps his plaster of paris self around the dust ana dirt of the State Fair Grounds horse barn any

And in the second place, the live horses have for six years been transferred from other departments, | objecting to his presence there in the first place, so today they

seum loaned the statue to the Fair | _

{it happens he is more of a mauler

JUDGE TO ARREST

in the courtroom at the time, the Judge declared from the bench: | “IN see if he’s big enough to do | this. And I'll do it right away.” Still on the bench, he placed | telephone calls for several members | of the eompany’s board of directors, | adding “We're going to have a | | showdown ors this!” { | J. P. Tretton, vice president and | general manager, was contacted. |§ |

from her summer home in Michigan. Under the supervision of Dr. Gatch, Mrs. Atkins, who was Brownie Miskimen before her marriage to Mr. Atkins, was to be taken to Indianapolis today for treatment, be taken to Indianapolis for further treatment, members of the family said.

Mr, and Mrs. Atkins were married last February in Indianapolis and spent their honeymoon in Havana,

Miami, Fla., and Nassau, arriving home about April 1. Mr, Atkins’ mother, Mrs, Suemma Coleman Atkins died when he was a boy. His father and stepmother live in Golden Hill. Mr. Atkins was born in Indianapolis and attended the Boys’ Preparatory School, an Asheville, N. C,, academy; Phillips Academy, Anare | gover, Mass, and Yale, He was - | graduated from the latter in 1933, | Besides his father, stepmother, | wife and grandmother, Mr, Atkins is | survived by a stepbrother, Charles | M. Du Puy, Greenburg, Pa.; a step-

Times Photo. un

” ”

different color.

LOUIS’ VICTORY LACKS IN GLORY

(Continued from Page One)

| Rapids, Mich, and another step- | sister, Mrs. Henry Newell Beers, New York. He entered | ness as customer's man.

the brokerage busiIn 1935

fought an incredibly bad fight and | stock brokers, was founded with yet at the end he was ahead on |Mr. Atkins as a member. points, The fact is if Farr, the Welshman, had been able to hit at all he would have knocked out Louis. As

| Club, Woodstock, and the Indian- | apolis Athletic Club.

and pusher than a hitter; he doesn't | jolt or stagger you even when he | lands flush. And yet he had Louis | backing up, jumping out of the | way of his lunges, at times looking | as if he were positively frightened. | In this connection it seems to me | one of Louis’ main defects as a | fighter supposedly great is that he doesn't like to fight back. If he fails to drop you and you rush him he becomes discouraged. And this is not a good sign in a fighting man, And all the while there was a | swarthy, dark-haired German in a blue suit sitting at the ringside who | probably would have been tempted | to give his right fist (he wouldn't | have needed it, anyway) to be in| there against the champion. This | was Max Schmeling, the first to ex- | plode the Louis legend of imvinei- | bility.

CITY BUS SPEEDERS

Karabell Censures Coach And Trolley Firms.

(Continued from Page One)

after his auto reportedly rammed | into the rear of the bus. “This situation has arisen repeatedly in my courts,” Judge Karabell said. “These operators refuse to co-operate with our law en-| forcement agencies. “How will we ever get rid of | drunken drivers under these con- | ditions?” The Judge turned to the bus driver, Harvey Murman. 6292 College! Ave. and asked: “Don't you con- | sider it your duty as a citizen to help make the streets safe for pe- | destrians?” Judge Karabell buses and street cars would come | under the speed limit order. He blamed the company's attorneys for the “situation,” charging they “have instructed the drivers they are not forced to sign affidavits under these circumstances.” Referring to one of the attorneys |

indicated both

Mr. Tretton assured the judge an | investigation would bes started at | once and promised “full co-opera- | tion in the future.” | The case against Mr. Chamberlain | was continued until Sept. 18, and

he was released on $3000 bond tinued.

Rayon Cord Edges

5

Mrs. Miskimen also may |

| sister, Mrs. Willtam Taggart, Grand |

| the firm of Atkins, Hamill & Gates, |

mattress will give excellent service.

Imported Damask Cover Heavy Quilted Sisal Pads

Box Spring to Match .

| weeks in January, Ordered by Legislature Teaching of safety and adoption of a text was made compulsory bv | | the 1937 Legislature, State, county and city school authorities belisve (such a course of instruction will re[duce the annual toll of young lives [claimed chiefly on streets, in their homes and at swimming pools and | | beaches, Until now, it was pointed oul | some schools have had safety | courses, but not until 1938 will such | | instruction be compulsory in al] | grade schools.

AF. OF L. RESERVES RULING ON DISPUTES,

|

ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, Aug. 31] | (U.P.).—The executive council of | the American Federation of Labor | | reserved decision today on two juris- | dictional disputes involving hotel | {and building employees and work- | {ers in bottle manufacturing plants. { Meanwhile it continued drafting | its report to the national convention | | in Denver next October concerning | | the 10 unions which were suspended | after they affiliated with the C. | 1. ©. Some observers believed the coun | | cil might decide not to recommend | | expulsion of the unions in the hope, |

| tually be achieved between the A. F. of L. and the C. 1. O.

Regular 29.50

“RESTWELL"

INNERSPRING

1

$1 Down Delivers—Small Carrying Charge

A mattress of high grade construction, in all standard sizes that we sell constantly at the original price, which has been reduced because the covering has been discon-

Of extra fine imported damask, this cover will last for many years, and the

name we can't mention because the price is so low.

Here are a few of the features:

Thick Layers of Button Tufted Taped

Colors »=Green, Gold, Rose, Orchid

Block’

Made by a nationally known manufacturer whose

Hundreds of Coil Springs

‘Living Safely’ Selected As Text for Eighth Grade;

Traffic Fines

17 Arrested on Failure to Pay for Stickers Assessed $48,

Thirty-eight traffic violators were assessed fines and costs totaling $208 by Judge Dewey Myers in Munici= pal Court today. Nineteen were to face charges this afternoon, Seventeen motorists arrested on warrants for failure to pay for im=proper parking stickers were fined a total of $48, or approximately $3 each, His second appearance in court on a speeding charge in less than a month cost Richard Hobbs, 2144 E, Michigan St. $25, Hobbs told Judge Myers he was

| fined $1 and costs for speeding on | Aug. 4. | for driving 40 miles an hour withe | out a tail light.

He was arrested last night

Judge Myers assessed him $10 and costs for speeding and $5 for ime proper lights, He warned Hobbs a third arrest would result in a jail sentence, Linley McKinney, 82, of 610 N. New Jersey St., was cut and bruised when he walked into the side of an automobile driven by Everett Hare per, 32, of 210 S. Addison St. Mr, McKinney was treated in City Hos= pital. Arthur Makey, 60, of 4609 Central

| Ave,, was arrested on charges of in-

toxication and parking without

| lights after a car driven by Hubert | Crouch, 1117 N. Dearborn St., struck | Mr.

Makey's car and turned over at Arsenal and Tenth Sts. early tos day. No one was injured. Otis Chadwick, a passenger in Mr, Chamberlain's car, was sent to the City Hospital with a lacerated scalp.

MARION COUNTY TRAFFIC TOLL TO DATE Deaths

1937

1936

Accidents |. Injured TRAFFIC ARRESTS Speeding aha Reckless driving Drunken driving Running preferential street , Running red light ........ Parking .

Oe IRINA LI I Tu MURPHY SEEKS CURE

LANSING, Mich., Aug. 31 (U.P), Governor Murphy will enter Univers

He belonged to the Dramatic Club, | however remote, that by leaving the | sity of Michigan Hospital at Ann {the Columbia Club, Meridian Hills | situation as it is peace might even-| Arbor

today for observation for throat trouble, his executive secre tary announced

Felted Cotton Handles—=Ventilators

16.98

s Mattresses—Fifth Floor