Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1937 — Page 9

oes been SO smartcomfort been so

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ng adventure for

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Yor This Fall

dine. llustrated is a monizing dark blue - ing lines. At Felfariety of smart, néw :

98

. lllinois

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of Fall Fashions

ustrated is a strikingly set off with J i) ated effect. Merit

ng prices. We inou buy.

DE STORES

Wash., 930 S. Meridian, 1108 Shelby

BU Us

you this fall! On this page are but eight styles chosen from hundreds of pairs of flattering footwear . .. for daytime, for sports, for evening... these stores are now showing. Visit one of them fomorrow . . . while stocks are still unbroken . . . and insure yourself of fashion-right footwear for fall. - iy 0] a bo XN :

»

. ’ > Nisley’s New Fall Styles Lady Evelyn Shoes . + « offer you striking new beauty and wonderful new com- Most Styles « + o» will guide your feet in Fashion's exclusive pathway. fort you have never experienced before. Flattering new fash- : This new multicolored dressy suede tie is slated for great suc- J ib ions, smartly tailored to every line and curve of your. foot. 4 J cess. Coffee Brown, plus fawn brown, plus copper brown! : ov Style and comfort with a glorious new meaning . . . made eo possible by Transparent Shoe” Models, developed and used only by Nisley.

NISLEY—Beautiful Shoes

44 North Pennsylvania

Same style in grey and black. Scores of other Lady Evelyn models, equally striking. Lady Evelyn Footwear is exclusive

RINK'S

New Shoe Salon, Third Floor

Lovely to Look At"

«oo and delightful to wear is the PEGGY ADAIR, with swirl >)

straps in black suede and smooth buckskin. A Parisian idea te make ankles loek slim and graceful. Beautiful fitting, elegant tailoring, faultless workmanship. Continental heel. Many

SEARS, ROEBUCK/and CO.

Alabama at Vermont Strest

+ + + is the DION with a moulded beauty, flowing smoothly and smartly over the instep. A very striking model, in coffee brown suede of black suede, accented with piping to harmonize . . . Chino heel.

Foremost Among Fall Fashions )-° You'll find many more equally flattering models in our fall showing. * : \

PEACOCK SHOE SHOP

28 Monument Circle

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Homer P. Thomas, general chairman, is completing program details for the Indiana Kiwanis Clubs convention in Ft. Wayne

Sept. 19, 20 and 21. A record attendance is expected at the annual event. y

COST FIGURES BROKEN DOWN

Sponsors | Added $12 to Every $100 Spent by U. S., Jennings Says.

For every $100 spent by the Works Progress Administration in Indiana, the project sponsors added $12, John K. Jennings, State WPA administrator, disclosed today. Mr. Jennings listed expenditures on WPA projects in Indiana over a two-year period at $108,675,220. Of this amount, project. sponsors contributed $11,872,659, he said. The totals represent a monthly average of $4,000,000 spent on projects in the state. Of $17,416,390 spent on projects in Marion County and Indianapolis during the two-year period, WPA paid $16,375,296 and project sponsors contributed $1,041,094, Mr. Jennings reported. |

U. S. WILL ‘PAY UP’ TO INDIANA POSTMASTER

Times Special WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—President Roosevelt has signed a bill to reimburse Alden H. Baker for

$850.55 worth of war savings and thrift stamps stolen from the Wesfield postoffice April 13, 1918. Mr. Baker, then the Westfield postmaster, had to make good the loss although he contended that the Government had failed to provide him with a safe for protection.

He obtained a confession of the crime from Harry E. Miller, who was sentenced for it. Almost every Congress since that time has had the bill before it. Favorable action was procured this last session by Rep. Virginia E. Jenckes.

JASONVILLE CHURCH HOMECOMING SET

Times Special JASONVILLE, Sept. 9. — Former members of. the Methodist Episcopal Church are to assemble here Sunday for an all-day homecoming program. Two former pastors are to conduct the devotional services. The Rev. John Ragle, now retired, is to

J. H. Allen is to conduct the evening program,

==29 ON THE CIRCLE™

BRIDAL PAIR

iF s2 Qs

A Gorgeous pair of matched rings. :

See our windows for more of these lovely bargains.

Use Millers Budget Plan

SHOP IN AIR-COOLED COMFORT

MILLER

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INU. S. BERTHS RECEIVE PRAISE

J. W. Scott Wins Power Case for U. S.; Richards " Goes to New Post.

Times Special WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—John W. Scott, formerly of Gary Bane time member of the Indiana House of Representatives, has received numerous congratuations on the Government victory in the . SanteeCooper power case. : Now a member of the Federal Power Commission, Mr. Scott handled the case in the Federal Court at Columbia, S. C, -as a special representative of the Attorney General assigned to power litigation. The decision not only upheld the right of South Carolina and its Public Service Authority to con-

struct the $37,500,000 Santée-Cooper

power and navigation project but involves all the other constitutional issues regarding use of Public Works Administration funds for such purposes. This was pointed out by Judge J. Lyle Glenn in his decision. Ten weeks were consumed in the trial and the testimony fills more than 10,000 pages. : Commissioner Scott received congratulatory telegrams from Mayor Burnet R. Maybank of Charleston, head of the South Carolina Public Service Authority, and R. M. Jefferies, general counsel, when the case was. upheld on the exact contention upon which he had pleaded,

Completes Housing Project

Another. Hoosier, Wallace Rich ards, formerly of Indianapolis, who has been lauded for his work in charge of the Greenbelt Government housing project here, has resigned to accept an executive position with the Municipal Planning Association of Pittsburgh. ‘The Greenbelt homes now are open, and Mr. Richards said that since his planning and construction work is now completed, the job here will be one of management rather than the planning in which he is interested. He is 33, a Butler University graduate and had charge of the Indiana exhibit at the Chicago Exposition, which consisted of the Thomas Benton murals. Mr. .Richards came here when Thom&s Hibben, Indianapolis architect, joined the New Deal staff of experts to war on the depression. He was made secretary of the old .Federal Emergency Relief Administration Land Committee. Dr, Rexford Guy Tugwell was a Come mittee member. he In charge of the land buying program, the Committee’s work later was transferred to the Resettlement Administration under which Mr. Richards took charge of the Greenbelt project.

MONEY POWERS OF F. D. R. PROTESTED

Wheeler Says He Failed to ‘Report on Huge Fund.

BEAR CREEK; Mont., Sept. 9 (U, P.) —Senator Burton KX. Wheeler, addressing a miners’ rally in his native state, protested last night that President Roosevelt has been given

such control over moneys and tars iffs that “he has more power than any ruler in the world except Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin.” He said the President has never reported on the disposition of $2,000,000,000 with which he was empowered to buy foreign currencies. Senator Wheeler, an‘ insurgent Democrat who led the Senate's fight against Mr. Roosevelt's Supreme Court program, said the President “can raise or lower the price of living in this country and throughout the world.”

REV. BERT JOHNSON TO LEAVE OCT. 30

The Rev. Bert R. Johnson, who resigned yesterday as Downey Avenue Christian Church pastor, announced today that he would preach his last sermon here Oct. 30. He then will begin his new duties as First Christian Church pastor in Jackson, Miss. He has served the local church since February, 1928. The Rev. Mr. Johison has been Emergency Peace Campaign city chairman and a director of the Church Federation of Indianapolis, Marjon County Chris-

‘tian Church Union and Flanner

House.

LODGE TO INITIATE TWO

Two candidates are to be initiated by the Olive Branch Rebekah Lodge No. 10, I. O. O. F., Saturday night at the lodge home, 1336 N. Delaware St. ;

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