Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 September 1937 — Page 11
THURSDAY, SEPT. 23,
HIGH TAXES HIT AS ONE BAR TO OWNING HOME
Realty Board President Urges Short Amortization Periods. |
HARTFORD, Conn., Sept. 23 (U. P.).—High taxation and interest rates and short periods of amortization were declared today by Paul E. Stark, Madison, Wis., president of the National Association of Real Estate Boards, to be major barriers blocking home ownership and retarding normal activity in the puiiaing “industry. Mr. Stark addressed the opening session of a regional convention. “Real estate,” he said, “enjoys but 20 per cent of the national income and pays 60 per cent of the Dalional tax burden.” He proposed extension of aforization periods to 30 years and a re-
_ duction in interest charges sp that
“five million more American families
would be lifted into the class that} could own their own homes.” |
TWO INDIANA YOUTHS SEIZED IN | ILLINOIS
CLINTON, 1. HL, Sept. 23 w, P)— Captured through the State Police radio system after an alleged attempted holdup of a gasoline station, Owen Childress, 17, and Malcolm Bolin, 20,"both of Kirklin, Ind., were held in jail here today. Police said the boys drove into a filling station near Weldon jyesterday. One drew a gun, and demanded gasoline for their car. They were frightened away when another automobile| stopped at the station. The State Police radio office at Springfield was notified and) details
- of the attempted holdup were broad-
cast. An hour -later Patrolman D. F. Weindorf spotted the pair's car near Beason and after a short chase took them into custody. i ’
LAND SINKS UNDER “KANSAS FARM LAND
WICHITA, Kans., Sept. 23 (U. P.). —The farm of Charles R. Joseph was sinking today into an| underground lake or river. Part of a wheat field | started
sliding |into the water yesterday afternoon and this morning a hole
more than 250-feet square showed
where the ground had sunk. Depth of the water was undetermined and the dirt had disappeared. Allie Fouri Joseph’s Farmhand, was driving a tractor in the wheat field when the land began slipping. He barely managed to drive the machine to safety. e phenomenon was similar to the recent sinking of Jand on a farm near Buhl, Ida.
CITY OWNERSHIP OF UTILITIES IS LAUDED
CONNERSVILLE, Sept. 23 (U. P.). —Municipal ownership of | utilities was lauded last night by Mayor William Dentlinger, principal speaker at dedication ceremonies of Connersville’s new $114,000 city . walerworks. About 45 per cent of | the new plant’s total cost was contributed by the Public Works Administration. Mayor Dentlinger pointed | out that several | Indiana cities have| reduced or eliminated their tax rates as result of - earnings from municipal plants.
PREDICTS RUSSIANS
WILL HELP CHINESE
pn,
Alfred W. Place, for six years U. 8S. secret agent in Japan, addressed the biweekly meeting of the Junior Chamber of Commerce last night at the Lake Shore | | Country Club. Mr. Place, also known tor having introduced baseball tothe Japanese, told the meeting that Japan would not gain anything over a period of years by conquering China and predicted that Russia would intervene in the present conflict on | the side of China.
F.D.R.MAPSNEW PARALYSIS FIGHT
nt Sn,
HYDE PARK, N. Y,, Sept. 23 (U. P.).—A new attack on |infantile paralysis was set up in a| national foundation announced in a state-
- ment by President Roosevelt just
prior to leaving on his western trip. The organization, to be |financed in large part from funds received annually in birthday balls for the President, will allocate money for hospital and research work and coordinate, generally, the brofio attack on the disease.
ARE YOU ONLY A THREE-QUARTER WIFE?
HERE re certain things a woman has to put up with and be a good sport. Men, because they are men, can never understand a juarter wife—a wife who is all love and kindness three weeks in a month and a hell cat the rest of the time. No matter how your back aches —no matter how loudly your nerves scream—don’t take it out on your husband. For threegenerations onev has told another how to go ing through" with Lydia E. 's Vegetable Compout . Nature tone up the sj thus lessening the discomforts from the functional disorders which otpen must endure in the three eals of life: 1. } from ] to w . 2. Prering for Hitherhood, 3. ApSh “middle SES
3 three quate eo Dis EB. Ay GETABLE COMPOUND and A “Smiling Through.”
Caapio M
REPAIRING
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thrillers,
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Ruth Roland, Star of Silents, Won Fortune in Real Estate
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 23 (U. P.).—Ruth Roland, heroine of the silent movie melodramas, had accumulated one of the film colony’s major fortunes before she died yesterday at the age, of 39, her friends said today.
Profits from her real estate opera- ¢-
tions, as Ruth Roland, Inc. were said to have exceeded $1,000,000 since she retired from the screen, just before the advent of the wartime “jazz age.” With money saved from her movie which usually had her fleeing from villains and beasts in the weekly serials, sho bought cheap property that later became Hollywood’s main shopping street, the site: for apartment houses and office buildings. Her interests ‘also included oil holdings. Her death, with her hushand, Ben Bard, at the bedside, was the result of an illness that had confined her for a year. Mr. Bard would not reveal -the nature of the ailment.
Went to Hollywood in 1912
It was in 1912 that Miss Roland came to Hollywood, to work at the old Pathe Studio. She was 14 and had already been on the stage several years, as the ““baby Ruth” of Ed Holden's reviews. Some of her pictures were “Red Circle,” “Ruth of the Range, » “The| Timber Queen” and “Love and the Law.”
She will be buried Friday at Forest Lawn Memorial Park.. Mrs. Genevieve Smith, who read the Christian Science services for the late Jean Harlow, will conduct the rites. It'was arranged that either Bing Crosby or Donald Novis will sing. Pallbearers will include District Attorney Buron Fitts, Sid Grauman, theater magnate; Joseph Breen, executive of the Producers’ Association, and Director Robert Z. Leonard. Miss Roland married Mr. Bard in 1929, when he was a,musical comedy star. He is now a dance director. Her first husband was Leo Kent, automobile executive, whom she divorced.
STABBING VICTIM IN [3 CRITICAL CONDITION
Suspect Held for Assault With Intent to Kill.
Royce Haynes, 30 ,of 124 N. East St., was held in jail today on a charge of assault and battery with intent to kill Everett Fike, 52, of 118 N. East St. ‘ Fike was in City Hospital in a critical condition, suffering from stab wounds. He was cut badly on the back, knee, arm and face in a fghy yesterday afternoon on N. East St. According to police, Mrs. Haynes, who is separated from her husband, hired Fike to move her furniture out of her apartment at 128 N. East St. While he was working, Haynes apreared and ordered Fike to replace
ENLIST. MARINES HERE
Enlistments in the U. S. Marine
Corps now are being received at a TT ° A
FUNERALS w
branch office of the Cincinnati recruiting district recently established in Tomlinson Hall, according to Capt. P. A. McDonald, officer in
charge.
Memory Is the Treasury and Guardian of All Things.
ILLINOIS AT WESTIO®=ST,
the furniture, officers said. When Fike demanded pay for returning the furniture, Haynes knocked him down with a half-brick, jumped on him and stabbed him, officers reported.
WEIGH PAVING PROJECT
The Works Board today was considering the paving of S. Audubon Road from Brookville Road to the Pennsplvania Railroad to provide adequate approaches to the new International Harvester Co. plant on the Brookville Road. The Board made a tour of the grounds yesteraay.
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Mail and Phone Orders Filled.
Call RI. 6364
Here's a Bargain! Run-of-the-Mill Sale of
“Cannon” Turkish Towels
Including Mill Samples and Rejects of Their Higher Priced Lines-Repriced at Great Savings!
SIZE 18x36 Luxuriously deep and highly absorbent. Women who know values will pounce onto these towels... they're the convenient size no home can have enough of. White terry cloth with colored borders.
12:
SIZES 18x36 and 20x40 Theyre double THREAD for extra longness, for extra sturdiness and durability. Pastels and colored borders.
® 22x44 LARGE BATH SIZE
The big size you can wrap around you. You'll want several of these at this low price. They're soft and spongy, heavy, fluffy and absorbent. Pastels and colored borders.
These are the sturdy-surfaced, spongy quality that have made the name
of Cannon a household word!
It’s only because Cannon’s standards are so rigid that they are stamped “run-of-the-mill.”
No defects to worry
‘about—only dropped threads and tiny misweaves which won't affect
their wearing qualities. Leader’s—Basement.
These Advertised Serials for Friday on Sale Saturday If Quantities Are Available!
Gray and brown | mixtures. Full lined; knit-grip cuffs. Bata heavy corduroy. Sizes 8 tol
28: seve Second | Floor.
Boys’ Part-Wool SWEATERS
Ie
Part-wool mohair sweaters with half-zipper front, sport back model. Plaid and solid colors. Sizes 30 to 36. Leader’s Second Floor.
CTT) LLL
BE Tor
TS
Cai
“Shirley Temple” ENTE
$4.39
eR Le GT (wi) [i30 patched knecs
Trimmed caps. : Lender's Reoond Floor,
BED SHEETS SIZE 72x90
ski pants with and plaid
Nizes 3 to 6.
Ae
Closely woven bleached snowwhite bed sheets. Wide hems. Buy all you can use while this
low price exists. Leader’s—Basement.
INFANTS’ Rubber Sheets
19e
Large size 36x45, in pink and § white. Regular 29¢ values! At this low price you should buy several! Leader's Second Floor.
13.1 [BAN BEDSPREADS
bl
Size 80x188, crinkled seglloped hordovs, Rose, gold blue and orchid,
Leader s—Buasement.
with
green,
Marvelous Shoe Values ~- Worth Double This Price!
300 PAIRS WOMEN'S FALL FOOTWEAR
- ® Black or
with streng handles, EPRI 29¢ valuesi: nt In LET Las special 8 ; x {XH iid At asement. 5
POP CC RN ~ 8-0z. CAN
J 2 Cans |
9c
Vacuum packed . . . and a regular 10c value! 1000 pounds for this Friday's
Leader's=-Baseh nent.
We bought _
Brown Kid! ® Highor Cuban Heels!
Leader’s—Main Floor.
TOILET SOAPS
Pen
Assorted perfumed soaps in ° pastel colors. Included in the lot is carbolated soap. Leader’s—Basement.
FI EAE
| }iTS Yd.
Ce grade of hieached shiaebing o.oo fine for quilting and many sther home uses. While 608 yards Iast Leader s—Basement.
“popular
00
PAIR
® All Sizes 4108
Sizes in
But Not All
Each Style!
They're actual $1.98 values! That's why we expect them to be snapped up before noon! Be here when the store opens to get your share of these marvelous values! Fine quality shoes, usually much higher priced!
P & G SOAP GIANT SIZE
4 |
The : well-known brand that's bo 19 LE While 1000 bars Inst.
Leader’ s~RBasement,
Razor BLADES DOUBLE EDGE 2 J for 10¢
Fits a “Gillette” razor. of Swedish chrome blue steel. Just 1500 packages in the lot.
the women.
Made
PILLOW CASES
10c
Size 42x36 pillow - cases. Bleached and of soft finish. Wide hems.
Leader’s—Basement.
CURTAIN IR
Ye 0h
36 to 4¢ inches wide. Figured and clip dats, fish nets and cushion dots. Assorted patterns.
Combining Beau With Savings
Ask About Our Convenient Charge Plan!
Every Day a Saving Day in Rink’s Downstairs.
v Sale of
Dress Coats
Elaborately - Fur-Trimmed |
-
Almost any time, old man winter will de scend upon us . . . be ready to greet him with a warm, practical, BEAUTIFUL coat
from Rink’s!
Huge Collars Ofiem
Vicuna Fur Manchurian
Marmink ‘Wolf Caracul Bombay Lamb Indian Coon
You'll save yourself no end of time and a great deal of tiresome shopping by coming directly to Rink’s tomorrow! Rest assured, {hese are MARVELOUS values . . . values that we believe are un surpassed! Black, brown and fashe jon-right colors. Sizes 14 to 20; 38 to 44; half-sizes.
For Quick Selling!
Just 80
Bhresses
The final season-end clearance of ‘summer dresses. Formerly 2.98 up to 6.98! Better be waiting at the doors tomorrow morning if you want to . share in these bargains!
Rink’s Downstairs.
5
“Why -
Live Longer”
in The Times Monday
is the title of a new and ab--sorbing series of articles on the health of women by
David Dietz, Scripps-Howard | Science Editor
In it he discusses the amazing advances of. Twentieth Century medicine in dealing with the problems of childbirth, the startling discoveries concerning the ductless glands, and the war on can--cer. "Why Women Live Longer" begins
ed nnd
