Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 October 1937 — Page 39
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES A.B. A. TOSCAN | Might of Boulder BANK OUTLOOK AT 630 SESSION
FRIDAY, OCT. 8, 1987
1. U. ACQUIRES 17-Million-Bale Cotton | LAND EAST OF | Crop Forecast by U. Sa
to hold its 15th annual meeting here Sunday. Mrs, Mary Stivers, Lafavette, diss
| trict, ‘president, is to predide, Auxs | FRANKFORT, Oct. 8. District 3, | infest bo represented wre to in
| Department of Thdiann, Dy . [elude Maj. Harold ‘©, MéGrew Auxs | Spanish War Veterans Auxiliary, is | iliary 3, Indianapolis,
* InwxiuaRy WILL WIEET
Dam Freed
CAMPUS AREA
Plans for Use incomplete; Held Necessary for School's Growth.
BLOOMINGTON, —More than 121:
Oct. 8
acres
UU. P.). of land |
diana University through action of | the Board of Trustees and the State Budget Committee, W, G. Biddle, Secretary of the Board, announced here today. The land lies east of the present campus. While the Board reported no present plans for development of the newly acquired property, rapid growth in enrollment and the addition of new buildings during recent years is bringing about a congested condition, members said, Additional grounds for building outdoor recreational facilities, parking lots, R. O. T. C. drill grounds, and other uses, and the new ground is looked upon as hecessary to the normal development of the university's plant in the future. Payment for the university's new acreage will be met from the university's capital out-
have been purchased here for In- |
|
are needed lest
Second Largest to 1926
Production Estimates Top Figure for Last Year
With Predicted Y
ield Per Acre of
249.8, ‘Capital Reports.
WASHINGTON. day pradicted a vg top this year
est in history. The forecast was 1.475.000 bales
and was higher than was expected veh by
guesses. Cotton experts of the Depurtiient |
of Agriculture indicated they ex- |
pected the report to have “a very
| bearish” effect on the market.
The estimate today was wn only by the 17,978,000 bale crop of | | 19286. The crop reporting board of the | department said the yield per acre 249.3 pounds the highoh record and compares with 197.6 pounds in 1936 and the 1923-32 | average of 1699 pounds per acre. The increase in prospective pro- | duction over that indicated a month | ago is due to better than average |
conditions for the maturing crop, together with very light loss from boll
of is
weevils, the department said.
Jay fund made available by the 1937 |
Legislature. The purchase will bring the university’s present land holdings to about 450 acres at Bloomington, Indianapolis and Winona Lake, largest tract is that of 250 acres northeast of the present campus where the university's waterworks are located. The main campus how comprises about 150 acres in Bloomington. The Medical Center Indianapolis covers ahout 50 acres. and the Biological Station includes & small fract at Winona Lake.
ASKS THAT LAWYER'S PETITION BE STOPPED
A J. Stevenson, Attorney General,
Pirst today filed a mo-
The |
at |
| year. |
Assistant |
tion in Indiana Supreme Court ask- | ing dismissal of a petition filed by |
George Panea, Hammond attorney. Mr. Panea asked that an act of the 1937 Legislature empowering the Supreme Court to fix uniform rules for Circuit unconstitutional. Mr. Stevenson claimed that the petition was based on generalities and that constitutionality of an act can be tested only in a specific case
WILLIAM R. RINGER IS NAMED NLRB AID
William R Ringer, Republican and | former Deputy Prosecutor, has been | named a trial examiner for the Na-| tional Labor Relations Board. is in Los Angdles, case. The appointment is for life, Mr.
Courts be declared
| while | yacht, cruise near here in February,
He | hearing his first | |
Ringer was Deputy Prosecutor |
in Criminal Court under Judson L.|
with Harvey the Federal
the practice of law Grabill before taking appointment, Mrs. Ringer is librarian of the Indianapolis Bar Association in Court House library. POTATO MARKETING PACTS ARE FAVORED CHICAGO, Oct. 8 (U. P.).—Adoption of potato marketing agreements | under the Agricultural Adjustment | Administration was urged today growers’ representatives of states. Thirty-two representatives from Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, Colorado, Wyoming, Nebraska and Idaho approved the program at a conference suggested by Secretary of Ag Ticulture Wallace.
The increased estimate is general throughout the cotton belt. Harvest- | ing is progressing rapidly, although | a general shortage of pickers is reported, the department said. The expected production this vear would more than double the oarry- | over this vear of five million bales, and would make it one of the largest | surpluses of American cotton on | record. Department of Agriculture officials pointed to the large estimate in | substantiation of their demands for | a special session of Congress to on- | act crop control legislation for next
DAMAGE SUITS WAIT PROFESSORS STORY
MIAMI, Fla, Oct. 8 (U. P).—Attorneys today awaited a deposition from Yandell Henderson, Yale professor, in the damage suit of two St. Louis women against the estate of Henry C. Yeiser of Cincinnati. Mrs. ‘Charlotte Just, who asked | $150,000 damages, and Miss Anne Gruner, seeking $50.000, contended they suffered from carbon monoxide fumes ‘which leaked from pipes they slept on Mr. Yeiser's | Friendship TI, during a 19386, Mr. Henderson's deposition was to | | deal with the nature of carbon | monoxide. |
STATE ASKS DENIAL IN SCOTTSBORO PLEA
WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 (U. P)
Stark and had been associated in | The State of Alabama today asked |
the Supreme Court to deny the petition of Haywood Patterson for a
| review of the 75-year prison sentence
the | [ Scottsboro assault case.
imposed on him as a result of his latest ‘conviction in the
The State denied the grounds on
| which attorneys for Patterson sought
| from him constitutional guarantees, || [and judge wviolated |}
| proper
by cight |
a high court review, that denial of his plea for a change of venue took
the trial in
that
practices the
charging { jury.
6 DIE IN MORDY A PURGE MOSCOW, Oct. 8 (U. persons were executed in the autonomous territory of Mordva today on charges of counter-revolution. They allegedly killed the chief of a
grain storing organization and his
assistant.
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8 'U. P)—
| Montague, sought for seven years as La Verne
famed |
P.) —SiXx
Speakers and Topics for |
Oct. 11 Meeting ‘in Boston Listed.
The Department of Agriculture to- |
of 17,573,000 bales, the second larg- |
above that predicted a month ago, the most hivordole Huo
MRS. HOPKINS RI
"WIL BE TOMORROW
High Government Officials to Attend Services.
WASHINGTON, Oct. | High Government is by President Roosevelt, turned to the Capital today,
QU. PHY=— headed | who Trewill at-
tend funeral services tomorrow for |
| Mrs. Barbara Duncan Hopkins, wife of WPA Administrator Harry HOp‘kins. Mrs. Hopkins, yesterday after
who was 37,
tomorrow at Mount Pleasant Congregation Church, with the Rev. R J. Clinchy, pastor, officiating. Burial will be in Rock Creek Cemetery here.
Pallbearers will be James Roose- |
velt, eldest son of the President; Col. E. A. Watson, the President's military aid; Marvin McIntyre and { Stephen Early, White House secre- | taries; Secretary of the ‘Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr.; Aubrey Wil- | | iams, Frank Walker Burnett Maybank of Charleston, S.C. Fiorello H. La uardia, Mavor New York, will attend.
of
[ernor Leche of Louisiana.
MONTAGUE TO GET SPEEDY THEFT TRIAL
ELIZABETHTOWN, N. Y.. (U. P.).—A speedy trial was Roop today for John Montague, Holly- | wood golfer charged with robbing a Jay, N. Y., tavern in 1930. District Aftorney Thomas Mec-
Oct.
Donald said he expected to present |
| the prosecution's case in two days. Defense counsel has not indicated how long it will take. Character witnesses were expected to testify for | who was indicted and!
Moore.
died | a vear-long illness. | Services will be held at 10:30 a. m. |
and Mayor |
BOSTON, Oct. 8 (U. P).—Five | thousand of the nation's leading bankers, including a delegation { om ~ | Ihdiana, will peer into the finaner) future of America next week. They will assemble here Monday | for the four-day 63d annual convention of the American Bankers | Association, representing 13,000 of [the 16,000 banks in the United Ste peakers at three general sesSo will survey banking prospects from specialized viewpoints, while | speakers at divisional meetings will
[review successful banking methods. |
| ‘Principal speaker Tuesday will be | Dr. Glenn Frank, president of Rural Progress, Inc, and ousted president of the University of Wisconsin, who | will discuss “The Outlook for Amer[ican Thstitutions.” Prank P. Bennett Jr., editor of the United States Investor, also will speak Tuesday, discussing “The Outlook for Savings.”
| Foreigh Trade to Be Theme |
Wednesday, Eliot
of the International Chamber of
Commerce, will talk on “The Out- |
while Hen- | of |
| look for Foreign Trade,” ning W. Prentis Jr. president the Armstrong Cork Co., will speak | [on “The Road Ahead.” | “Outlook for Research in ¥eonomics and Business” will be discussed Thursday by Dr. Virgil Jor- |‘ dan, president of the National Industrial ‘Conference Board, and “Prospects for Profits in Banking Industry,” by Leonard P. | Ayres, vice president of the Cleveland Trust Co.
Round Table Talks
James H. | Crutcher of New Orleans will attend | as & personal representative of Gov- |
Speaches at divisional
‘will be featured by those of Dr. | Walter Lichtenstein, vice president | of the First National Bank of ‘Chi- | cag op, and Robert L. ‘Garner, Vice | president and treasurer of the Guar- | anty Trust Co. of New York City. at Tuesday's clearing house round table conference. Dr. Lichtenstein will “World Economic and Business Outlook,” and Garner on “Aspects of | ‘Government Bond Market.” Officers will be elected at Wednesday's general session, with Orval W,
Adams, present first vice president, | [expected to win the presidency to | succeed Tom K. Smith of St. Louis. [a Adams is executive vice president of | Bank of
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Wadsworth, | chairman of the American section
the | |
| Parting’ With Actress.
meetings | [JF
| bhe time { tract,
speak on |
wn
With thousands of tons of water pouring from all outlets, this un= usual photo shows the full might and magnificence of Boulder Dam, in a display that may never happen again, at least until the lake should fill. In the background is the dam and the vast lake it has created stretching far into the distance, Arizona forms the right bank of the Colorado River here and Nevada the left bank.
|e in March, 1935. Tt was Mr. LL, [Stilwell's second marriage, Mrs, Stil-
wells third.
BANKER, SUES WIFE
Chicagoan Plans ‘Friendly
CHICAGO, Oct. 8 (U. P). Stilwell, vice president the
ai r Grows Owt Continental Tllinois National Bank 95 or SL. Come
Abner of
Complete with @ Maireut * Finger Wave Sham- ® Neck Trim Rinse sued for divorce today from Rose- | | Ro APPOINTMENT NFCFEEARY mary Ames, London stage star at Dyea, Mae Mucins = rans 4 under a Hollywood con- Bieagnéa 1: iriey
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Mrs. Stilwell, now in New York. is interested in continuing her career, | and Mr. Stilwell's Interests lie in | banking, he said,
: “Tt ‘was a friendly parting. Tt was | Just that our interests lay along dif« |
| ferent lines.”
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The
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