Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 October 1937 — Page 3

MONDAY, OCT. 18, 1937

AUTO ACCIDENT | LISTRISEST021 3 OVER WEEK-END Sk

§ County Death Toll Stands at 118; 23 Draw Traffic Fines.

&

(Continued from Page One)

They were passengers in a car | driven by Paul Hussey, 26, of 3167 | Boulevard Place. Driving the other car was Melvin Coulter, 19, of 1133 | N. Olney St. Struck by a car as he crossed Illi- | nois St. at Vermont St., Leo John- | son, 34, of 148 W. 27th St., received | face and head cuts.’ He was taken to City Hospital. The driver of the car, Edward Williams, 926 N. Gray St., was not held. Miss Jewel Littell, 20, of 539 S. Illinois St., received head injuries when she allegedly jumped out of a car driven by Phillip Harris, 27, of 1617 E. Vermont St., yesterday at Market and New Jersey Sts. She was treated in City Hospital. Police today sought occupants of | a car which struck a tractor-trailer truck yesterday at Virginia Ave. and Maryland St. The truck driver, Omer Harris, 21, of Middletown, Ill. told police a man

{ Grounds, potter's field, at Bangor, and woman |

Jumped out of the car, got into an- | box containing the body of Al Brady was lowered

Brady at End of Tra

The scene above occurred in the Mt. Hope City

into the grave. held, said praye

Me., as the pine the ‘burial.

other car and fled after the acci-| dent. Police found two revolvers in| the abandoned car. { Sidney Sudberry, 17, 3006 Grace-| land Ave. ‘vas treated in City Hos- | pital for head lacerations he

cycle collided with a car driven by Kenneth L. Duncan, 23, of 703 Con-

il—Potter’s

ield

2 34

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

GAS FIRM CITED Crop Bill Only IN CLAIM FILED Work Expected

PAGE 3

FOR $500,000

‘Bondholders Ask Payment of Funds Now Held in Escrow.

(Centinued from Page One)

pay the Chase National Bank of | New York, as trustee for the bond- | holders of the Indianapolis Gas Co.,

[the interest on the bonds.

Times Acme Photo. A minister, who had his name withrs in an undertaking parlor before

Those at the grave are reporters, cemetery officials and a grave digger. »

® |

Violence Increases in Holy Land; JALHOVER CASE

Erne Satmeons mon, 7 Dace’s Paper Raps British Policy| WORD AWAITED

gress Ave. The accident occurred at | 13th St. and Capitol Ave.

An unidentified bicyclist was] . : ; : struck by a ear driven by William | Evitable liberation from oppression

Coffev. 23. of 2204 Hovey St. Sat. | despite the great British forces and urday night, according to police. | JeWish influence. 1 [ Scattered violence and attacks on

Patrolman George Denker who saw | : the accident. chased Coffev several | Jews were reported in all parts of

blocks, he said, and arrested him | the Holy Land. on charges of driving without lights reckless driving and failure to stop after an accident. Elnora Prather, 36, of 1310 Fayette St., received scalp lacerations when she was struck by a car as she crossed West St. at 14th St. Saturday. She was taken to City Hospital. Driving the car was John Hagger, 51, of 2237 Northwestern Ave.

Horseback Rider Injured

Duce’s Paper Criticizes

Policy in Palestine

ROME, Oct. 18 (U.P.).—Premier Mussolini's own newspaper, Popolo D'Italia of Milan, leading a bitter | campaign of criticism against Great Britain's Palestine policy,

not but throughout the civilized world.”

Ceincidently, dispatches

Mrs. Grace Stannutch was in Set. Vincent's Hospital today in fair | Addis Ababa reported that Moslem condition with body injuries. She leaders of Ethiopia had telegraphed was injured Saturday when the |the League of Nations and the Brithorse she was riidng in the 2100 ish Government expressing disapblock Montcalm St. shied against |proval of British policy and solidan automobile and threw her. | arity with Arabs in Palestine. The car was driven by George L.| There was some surprise here at Helms, 39, 2749 Caroline Ave. [the heat of the Popolo D'Italia ediLeona Flaherty, 53, of 633 N. Ta- | torial at the outset of negotiations coma Ave., was reported in fair con- | dition in St. Vincent's Hospital today with back and head injuries received when she was struck by an auto while crossing the Circle. The driver, Harold Julow, 20, of Kokomo, was not held.

| |

the Spanish Civil War, | But the attack fitted in with de{velopments of the last several | weeks calculated to remind Britain that Premier Mussolini is not inclined to sit quiet while Britain and France make threats of strong

asserted | today that “news from Palestine can | arouse a sense of horror |

from |

[to remove foreign volunteers from |

MARION COUNTY TRAFFIC DEATHS TO DATE

1¢ aid 1936 ..

Oct. 16 and 17

Accidents ... Injured

action if the volunteers are not removed.

French Seek New

Spanish Demand

PARIS, Oct. 18 (U. P.).—Andre Charles Corbin, French ambassador,

(Continued from Page One)

\ | demand that equal numbers be | withdrawn from Rebel and Loyalist | armies. | Instructions sent to Ambassador | Corbin, in preparation for tomor- | row’s meeting of a nonintervention subcommittee, were brief but definite. As outlined, they were: France insists on a speedy solution of the volunteer problem. Any “token” withdrawal of vol-

unteers should be proportionate to |

[the number of men in the respective | armies. | France will not consider withdrawal of less than 5007 men sufficient to warrant negotiations on granting limited belligerent rights to the Rebels and Loyalists.

[early dispatch of neutral missions [to both sides to ascertain the exact | number of foreign volunteers in Spain and to arrange and supervise | their gradual withdrawal.

| Rebel Drive Expected

‘On Aragon Front

HENDAYE, FRANCO-SPANISH | FRONTIER, Oct. 18 (U. P.).—Bitter | fighting on the Aragon front in | northeastern Spain was reported by | Rebel sources today to be a pre- [ lude to a major Insurgent offensive. Reports from Rebel sources indited that the offensive, scheduled | for today, had been delayed. Generalissimo Francisco Franco was reported to be anxious to conquer Asturias province first and then rush reinforcements to the Aragon | front,

| | ca

‘Chinese Regiment

Nothing must interfere with the |

Arraignment Is Delayed | Pending Federal | Decision.

Local authorities today awaited | word from Atty. Gen. Homer Cum- | mings on what charge James Dalhover, Al Brady's ‘trigger man,” will | be tried. | Marion County delayed arraign- | ment on a charge of murdering ( Sergt. Richard Rivers pending the [ decision from Washington. The | sallow-faced little gunman, captured by G-men in Bangor, Me., last week, | was reindicted by a country grand | jury last week. | Chief Deputy U.S. Marshal Julius | Wichser left today for New Albany | Federal Court sessions and re(quested that the prisoner not be removed from the Marion County Jail while he is away. He said he | expected to be gone until Wednes- | day, and he did not anticipate a | Federal decision on the case before | then. | All officials have said they have |agreed to abide by a decision of | Mr. Cummings as to whether Dal{hover will be tried here for | Rivers murder, or in Cass County [for the murder of State Policeman oi Minneman.

‘BANK SUIT REQUESTS FIXING OF LIABILITY

SCOTTSBURG, Oct. 18 (U.P). —A suit of the State Department of

Financial Institutions, asking judg-|

ment against 21 stockholders of the closed Scottsburg State Bank for

the |

| | The bill said that the City bought

| the Citizens Gas Co. in September, | 1935, and that in 1935, the Citizens Gas & Coke Utility, and the Indianapolis Gas Co. signed an agreement. Agreement Is Attacked agreeemnt, the bill said, that the Citzens Gas &

This provided

Coke Utility use the mains and de- | 12ce leans toward compulsory opera-

posit with the Indiana National | Bank the installments on bond in- | terest payments.

| The bill charged wthat the agree- |

| ment's purpose was to depreciate the bonds’ value and necessitate a default in interest payments. The bill asked the Court to de-

| Enactment, of crop control legisla- | tion and little else is expected from ‘the extraordinary session of Con-

| minimum hours, reorganization of the execu-

| trol.

i | | | | | |

clare the 1913 lease valid; to enter | [a judgment in favor of the bond- |

| holders, in the amount of interest held in escrow ($500,000 for a year [and a half); and that the Indiana | National Bank be restrained irom | dispersing the funds pending a ter- | mination of the complaint.

DISTANT RELATIVE

| OFF. D.R.ENDS LIFE

NEW YORK, Oct. (U. P)— William A. Winston, 39, widely { known expert in corporate law, and a distant relative of President Roosevelt was found | today in his Sutton Manor apartment, 411 E. 33d St. Police said he (had committed suicide with a shotgun. A note found in the room as- | eribed his act to a nervous ailment | from which he had suffered for | three years. Police were | that he was a brother-in-law of | Frederick Delano.

NEW BATTLE IN CONGRESS DUE

‘Issue Raised Over Proposal To Increase Powers of Executive.

18

| (Editoria’, Page 12) Times Special - | WASHINGTON, Oct. 18.—A fight | rivaling in intensity that of the last | session over President Roosevelt's plan to “pack” the Supreme Court is promised when Congress comes back. It will be on a different subject, [but will involve the same general

| enough, there 1s an inevitable Sen-

shot to death |

informed |

|

| | |

A F.L-L.1.0 ARMED TRUCE MAY BE SET UP

‘No Compromise’ Attitude Of Both Sides Is Held Bar to Peace.

From Congress

WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (U. P)) —

gress summoned to meet four weeks from today. President Roosevelt assigned the special session a five-point program, but scarcely could have believed it would be completed by the time Congress adjourns shortly before Christmas. After crop control, Mr. Roosevelt asked enactment of legislation for proper land use, establishment of wages and maximum

(Copyright, 1937, by United Press) WASHINGTON, Oct.

armed truce in labor's civil war

mittee for Industrial Organization, hut a real peace is not possible until the parties abandon their “no compromise” on the issues dividing

them. The two organizations membership of nearly

tive departments and amendments to strengthen antitrust laws. Whether crop surplus control shall be by compulsory or voluntary methods must be determined before | Congress can execute what undoubtedly is the will of a majority of its members by voting the Administra- | tion the requested powers. Sacretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wal- |

with a 8,000,000

Denver, Colo, and in Atlantic City, N. J. Both adopted resolutions criticizing recent decisions of the National Labor Relations Board which they held had favored the other. They took a common posi-

tion, but Chairman Marvin H. Jones of the House Agriculture Committee has worked for voluntary conThe Administration is likely to compromise. Development of a crop control | compromise and determination of | the antilynching bill debate easily may consume in the Senate the five or six weeks of special session be- | fore the holidays. If that were not |

ure and other social legislation. Although united on these mattoars affecting the workers, they opened wider the schism between them by statement, action and charges. Mr. Lewis suddenly made an overture for peace. He proposed to the federation's convention that 100 delegates from each organization meet to seek a permanent settlement. The federation replied that it [ had set up a three-man committee two years ago to work for such a

ate wrangle over neutrality and the implications of Mr. Roosevelt's Chicago statement that America “actively engages in the search for peace” and contemplates a ‘“‘guarantine” of offending aggressors.

FURNITURE STORES RESUME DELIVERIES

Negotiations in Milk Strike Remain at Standstill.

conference would be unwieldy but

a “reasonable” number. Mr. Lewis vielded and notified the convention that a 10-man committee had been named by the C. I. O. delegates and proposed a date for the meeting which was accepted by the federation.

Asked for Armistice

{Contitived from Page One) Earlier, President William Green

State Labor Commissioner, who has of the Federation had pleaded for attempted to aid settlement moves. jan armistice. He appealed to the But today, Mr. Hutson's only com- sc 1.) “rebels” to “come home.” ment was, “They remain dead-| ‘mr Lewis was cheered by 150 of locked. . : . : his aids when he protested that Mr. Williams said picketing con-| the ¢ 1. 0. was not to blame; that tinued at the three struck plants— {ne Cc. I. 'O. unions had besn “unCapitol Dairies, Inc, Weber Milk |jawfylly” suspended from the “edCo. and the Furnas Ice Cream Co.|gration and that the organization Grocery Strike Averted | would co-operate with the A. F. of Progress was made over the week- 1, to obtain a united end, however, on one strike front. ment. A threatened walkout of wholesale| The obstacle to the peace which grocery truck drivers was believed path organizations profess to want

averted when Teamsters and Chauf- is that each side wants to dictate |

feurs Local 135 officials and Bessire the terms—terms so potentially im- & Co., Inc. signed an agreement. | portant that they could easily conIt provided for a ‘modified closed |trol the size and the power of the shop, for a 45-hour week and pay | trades union movement and the fate increases, it was said. |of some of its present leaders. Attempts to settle the Beech| The committees from the rival Grove bus lines walkout have failed. | organizations will ‘meet here Oct. 25

Emmett Joseph Williams, teamsters’ (to make preliminary arrangements |

union president, said he expected for the real peace conference. The to confer with State Labor Depart- | attitude at the first meeting on vital ment officials today. |issues probably ‘will determine

: | whether the second conference Early October Milk | should be ‘held. Prices Are Announced

The delegates will come to the initial conference fully “instructed.” Leon C. ‘Coller, Milk Administra- | can Federation of Labor holds that

The executive council of the Ameritor for the Marion County area, to- it ‘considers the ©. J. ©. Unions

BOB BURNS

Says. Oct. 18 =

Every time we drive a car in heavy traffic, we find ourselves wondering what it's gonna be like 10 years from now. Some scientist come out ix the paper the other day and said, “The very fact that the traffic is getting so heavy will scare a lot of people out of owning an au-

18.—An |

may come from next week's confer- | nces here between the American | Federation of Labor and the Com- |

| workers met separately last week in |

tion in indorsing the Federal Hous- | _ ing Bill, a Wages and Hours meas- |

peace, complained that a 200-man |

offered to expand its committee to |

labor move- |

t o mobile.” I want'ta ve ll him right now that that ain't gonna work. I don't think anybody ever hated traffic [like Grandpaw Snazzy. He use'ta | say he wouldn't fight that traffic if you gave him a car, but when I went home not long ago, there he was with a great big, brand-new automobile. I says “Grandpaw, I thought you said you was satisfied to be a pedestrian the rest of your life—what changed your mind?” He says “Well, T'll tell you, Robin, I | was standin’ on the street corner [not long ago and when I saw three | automobiles chasin’ one pedestrian, |T decided right then and there I | was on the wrong end of the sport!” (Copyright, 1937)

W PerERY

RAPS WAGNER FOR | MAHONEY RALLY,

| | NEW YORK, Oct. 18 (U. P) =~ | Senator Wagner (D, N. Y.) will ad [dress a rally for Jeremiah T. Maw [ honey, Democratic mayoralty cane |didate tonight despite charges by the State Federation of Labor and [the American Labor Party that the | meeting was sponsored by anti labor organizations The labor forces, branding the scheduled Mahoney rally as @& “stooge” labor meeting, demanded that Senator Wagner, author of the [ National Labor Relations Act, can« | cel his speech. The rally was called | by the Trades Union Party.

the “record of success” of the ine dustrial form of ‘unionism=—the heart of the C. I. O. movement and cause of the schism—as opposed to the A. F. of L. eraft union policy. Mr. Green repeatedly has ‘cone tended that industrial unionism is not the cause of the present con= flict. But the Denver convention

rejected a resolution which, by relaxing the Federation's attitude | toward increasing the number of | “one big union” charters for mass

| production industries, would have | been a step toward peace with the |. 1.0. The best informed opinion at the | Denver convention was that Feder | ation representatives might be will= line to make some confessions on industrial union in peace talks with | the C. I. O. but that any plan would Ihave to protect the jurisdictions of | oraft unions. Any reunion on such la basis would involve hundreds of | Jurisdictional disputes which Mr. | Lewis and his aids would be un- | willing to leave to the final detere | mination of the council on which | they would be a minority. | ‘Because he and his aids who favor industrial unionism were in the minority on the council and were consistently defeated in Fed- | eration conventions on the ‘one

| principle—extension of the power of | day announced milk prices for the | .«ytjaws” and that harmony can be | big union” plan for ‘mass produce

the full amount of the shareholders’

8|

Speeding Reckless driving Drunken driving Running red light .......... Running preferential street ...... Others :

soled

w | ih!

has been ordered to insist that any | withdrawals of foreign volunteers | from the Spanish Civil War shall | be in proportion to the number serving on the respective sides, 1t was learned today. This is in dicontradiction to the Italian

IN INDIANAPOLIS

MEETINGS TODAY

University of Pennsylvania Alumni, dinner, Woodstock K Club, night Indianapolis Press Club, Monument Circle, 8 p. m Indianapolis Association of Credit Men, Auto Accessory and Petroleum Group, meeting. Coiumbia Club. 4:45 p. m Salesmen's Clnb, luncheon. Hotel ington, noon. Indiana State

meeting,

Wash-

Typothetae, 1 n, noon Apparel Club, convention all day of Columbus Luncheon Hotel Washington. noon. Adjusters, iuncheon,

Club, luncheon Insurance Washington. noon Indiana University Club, Jumbia Club, noon Scientech Club, Trade. noon Service Club,

luncheon,

luncheon, Board

noon, Irvington Republican Club, meeting, 5446'> E. Washington St.. 8 Delta Upsilon, luncheon noon, North Side Realtors, Cottage, noon

luncheon,

Also See Women's Events, Page Four.

MEETINGS TOMORROW

Degree of Pocahonias. bang csption, Hote! Lincoln, 6:30 n ‘ Rotary Club, luncheon, Ciaypool noon Marion County Council of Women, meeting Clavpool Hotel. 2 p. m Men's Appare Club, convention, Claypool Hotel, all da Alpha Tau Trade. noon , Gvre Club, luncheon, Spink-Arms Hotel, oon Mercator Club, luncheon. Columbia Club noor

n . Universal Club, luncheon. Columbia Club, noon University of Michigan Club, luncheon, Board of Trade. noon Alpha Delta Omega Hotel Washington, 7 p. m Indianapolis Home Builders’ dinner, Athenaeum, 6:30 p

MARRIAGE LICENSES (These lists are from official records at the County Court House. The Times, therefore, is not responsible for errors in names or addresses.)

meeting

Association,

Sikorski. 27, Awe... Dorothy F. Dean field Ave Herbert J. Lahmann, 37, of 1124 Cameron Ave.; Edna Mae Viles, 32, of 1809 N Capitol Ave Ir] L. Smith, 28. of Indianapolis; Elkins, 26, of 1616 Spruce St. George F. Alden 41, of 1468 Central Awe; Helen G. Morgan, 28, of 2025 Laurel

St, | Charles M. Fablan 25, of 6136 College | Ave.; Grace Doyle, 29 of 829 N. East St. John Stark, 23. of 608 E. Walnut St.: Gladys Overman, 32, of 1015 Edison St Leroy W. Small Jr., 21, of 1249 'W St,, Virginia Davis, 18, of 925 Congress Ave William J, Artman, 38 of 3461! N Illinois St.: "Winona Cummings, 39 of 2870 | N. INlinois St | John E. Turner. 24 of 1305 Pleasant St.. Maxine Mahan, 22, of 1310 Pleasant

John W 1149 Fairfield

of 1149 Fair-

of 20

Grace

t, { Willard Johnson, 39, of Indianapolis: | Mary Catherine Johnson, 19, of Indianap- | clis.

BIRTHS Girls

William, Iris Crays, at Methodist. Joseph, Miriam Teeguarden, at kill ist Orphie, Marjorie Bridges, at Methodist. | Herbert, Ada Jackson, at Methodist. | Herman, Grace Schaekel, at Methodist. |! Harry, Theodocia Carpenter, at Methodist Carl, Thelma Xellam, at Methodist. Robert, Mary Bess, at 210'. S. Pine. Charles, Cora Jenkins, at 818 Fayette. Mack, Violet Bovd, at Coleman Brady, Cheryl Minnis, at Coleman. Roy, Frances Quinton, at Coleman Lemue], Margie Riddle. at Coleman. John, Marie Gay, at City, Robert, Eula McIntyre, at Earl, Mary Pumphrey, at Jerome, Della Liscomb, at Oity. Joseph, Verly Henson. at City. George, Olive Dooley, at City. Boys

Durward, Anna Belmont, at Methodist. Claude, Georgia Harrison, at Motnoais

City. City.

48 |

luncheon. | Clay- | Hotel Co- | of

luncheon, Hotel Lincoln {

RB... { Board of Trade, |

Canary |

uet and re- | m Hotel, | Republican

‘Omega. luncheon. Board of |

30th

| row;

Norris, Mary Lincoln Russell,

Thelma Wattworth, | Methodist

| John, Marv Seabert, at Methodist. Charles, Loretta Mosley, at 934 Burdsall Parkway Frederick, Elizabeth Pleasant, at | Andrew, Dulcr Deshler, at City John, Catherine Stratton. at City Roy. Mabel Comstock. at City. Cecil, Stella Shaw, at ity. Boyd, Pearl Kasey, ¢

at Methodist, at

City.

DEATHS

William S. McMasler, lobar pneumonia. Edna Black, 44, | chronic myocarditis. Ellen A. Beyer, | occlusion. Harry Hayes, 40, at Veterans | occlusion, Henry W. Jurgen, 61, chronic nephritis,

60, at Methodist,

at Central Indiana,

65, ‘at ‘City, coronary

coronary

at Methodist,

cardiovascular renal disease. Amanda Arthur, 73, at chronic myocarditis. Edward O. Devenish, pyelonephritis, Jacob Sehr, 54, at St. nephritis. James Gill, 86, at City, hypostatic pneu-

| monia Mary Mariah Owens, 76, 740 N. Tibbs, at 1140 Church-

1102 Perry,

81, at City,

Vincent's,

Inbar pneumonia. Catherine Dearmin, 68 | man, diabetes mellitus. Thomas Scearcy, 79. at 2328 N. Dear- { born, pulmonary hemorrhage Will Scott, 60, at Long, brain abscess. Elizabeth King, 78, at 1731 N. Capitol, cerebral hemorrhage.

|

OFFICIAL WEATHER

| | | | | “eee United States Weather Bureau | |

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST—Occasional |

| rain probable tonight and | somewhat cooler tomorrow.

| me

tomorrow:

TEMPERATURE —Oct. 18, 1936— 11

BAROMETER

| 29.7

Ta. 'm. i Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7 a. m 3 | Total precipitation .. : Excess 506

. 1.96 . 37.33 5

MIDWEST WEATHER Indiana—Occasional rain probable tonight and tomorrow; somewhat cooler to- | morrow, Minois—Occasional rain probable to- | night and tomorrow; cooler tomorrow and north portion tonight Lower Michigan—Mostly | and tomorrow, probably | somewhat cooier tomorrow west tonight. Ohio—Probably rain tonight and tomorwarmer in east portion tonight, cocler in west portion tomorrow. Kentucky —Probably rain tonight and tomorrow; cooler in central and west portions tomorrow.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 3 Station,

Amarillo, Tex. Bismarck, N. 'D

cloudy

and extreme

A. ol. ar. Temp. 52

Chicago ..... Cincinnati Cleveland, O. ‘ Denver ‘ Dodge ‘City, ‘Kas, ‘..... He “na, Mont, Jacksonville, ‘ Kansas City, Mo. Little Rock, Ark. .. Los Angeles Miami, Fla. sit ay Minneapolis-St. Paul Mobile. Ala. .... 0.005 New Orleans New York Okla. Omaha, Pittsburgh Portland, Or». San Antonio

San Francisco . . .... Ptoidy 30] Sle Ram 9.95 FR. ao \Cloudy 3 t. | Washington, D.C... Pteidy 30:

John E. Mann, 81, at 1217 E. Raymond,

acute |

chronic

tonight | occasional rain; |

Is Wiped Out

SHANGHAI, Oct. 18 (U. P).— Fourteen hundred Chinese infantry-

| men, an entire regiment sworn to | agent, had paid two dividends to

| die rather than retreat, were anni- | hilated today in the Woosung Creek sector of the Shanghai front.

For days Japanese had been at- | was paid in July; and the second, | | amounting to 10 per cent, was paid |

tacking in the sector, trying to consolidate themselves on the | Shanghai side of the creek. Each | time they had been thrown back. | Today they sent a fleet of bombing planes over to attack the Chinese (lines. Then infantry, marching oe tanks, were sent over the top.

‘Report Two Italian Subs ‘Are Badly Damaged

PARIS, ‘Oct. ‘18 '‘(U. 'P).—Two badly damaged Italian submarines, one carrying two dead and several wounded sailors, arrived at Naples lin mid-September, the Agence Espagne said it learned today. The Calypso arrived on Sept. 9 and the submarine Tito Span | reached the port the next day. third submarine camouflaged as a Soviet craft with sailors wearing | Soviet uniforms allegedly left its [ base Oct. 1, the news agency said.

Davis ‘Plans Parley ‘With ‘Roosevelt

| ‘WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (U. P).— | Norman H. Davis, chief American

| delegate to the conference of Nine- |

| Power Treaty signatories, plans to | see President Roosevelt at Hyde | Park before sailing for Brussels, he | revealed today. Mr. Davis | other members of the American | delegation conferred at the State

| Department today on preliminary |

| arrangements.

4 WOMEN ON PANEL IN MONTAGUE CASE

ELIZABETHTOWN, N. Y., Oct. 18 | (U. 'P.).—Four ‘women are on the | jury panel called for the trial of | John Montague, Hollywood wizard | golfer, on a seven-year-old robbery

| charge. The trial is scheduled to

| start tomorrow.

| |

|

pation in the robbery of a Jay, N. | Y., tavern in 1930, was expected io [arrive here today or early tomorrow with his chief counsel, | Noonan of Albany, one-time de- | fender of Arthur (Dutch Schultz)

| Flengenheimer.

(CAR FALLS ON RAILS,

BRAZIL, Oct. 18 (U.P). —Mr. and Mrs. Lee Ames, Carbon, escaped

last night. First, the steering gear on their automobile locked and the car plunged through a guard rail, falling 30 feet onto Big Four Railroad tracks. The wrecked car then rolled off the tracks just as a passenger train sped past. The couple ‘was injured only slightly.

Montague, charged with partici- |

James M. |

IS MISSED BY TRAIN

death twice within a few minutes i

liability, was on file in Scott Circuit [Court today. Paul Heichelbech, liquidating | creditors of the institution since it | was closed Dec. 7, 1936. The first | dividend, representing 70 per cent,

| last week.

DONALD, 0, DONALD! WHERE IS DUCKY?

SOUTH ‘BEND, ‘Oct. ‘18 '(U. 'P))~— Police today were ordered to shout “Donald” at any duck they saw. Owners of the duck reported that the downpour of rain caused their pet to flee. “The duck will come readily to anyone saying Donald,” police were told.

[the chief executive. A main differ- | delivery period Oct. 1 to 15 to be | |

ence is that in this case the Presi- | P2id by distributors for milk of 4 |pederation and abide by futre de- | per cent butterfat content and pur- | cisions ‘made by ‘majority rule,

| dent wants to take power away from judicial branch.

Administration effort to reorganize

the executive branch, and particuJarly on Mr. Roosevelt's proposal to place in the Treasury Department—subject to White House control— the larger powers over spending now possessed by the General Account- | ing Office and its head, the Controller General. Congress created the General Accounting Office in 1921. The Controller General was given a 15-year term and made subject only to the will of Congress. The President, however, was given the duty of appointing and this has recently resulted in the office losing some of its prestige.

NE

| | x |

Even the present

b 7 |

Milestones

<u -u8 Customer FP TUT Service

generation can ‘remember

when shopping in the "good ole summer-

time’ was a

| jaunt.

|

{ |

| a

a pleasure.

end now comes.

a &

pretty hot, Then science began fo tell the world about "air conditioning." E could be made cool and comfortable. 3 ot course, installed air conditioning—the first ; in Indianppolis for a big store. | our shopping floors, ‘particularly those with a |g concentration of traffic, are cool and pleasant |& for shoppers on the hottest days. other milestone in ‘making shopping at Ayres

CHARGA-PLATE

A New Service for Charge Customers

to Speed Service for All Customers

Watch for Announcements.

L. S. AYRES & CO.

uncomfortable

Entire buildings Ayres,

Now most of

Just an-

the Controller General—

{ |

the legislative instead of from the | {pper.

chased during the first half of OcThe prices ‘are: ‘Class 1, $2.54; Class 1-B, $1.88; Class 2-A, |

restored only if they return to the |

Declines to Meet Wishes The council declined to grant Mr.

: ERN STYLE=effectively stream-

|

| | i

| |

i : |

The new fight will be over the $1.95; Class 2-B, $181, and Class | Lewis’ demand that it recognize as

3, $1.60. I'a stipulation to a peace conference

tion industries, Mr. Lewis started the C. I. O. The same delegates who cheered his offer of peace with the Federation likewise applauded his pledge at Atlantic City that ‘not one vital ‘C. I. O. policy would be | compromised in the forthcoming | conversations.

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a

Willys

FRANK S. FEESER CO.

723 VIRGINIA AVE,

WHITEHEAD MOTORS, INC. 818 E. 63rd ST.

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cat tas WL ee,

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