Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 October 1937 — Page 11

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WEDNESDAY, OCT. 27, 1937

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PAGE 11

KUNKEL STILLIS FE D. R. 10 Give Rosin Census Talk

WARDEN, SAYS PENAL DIRECTOR

But Gottschalk Won't Commit Self on Rumor He Will Be Replaced.

By LEO DAUGHERTY

nothing doing now as of the Indiana | 1S concerned,” State | e Director Thurman A Gott- | in charge of State penal | today as he TrTe-| office after a two-|

the warden

Pricm SIISOnN

als

ms. said

erred to reports that War- | den Louis Kunkel is to be re-| placed at Mich- | igan City tBu tt, course, I Know

of] don’t when 1 might be in the market for a warden,” he| added. He said he had inter-|

viewed potential] |

wardens while attending a nha-|

tional confer-| 3

ence of prison authorities in Philadelphia “You Know," | he continued, “it me that there is a scarcity n wardens. Lots of felcould do that kind udeging from the ones so sure. And a tough job up at Farms spread over | a great big in-

Gottschalk

not

Wouldn't Commit Self

Gottschalk wouldn't comrun that Warden 1e ‘way out p this morning, about, certain | d to do. Said he ether to go ahead | ell him whether to |

Tors

tor Gottschalk took pride in| tq prison authorities envied the Indi-

hat

ail

erence

every state but In- | gangs in the prisons,” | “And up at Michigan ibout 200 more to op-! industries at capac- | se we're not anxious

fen 01

alk said there is ¢ t's limited by law to ! tax-supported | everything that e State Prison.

is

Studied Three Institutions

welfare and prison prior to the Phila- | he had made a! prisons at Richmond, wille, Tenn., and a | in Washington ond prison has fine | has just been reor- | John R. Wald Co. | ame company which is |

the

1

the

Tira nicilzan

City and the at the Pendleton Boys’!

impressed very much by at the Richmond | like the one we plan which will employ | It will replace

wisvit piant

zan City 50 people

Fill in and M

ALLEGED BEECH

. | Mrs. Jones May Seek

ack Home

a

GROVE SLAYER ISBACKIN CELL

‘Refused Release on Bail,

|

Venue Change.

39-year-old charged |

Jones, operator

Mrs. Etta | rooming-house

© |'with the slaying of Helen Schuler | » land the wounding of her step- [|

n> PR

PAW. Report

(oT RRC ITR RTT To)

Times-Acme Photo

Uncle Sam urged his unemployed nieces and nephews to fill in and

mail their questionnaires when the begins on Nov. 16. This poster was tion as part of the campaign to ma President Roosevelt announced by radio on the night of Nov. 14 to

Government's voluntary unemployment registration census. from Washington two nights before the Government starts its

speak attempt to check up on joblessness.

great census of the nation's jobless designed for country-wide distribuke the census a success. today he would address the country ask national co-operation with the He will

the shirt shop. Prisoners working in it are to make thread from the raw cotton and we have a potential market for that for State use.”

Says Plainfield Best

Mr. Gottschalk didn’t see much unusual about the Nashville prison, but he thought that the boys’ school at Washington “didn’t compare with Plainfield. It is run down, not clean and doesn’t have the school program we do.’

The Welfare Director said he also |

institutions for the feebleN.Y. and Letch-

visited minded in Rome worth Village in Fields, N.Y He said that the latter the “colony type” with separate buildings and that he favored that type in the $280,000 expansion program of the institution for feebleminded in Butlerville. Ind

COVADONGA SAYS HE MAY NOT FIGHT SUIT

Fla., “Oct. 27

MIAMI, AJ. P=

shoe and tobacto The Count of Covadonga, son of the

former Spanish King, still confined to his hotel with an attack of hemophilia, announced today that he would not contest the divorce suit brought in Havana by his second commoner wife, the former Marta Rocafort, if the charges were “very, very dignified.”

was of |

‘REPORT THREAT ON VITTORIO MUSSOLINI

{ HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 27 (U. P.) — C. M. Castroceio, Ttalian consul here, | today had protested to police that a | Hollywood man had sent an alleged{ly forged telegram to Vittorio Mussolini, Italian dictator's son, in which he demanded money under {threats Police reported the telegram said: “If your friend, del papa, fails [to immediately return money he lowes me, I will denounce him to | friends and inform newspapers.” Young Mussolini recently was here cn an inspection tour of dios.

PARALYSIS TRUST TO ‘PICK OFFICERS

HYDE PARK, N. YY. ‘Oct (U. P.)—President Roosevelt today that the full list of for the newly organized Infantile Paralysis would be announced within two or three weeks He conferred on the question yes|terday with Basil O'Connor, his | former law partner. The group was started recently to co-ordinate various attempts to study and fight the | disease.

27 said

National

§ | day that Mrs, Jones told him three

or partly unemployed...

film std- |

trustees |

Foundation |

| the world.

| mother, Mrs. Lottie Schuler, was | | back in Marion County Jail today. |] | A writ to release her on bond was | | denied yesterday. i | Criminal Court Judge Pro Tem. | | Clyde Karrer denied Mrs. Jones’ re- | | lease after a two-day hearing. More | § than 20 witnesses testified about the | § tragedy Which occurred in Mrs. | Schuler’s Beech Grove home July 14. | § | Trial has been set in Criminal | &

| Court for Nov. 29. Miss Bess Rob- | bins, Mrs. Jones’ attorney, indicated | | a ow ® ‘change of Venue | porothy Parker, whose witticisms Vy. - on Sars | Mrs. Schuler, Walter Shuler, the | Br ented ne the Wopld. | Jen child's father; Sheriff Otto | on arrival at New York may be | Ray and Dr. Norman Booher, deputy | gue to hearing the latest words coroner, were among ‘witnesses, | ‘put in her mouth in an effort to The gun allegedly used in the | makea plain jest better slaying ‘was introduced into evi-!| ____ 3 | dence. Pictures of the slaying | scene also were shown. : “'EX-MINER BECOMES Miss Robbins sought to show in| the hearing that there was insuffi- | COLLEGE PRESIDENT cient evidence to hold Mrs. Jones in | jail ‘without bail. { PARKVILLE, Mo, Oct. 27 (U. P.). Sheriff Ray testified late yester- | —Dr. William Lindsay Young, who 25 years ago was a coal miner in or four different stories about the Illinois, will be inaugurated as presishooting. | dent of Park College Friday a , Dr. Young ‘attended 22 rural ADMITS ANTI JEWISH schools in Illinois before reaching . the fifth grade. He received his CAMPAIGN IN PROBE | doctor of laws degree from Waynesburg College and his doctor of diSe euriampaion | vinity degree from Carroll College. BOSTON, Oct. 27 (U. P.).—An He succeeds Dr. Frederick W | anti-Jewish propaganda campaign, Hawley, who retired after serving as financed by anonymous contribu- president 22 years, tions of $9000 yearly in Boston. is being waged by the Industrial Defense Association, according to Executive Secretary Edward H. Hunter. This revelation was considered by the legislative commission on radical activities in Massachusetts. Hun- | ter said he edited and published [anti-Jewish pamphlets. being “op- { posed to the Jews because of their | communistic activities.” He charged | that Jews “are the power behind the { throne and make up the invisible government at Washington.” | | Among members of the invisible | | government, he said, were Supreme | | Court Justines Brandeis and Car- | | dozo and Governor Lehman of New | York.

"AUDUBON ‘SOCIETIES | PICK NEW PRESIDENT

| NEW YORK, Oct. 27 (U, P).—] { Dr. Robert Cushman Murphy of | New York was elected president of the National Association of Audubon Societies at the 33d annual meeting of the association yesterday. { Mr. Murphy, associate curator of ‘oceanic birds of the American Mu- | seum of Natural History, succeeds | Kermit Roosevelt who has been macle an honorary association presi- | dent. ‘Mr. Murphy recently returned from exploring the Pacific Coast from Columbia to South America, one of the least known stretches of continental seacoast in

The Season’s Latest Sensation! The New

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Raracol Trim Camprette S|

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You look out past the

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Then there's the feel struction all around

defender,

aride!

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America’s most quoted woman | comes home from a trip abroad— |

NIA RR

over that long graceful bonnet=there is no neckstrain; looking any way, to front or to side, you

strength knit to silence, the whole borne on a chassis that's taut and firm and finished as a cup

But it's when you hit the rough going, the rutted road, the railway crossings, the cobbled paving, the “washboard” gravel, that this wondrous new 1938 Buick shows vou what science can do with

Under vou now is something fresh and tireless and new in automotive design, not the old-type

22 KILLED AT YOKOHAMA YOKOHAMA, Japan, Oct. 27 (U. P.) Twenty-two persons were killed and dozens injured today when an electric train crashed into a crowd waving goodby to a troop train. The crowd jammed the trackside and it was presumed that the engineer of the electric train did not see it in time to stop.

Men's and Women’s CLOTHING ON FASY CREDIT

Askin & Marine Co. 127 W. WASHINGTON ST.

-.

TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES |

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ON'T ‘BE AFRAID OF PAIN

4 ol [1 [Tilia SENN

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HALLOWEEN Is Saturday!

ii

Gay Halloween "PRIZE-WINNING"

COSTUMES =m oh For Adults and Children! ® TOYLAND EVERY c AND SAT, COSTUME Ba. NIGHT ® gr. / on Halloween, Halloween ® CHILDREN'S SUITS in Sateen Masqueraders ® ADULTS" SUITS in Cambric and Sateen Finished

Hi OPEN #1 Children and Adults alike will find here For Taste Other Halloween Suits, 55¢ to $2.98

WITH THURS. FRI. if a Costume to their liking for gay parties Minute Leader's Toyland—Main Floor West Bldg,

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CUSHIONED PROWL OF THE PANTHER

One ride will show you why TORQUE-FREE SPRINGING, and the new DYNAFLASH ENGINE, make the 1938 Buick the most modern chassis in the world

TVHE seat fits vou, that's the first thing. It's broad and deep, and it’s pitched right, and there's a high comfortable roll back of your shoulders and behind your head,

driver in front of vou, out

“Buick 2arvies the

banner forawvard'’

As the beautifully poised car streams onward under the spur of the amazing DYNAFLASH engine, the wheels may dip and curtsy but the body rides true and level as a flung lance.

You sit in the cushions, relaxed and vested. You're safor=skid risks are blessedly reduced. You save moncy=rear tires last measurably longer. And the whole eager car handles with a sureness, a “directability” never before attained.

of sound and secure con. you, steel fused on steel,

Please don't stop ‘with admiring the new Buick, Know what DyNarLasa power and the lullaby ride of Toroue-FREE SPRINGING mean, by sam

pling them first-hand onthe highway. & 7 4

leaf spring of vore, but the great soft coils of shock smothering TORQUE FREE SPRINGING.

Of course, you want to be smartly dressed, but these galoshes do not keep you from it, for they complement your costumes instead of detracting from them, while at the same time they protect you from the snow, rain and winter winds. Fashioned of smooth-fitting rubber and trimmed with Karacol (a fabric that resembles fur). Comforiable and easy to wear because of their lightness of weight. Snap and slide fastener styles with high, boulevard and low heel-heights.

Giri

MONEY GOES FARTHER IN A GENERAL MOTORS CAR ...on

®

THE SLIDE FASTENER: Black and Brown. ..... $1.93

ONE SNAP STYLE

Black and Brown. ...... S179 White and Grey

Community Motors, Inc.

37 West 38th St. Indianapolis, Ind,

Monarch Motor Co. Inc.

WASSON'S NEW BASEMENT STORE 1018 N. Meridian St. Indianapolis, Ind.

Kincaid Garage Liston, Ind,

Sandman Bros, Martinsville Auto Co, Washington & Pike Sts, ilte, na. na, Martinyy

H. R. Swaynie

Westside Square Noblesville, Ind,

A

Howard Holt

23-25 W. North St. Greenfield, Ind,

| R. A. Flanagan

1 'E. Monroe St, Franklin, Ind.

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