Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1937 — Page 3

MONDAY, NOV. 29, 1937

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

HOOSIER CROWNED HAY KING AT WORLD LIVESTOCK SHOW; PURDUE TAKES EIGHT FIRSTS

Robinwood Farms, Greensburg, Wins Shorthorn Bull Prize; Canadian Awarded Chicago Wheat Crown; 4-H Champions Named.

of this mining section today a week-end of dancing and West Virginia

CHICAGO. Nov. 29 (U. P.)—George Sauerman, Crown Point, Ind, Gordon Gibson, Ladner, successive vear. H e 1 css s Go to pound pen .the best 240 to 300pion Shropshire bred wether pounds, was another Purue exhibit. | miners. burg, Ind., took the honors for the |y va. and had tentatively agreed | The champion wether lamb was afternoon. Jess C. Andrew of West Point, | Mrs. Roosevelt attended a comof hard red spring wheat of the |sat in a front pew and were rurship. exhibited a sampie of hard red | Mrs. Cromwell chatted with her the field pea champion samples of Jennings of Eikins, a member of

(UU. |

and | world’s richest women, continued a

The nation’s First Lady and the |

This Is News! Dog Shoots Man

Everyone knows that when a dog bites a man, it’s not news. when a dog shoots a man with a 12-gauge shotgun, that’s news, and it | may sound very comical to ever yone but Cecil Parthemer, 31, is fighting for life in a Warren, O., hospital, and his dog. Queen, the remorseful beagle shown above with the fateful weapon on her master’s bed. Mr. Parthemer rested his gun on a fence while hunting. The dog jumped up and touched the trigger with her paw, sending a full charge of wadding and shot into Parthemer’s chest and armpit.

BOETCHER AND COUNCIL PLAN

City Medical Society Not to ! Enter Soot Fight Unless Requested.

a CUntindel from Puge One)

is to be reintroduced. Roy O. Johnson, Smoke League attorney, in a letter to Richard W. Tubbs, Coal Merchants Association presider.t, asked the dealers to “match whatever reduction the Citizens Gas & Coke Utility might make in coke prices.” Mr. said he had answered Mr. Johnson “with a pledge of co-operation.” Mr. Johnson's letter read: “Investigation shows that the Citizens Gas and Coke Utility has raised the price of coke 50 certs a ton at two different times this year. In other words, before these raises, coke was being delivered to the retail coal merchant at $6 per ton. “Could the retail coal merchants

sumer from the yards of the Citizens Gas and Coke Utility if the company would provide the equipment so that i deliveries could be made direct and .#% |thus eliminate the expense of sh.pBut | ping coke from the ovens to the vards of the retail merchant? (It is our understanding that this system of delivery other cities).” Meeting Sought

The letter added that a league committee “would be glad to meet

inset, who

FE. D. R. Urges 5-Year Private Housing Drive to Fight Slump

(Continued from Page One)

with a committee of retail merchants appointed by you for the purpose of discussing these propositions.” Mr. utility operate, smokeless fuel would be made available to the consumer at a reasonable price.” He recalled that Thomas L. Kemp.

Johnson said “that if

| of mortgages

| mortgage associations by sale of debentures up to a 20-to-1 | | ratio to their capital. a $50,000,000 association by the RFC | $1,-

(U. bYy=-|

today retained his title of hay king of the world at the 38th annual International Live Stock mSpesion in the International Amphitheater here. was crowned wheat King. es | | I d T d championship went to L. E. Peter- | rst a y an son, Victor, Mont., for the second | Purdue University was one of the | leading winners, taking first Sg . y " in poultry judging, and in pens of | M Cl | Berkshire barrows, exhibiting the | 1NCrs 1Uurc 1 champion pen, the best 200 to 240pound pen and the best pen from | UNIONTOWN, Pa., Nov. 29 one sire. { P.).—Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and Purdue also exhibited the cham- Doris Duke Cromwell, one of the the best pen of three Shropshire | tour wether lambs. The best pen of | after Chester White hogs, 160 to 200 | church-going with The Lafayette school also won three | second places and one fourth. heiress to the Duke tobacco millions The Robinwood Farms, Greens- | spent the night in Morgantown, | best 2-year-old shorthorn bull and !to visit the settlement of the second place in the 3-year-old class. | priend’s Service Committee here Canadian Takes Lamb Prize | before driving on to New York this exhibited by W. J. Brodie, Stouff-| Mrs. Cromwell, who inherited anville, Ontario. Oklahoma A. & M.|other portion of her vast fortune College was reserve champion. ‘on her 25th birthday last week, and Ind.. took second prize in the south- | munity church service yesterday in down wether competition. | the simple nondenominational The winning wheat was a sample | chur ch at Arthurdale, W. Va. They Reward variety, weighing 65.2 | rounded by humble coal miners and pounds per bushel. Mr. Peterson, | their families. who won the 1936 barley champion- They went to Arthurdale where winter wheat, Montana 36 varietv. | hosts, drank cider and ate cookies, The champion wheat sample | while Mrs. Roosevelt danced several came from the same farm on which | virginia reels with Rep. Randolph 1929, 1933 and 1934 were grown by | the party. Mrs. Cromwell did not the new wheat king's father, W. G. | dance, claiming that it was the iibson. | first time she ever had seen a Selection of the champion steer, | square dance. high point of “agriculture's world | — fair,” is scheduled for tomorrow | afternoon. EGYPT TENSE AFTER 19,000 Exhibit Approximately 14.000 entries from | ATTEMPT ON PREMIER | 42 states and four Canadian prov- | TT inces sought livestock honors and | CAIRO, Egvpt, Nov. 29 5000 entries from 30 states, six Can- | Extra police squadrons patrolled adian provinces and Australia com-|the streets of Cairo today to ~repeted for hay and grain awards. vent further political rioting which | The national 4-H Club Congress, | broke out yesterday when an at-! held in conjunction with the exposi- | tempt was made on the life of tion, selected Franklin Spore, 19, Kildare, Okla. as national meat animal champion. He $300 scholarship. A scholarship of $200 went to Arthur | Young, 19, Clearwater, Kas., Rudolph Hruska. 20. Lewiston, Mo., third. won a $100 scholarship.

Indiana 4-H Club award winners |

included Marjorie Patrick, Cloverdale. best tailored or semitailored | outfit; King. Indianapolis, best garments; Eileen Simmons, anon, best wool dress or suit; Jeanette Dorothy Arvide, Lafayette, five jars different vegetables; Haehl, Indianapolis, five jars of | fruit.

Times LAFAYETTE, Nov. 29.—Indiana corn eur rome ers have 210 entries in the

Special

and |

Moustapha El Nahas-Pasha, Premier |

of Egypt and president of the

received a | Wwafd Party. second place |

The Premier's | was identified as | Khader, 22, a clerk in the Agricul- | ture Ministry. of the late Arabi-Pasha, jute revolt of 1882.

alleged assailant

Eleanor Van Sickle and Mary | International Corn and Grain Show |

children’s | Leb- |

at Chicago, according to K. E. Bee- | son, Purdue Extension Agronomist. About 300 Indiana farmers are | making hybrid seed corn this vear

Alice | and many of them are exhibiting

the seed at the show. There are

| also Indiana entries in the small grain and soybean classes.

William Curry, Tipton County, won the major honors in the 10-ear class last year.

He is the grandson | leader of | quirement that the mortgage Yoes e

yparles Baugh,

IN INDIANA POLIS

Here's County Traffic Record | Noblesville: Kalter line.

of Cable § 0 Be a Eileen Lan2, 19° ‘of 2935 N. Dearborn

of ih Woodlawn | 22, 1422 Ken-

| es. 25. of 644 Marion Ave. Georgia Wayman. 22. of 852 River Ave.

BIRTHS Girls Frances Hern, at 1605 E. 59th. Bovs Frances Larrison,

St. 2501 Brookside Deaths (To Date)

Mason Jeniart, Av Edith te

Deaths in oity 1937

Stanley,

Accidents (Nov. 27 and 28) Accidents ....2 Injured Dead

Everett,

: 1018 Division,

at

DEATHS

| . Lee Walker, 37, 1642 S. Delaware, miliary tuberculosis. John R. Headspeath, 63, at Central Indiana, aortic insufficiency. Anna Burnside Keifer, 84, at 4466 Carrollton, chronic nephritis. Emma Allen Ratcliffe. 75, at Central Indiana, broncho-pneumonia. 13 iniyie Lee Murtaough, te at Methodist, a ravenfricular hemorr Reckless Driving | “Edna Brame, 39, at 2217s W. 13th, 4 nary occlusion Nora Edwards, 37, at City, meningitis : 586, 56,

at Arrests

(Nov. 27 and 28)

Speeding

tuberculous

Running Preferential Street 10

Helen Adeline Ham, Methodist, acute mastoiditis. Jimes Philimon Tves, at Methodist PeLIurated duodenal ulcer, ? Rani { seorge Camper. 53. at 930 W. Vermont, Running acute toxic myocarditis ox Light Walter Butler, 48, at 1435 Williams, ear9 cinoma. [par Tolliver, 52. at 518 Blake, lobar en Drivin neumonia, Drunk 8 | Sophia Losche, 72, at 626 Buchanan. an5 | gina pectoris.

Joseph Conrath, Others sclerosis, 26

at

Red

72,

at City, arterio-

MEETINGS TODAY (Also See Women's Events, Page Six) { Indianapolis Press Club, dinner. 6 p. m. | Scientech Club, luncheon, Board of | Trade. noon. Service Club, noon Irvington Republican 5446', E. Washington St. pn. eit Upsilon, luncheon, Board ot Trade,

OFFICIAL WEATHER

United States Weather Bureau

Indianapolis forecast: Fair tonight and | tomorrow; somewhat colder tonight with meeting, | lowest temperature 1B to 20 degrees.

Sunrise ees 6: 6 | Sunset

luncheon, Hotel Lincoln,

Club,

no North Side Realtors, Cottage, noon. White River Chapter, Tzaak Wallon League. dinner, Indianapolis Athletic Club,

. Salethien Aig luncheon, Hotel Wash- BAROMETER a. Mm... 50.18

on, or

Four "Social Was ington, 6 p. Mm. odds | Precipitation 74 hrs, ‘ending Indiana Trade Association, Total precipitation Hotel Washington, noon, Excess Hub Club, luncheon, —

Club,

TEMPERATURE —Nov. 29, 1936—

. 2

luncheon, Canary

Club, dinner, Hotel

luncheon, Club, Columbia Club,

Columbia MIDWEST WEATHER Indiana — Fair tonight and tomorrow preceded by snow flurries extreme xoutheast portion tonight; somewhat colder to- | night and extreme southeast tomorrow. Minois — Fair tonight and tomorrow; somewhat colder tonight, Lower Michigan—Partly and tomorrow, except treme southeast early tonight;

noon. Steel Iuncheon, noon, Building Owners and Managers, luncheon. Colnmbia Chub. noon. Indiana University Club, numbia Club. noon Woman's Rotary, Clith, noon Sigma Delta Club, 8 p.m

Iuncheon, Co-

luncheon, Columbia

cloudy tonight |

Columbia snow flurries ex-

Sigma, dinner,

insurable. would be modified. 2. Encouragement national

allowing

of

| to “provide the basis for 000. 000,000 of private funds obtain- | able through the sale of national | mortgage association debentures.” | allow increase of small property | 1oans from 80 to 90 per cent and reduction of interest rates from 6' to 5'z or 5!4 per cent, depending on the property evaluation.

Would Expand FHA

| 4 Expansion of FHA to cover loans up to $200,000 on large-scale Izzedine Abdel building projects instead of the present $16,000 limitation. This extension the re-

would be contingent upon

not exceed $1000 a room On

| structure or structures. 5. Liberalization of existing limit- | ed dividend requirements of the act, | releasing dwellings in this category

from blanket mortgages where the | mortgage does not exceed $1200 a room and the value of the dwelling is not in excess of $5,000,000. 6. Revival of insurance provisions for repair and modernization loans

Marriner S. Eccles, chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and chairman of the informally constituted housing committee appointed by the

| President, emphasized the program [will not require any additional ap-

propriation.

coro- |

He said the plan did not contem- | plate any competition with private

- | enterpr ise except in the case of very

large loans and that business would be given its full chance to avail itself of opportunity in this field. Copies After England Mr. Eccles outlined the full import of Mr. Roosevelt's plan, including some details not mentioned in the message but which will be contained in the Administration's measure when Senator Wagner presents it. “What is being undertaken here,” he said, “is in line with the successful experiénce of Great Britain and other countries. If we can lower interest rates and construction costs we will place home ownership within the reach of families previously barred.”

| hourly rates.

pected to request State Govern-

| ments to amend existing “unfair”

foreclosure laws and take other measures to facilitate the construction revival. “We hope to crystallize public attention on the problem,” he said. “It becomes practicable under this program for builders to undertake large scale projects, to buy large volumes ol materials at wholesale prices, and

[thus to assure labor of an annual wage at a higher level than present | vearly income in return for reduced | This is a problem to

be worked out through the co-opera-tion of contractors and unions.”

Steel Mills and

Unions Spread Jobs By HERBERT LITTLE

Times Special Writer PITTSBURGH, Nov. 29. — This

autumn’s sudden recession of business has reached the proportions of a depression in the steel industry,

| backbone of industrial production,

in terms of jobs at least. The first definite indication of the

| wide extent of layoffs was given {o- |

{day in a regional survey by the | Steel Workers Organizing Commit-

sume buying to meet current needs. | Last summer and spring steel’s cus-

Financing of |

3. Extension of FHA features to

Steel Production Takes New Drop

| cline, dropping to 29.6 per

similar to thos eprovided by FHA up | to last April 1.

of Warsaw, Belgrade, Sofia, Buch-

| Foreign Secretary Eden.

British

He said the Administration ex- |

Citizens Gas manager, had recently that “the expenditure of | $75,000 would equip the plant for direct deliveries. “Coke is delivered from the ovens

tomers opought heavily and sent | production way up. Now it is be- | lieved that the inventories piled up | through that buying are largely | consumed. and steel men hope that ordinary demands for current needs | will increase their market. Recent | developments in financial New York and legislative Washington also are viewed as favorable.

| ity by freight to the various retail | coal merchants of the city. This adds a burden to the consumer and is an expense which should be elim- | inated either by the utility or | the retail coal merchant,” Johnson said. “Should it cost $75,000, be a drop in the bucket money that would be saved for the consumer land since this is a municipally- — | owned and operated institution, the Steel production this week will Show | consumers’ interest should be conits eleventh consecutive weekly de- | sidered.” cent of | He also announced that capacity, the American Iron & Steel | League's Smoke Abatement Institute reported today. The rate | nance Committee would interview was set at 29.6 per cent of capacity, | members of City Council to “aca decline of 14 points or 45 per |quaint them with the features of cent from the 31 per cent rate last | the amendments which are being week. | proposed for adoption.” He said the committee plans to appear beNAZI DEMANDS fore the Council in session. That may prove a vital step. hor most conferences, this one Man- between the spokesmen for Britain land France has behind it the armies

Mr.

it would

NEW YORK, Nov. 29 (U. P).

the

lverdnmen in detail of all that | was said at the meeting of Lord Halifax and Chancellor Hitler, ind

he the next thing to do.

French Report Says

date Powers May Confer |and navies of the earth's mightiest |

empires. Britain and France want peace but if Chancellor Hitler's terms are too high, they will be turned down. If Chancellor Hitler insists on set- - | tling the issue on the battlefield. whittling out the Rome- “Berlin axis | France and Britain wiil pick up the while making a bid for the support | gauntlet.

On Colonial Problem.

(Continued from Page One)

tantly. but pick it up they would. arest and even London. The Quai| That is what D'Orsay and Downing Street have |js all about. Britain and France been in constant communication qo not want to pick up anybody's and last week Viscount Halifax, | gauntlet, That is why Lord President of the British Cab- | Chamberlain sent Lord Halifax to inet Council, paid a visit to Ger- talk with Chancellor Hitler. He many. | wanted to find out exactly what Today, France's Premier Chau- | Chancellor Hitler wanted so that tempts and Foreign Minister Delbos | Britain, in consultation with France, are scheduled to arrive in England | could determine whether they :ould for a conference with Britain's pay the price. Prime Minister Chamberlin and| If there another European war, the practical Mr. Thus Europe's traveling statesmen | Chamberlain holds, nobody can win. are reaching the short rows. The | All will lose. Europe will be left lenders will inform the [a shamless and out of the ashes

is

A Bridge Forum

conducted by

MRS. DOROTHY ELLIS

Indianapolis Bridge Expert Auditorium Sixth Floor

SMOKE PARLEY

| —All the time that he was selling |

some “time ago and v was defeated. It!

two |

| he said.

make deliveries directly to the con- |

|ted to 23 transfusions. | $25 for each transfusion and usually | sister, Mary Josephine, 13.

is followed in some

coal |

the | and association would co- |

said | | will | catastrophe he | colleagues this week will attempt to

| of the Citizens Gas and Coke Util- |

by |

to the |

over a period of time, |

Ordi- |

| Britain and France will then dis- |

They would do so reluc- |

the London pariey |

Premier |

general |

Blood Donor

Offers Life as

Aid to Others.

OLYMPIA, wash., Nov. 29 (U. P). | his own blood to survive the depression, Roger Carr sensed a paralyzing | numbness creeping through his body.

| Now he is crippled by the malady, | doctors know no cure for it, and he

is ready to sacrifice his life to medical science in hopes of saving others

| from his fate.

His disease is called “multiple sclerosis.” It is described as "a chronic disorder of the nervous svs-

| tem characterized by small areas of | | hardening in the brain or spinal | cord or both.

| Schloemer, 441 Cecil St. | held.

TRAFFIC CLAIMS | ONE HERE AND SIX OVER STATE

Tech Pupil Dies Dies After He

Drives Cycle Intb Auto’s Path.

(Continued from Page One) was not

Dr. Frank Ramsey, oner, and Sergt. Accident Prevention Bureau mem-

deputy cor-

Doctors think his affliction was | ber, investigated.

caused by the many transfusions he

underwent and that there is no dan- | Tubbs | 'others to whom he gave his blood. | Ing to his mother, Mrs. Marie Hill

ger of his having transmitted it to |

They say he will die in a few years |

| {unless some new cure is discovered | land that an operation likely would

kill him immediately. They refused | to operate on him but today he insisted that they do so. “I'm offering my life as a last re-

sort in an effort to discover a cure.” | “I only hope it will be of | | zens’ Military Training Camp at Ft, | Benjamin Harrison

benefit to the medical world.” No doctor has replied yet. Once Carr worked for a blood

The youth had ridden his bicycle | to and from high school for three | | years without an accident, accord-

Jaenisch, “We celebrated Rudy's 17th birthday on Thanksgiving Dav,” she said. “We made it a special occasion | | when his birthday fell on Thanks- |

| giving.”

Interested in Aviation

He was a member of his school’s R. O. T. C. and attended the Citi-

last summer, His hobbies were amateur radio work

transfusion agency in Detroit when | and aviation.

he could find no work. He earned |

ave a pint or more of ‘blood.

J. C. KIDD, EX- STATE AID, DIES OF STROKE

BRAZIL, Ind., Nov. 29 (U. P.).—J. Charles Kidd, 66, former Indiana

Insurance Commissioner, died suddenly from a stroke of apoplexy at Miami, Fla., yesterday. He had been |

| in poor health the past nine vears. in Brazil witnesses told them he was speeding.

Mr. Kidd was where he entered the real estate and insurance business. Later he was engaged served as under

born

Governor Harry G.

Leslie,

rise Bolshevism. Such is the

and his

avoid. At least leaders favor a Chancelor Hitler. him a free hand in Eastern and Southeastern Europe in return for positive guarantees in Western Europe. They would even return some of the former colonies. They mind if the Nazis took the Communists down a peg or two.

some of the “hoss trade”

U. S. Demands J Japan

Consult on Customs

WASHINGTON, Nov. 29 -——The United States

States be consulted im any proposed | changes in the Chinese customs or-

revealed today. The demand was formal, written

contained

| lodged with the Japanese Foreign on Sunday by American Ambassador Joseph C. in-

Minister. Koki Hirota. Mr. Grew had made

represenations,

Grew, formal

He submit- |

| Kirk Irvington Mortuary.

in coal mining. He! insurance commissioner | the sidewalk,

British | >t" with |

Those would give | 3 was in Methodist Hospital today

| on Road 431 at | Her

German | would not greatly |

Survivors are the parents. Mr. and | Mrs. Rudolph A. Jaenisch Sr., and a

Funeral services are to be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Moore & Burial is | to be in Washington Park. Grace Rollin, 35, whose address pelice were unable to learn, was reported in critical condition in City Hospital today. She was struck by an auto in the 11CC block N. Senate Ave. allegedly driven by Morris Cason, 22, of 621 | W. Michigan St. Cason was held [under $2000 bond after police said

Women Flee Car After the accident, Cason's car skidded 50 feet and careened onto officers quoted wit-

| nesses as saying. Two women leaped from Cason's | | car and fled after

| French | nesses said.

Injured when struck by an auto

in fair condition in City Hospital. Mrs. Lillian Paddock, 43, Dayton.

as the result of truck-auto collision Woodland Drive, husband, Doyle Paddock, was treated in the hospital and released. Harold Trussell, Detroit, driver the tractor-truck, was fined

vou wan'ta get on a man's character, the city where he ain't afraid he's

William Tremp,

wards.

fer.” | they're very

| Meridian St.

the crash, wit- | ling the |in the 3500 block W. Washington Miss Mary Keney was reported | | of 8 per cent over the 20.560 deaths

of | $15 in | Municipal Court on reckless driving | charges. Trussell told deputy sheriffs they

BOB BURNS Says:

OLLY WOOD, Nov, 29.—I{ real low-down follow him io

the

gonna run into somebody from home, You jest oughta see some of the old boys when they visit Holly~ wood. You find them in the hot spots out nere, They'll always have on a funny paper hat and when they ain't hoppin’ around the dance floor, they're sittin’ at the table, raitlin'

one of those noise makers or blowin’

la horn. Back in their home town, [they're so dignified, they bend hack1t reminds me of the time Uncle Slug went to a factory fn get a job. The manager said “Have you any recommendations?” Uncle Slug [said “Yes, here's one from Rev, | Tweedle back home and here's an= other from my Sunday school teach« The manager said “Well, fine, but I'm more in-

terested in hearin’ from someone

|who knows vou during week.”

(Copvright 1937)

and careened into a safety zones guard. Miss Edith Taylor, 32, 2048 N, was injured when she walked into the side of an auto in front of her home. She was taken to Methodist Hospital with head and knee injuries.

Arrested bv State Police after a

| two-mile chase in heavy W, Wash-

ington St. traffic Saturday. Lester Roach, 22, of 2935 Ida St.. was fined

[$25 on a speeding charge and his

driver's license was suspended for 45 days in Municipal Court today. Judgment was withheld on a reckless driving charge. State Police said Roach. driving about 50 miles an hour, nearly crashed his car during the chase,

Autos Kill 31.950 in

‘U.S. in 10 Months

CHICAGO. Nov. 29 (U. P.).—The nation’s traffic cost 31.950 lives (urthe first 10 months of 19317, National Safety Council reported today. The toll represented an increase for the same period of 1936. Fatalities last month totaled 3800. a #& per cent increase ove: September and a 1 per cent increase over October, 1036. Milwaukee retained first among cities of more than 500,000 population for the lowest death rate, Its rate was 1086, compared

place

| with an average of 17.4 for all cities

of its population class

| said, that his trailer swerved to the |

Leaders in other population classi

UU. P| has served a | demand upon Japan that the United | ning a preferential street and fail-

| were placed against Mrs. ganization, Secretary of State Hull Fields, 32, 736 Lexington®#Ave., | her auto struck a police car at 25th in | St. late Satur- | representations | day. Allen Morgan, 28, of Kokomo, was | 0.0; in Methodist Hospital with injuries | received when the car he was drivtracks at |

opposite side of the road as Paddock car was passing. Woman Arrested

Charges of drunken driving, run-

| ing to give a police car right-of-way

and Keystone Ave,

ing skidded on streetcar Pershing Ave. and Washington St,

{and New Orleans, | 500.000).

Caroline after |

| Mass.

the fications:

Memphis. 12.4; Minneapolis,

14.3.

12.8; (250,000 to

Hartford, Conn.., 64; New Bedford, Mass.. 6.4; and Wichita, Kas., 71 (100.000 to 250000) Hoboken N. J.. 20; Bayonne. N, J. 26; and Mount Vernon, N. Y. 3.7 (50,000 to 100.000), Bangor, Me., 0.0; Beverly, and Dubuque, Ia. 2.9. | to 50,000) Wausau, Wis. 00; Gloucester, 00, and New Kensington, "Pa. 0.0 (10.000 to 25.000).

Mass, (25,000

are the

only one

who can gre your

Large 11x14 size

To the people who think the world of you... give the gift

somewhgs | colder south portion tonight. ©

| tee, a C. I. O. group, showing that Ohio—Mostly cloudy, probably light snow

this afternoon or early tonight h I TR Eo portion; tomorrow, fair, Sti Soot been laid off in 21 relatively small ew tuck Mostly cloudy, probably light | Steel mills in and around McKees snow in north and east central portions | y this afternoon or early tonight : igh: Iv | Ro Ripnene HHQ Cores, WI

J

they want this Christmas! It’s you they're interested in, so give them a lovely,

MEETINGS TOMORROW

Rotary Club, luncheon, Claypool Hotel, no Indiana Municipal League, meeting and m.

luncheon, Claypool Hotel, 9 a.

colder in extreme west portion’ ‘onight; tomorrow fair and continued cold

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES

Station, Weather, noon. Amarillo, Tex. Mercator Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, | Bismarck, N. D noon. Boston aera eee. Universal Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, | Chicago noon Cincinnati g Universify of Michigan Club, luncheon, | Cleveland, O. Board of Trade, noon | Denver Dodge City. Helena, Mont, Jacksonville,

Knights of Columbus Lunch Club, Hotel Washington, noon. Alpha Tau Omega, Trade, noon, Gyro Club,

luncheon, Board of AM

Temp. 34

AT Bar, 30.06

luncheon, Spink-Arms Hotel,

eevee PECHY coe JER Kas. ....Clear

MARRIAGE LICENSES

(These lists are from official at the County Court House. The Times, Rs ngzles ey therefore, fs not responsible for errors in | Minneapolis mames or addresses.) Mobile, Ala.

New Orleans Charles Hood, Mary | New York West, 18, eity

| Okla. City, Charles Lasiter. 26. of 25 Wisconsin St.: | Omaia Neb. Quelle Williams, 18, of 618 S.

Meridian | Pittsburgh | Portland. Ore. tvappietius Crippen, 18. citv: Mae Povn- | San Antonio. Tx, ....C er city, i San Francisco 48, of 1931 N. Illinois | 31. Louix 24. of 1931 N. Illinois | Tampa, Fla Washington. D.G.

| Kansas City, Mo. .. records | Little Rock, Ark.

21,

Connersville;

Jack Chresiensen,

St. Marths DePoy. St.

Steel production, operating nationally at only 31 per cent of capacity, is expected to proceed at about 26 per cent this week in this center of heavy production — approximately the same as last week in this district. In some of the large plants where the managements and unionists have agreed on part-time work— usually three days’ work instead of five for each man—in place of wholesale layoffs, the severity of the recession is not so painfully felt. In Pittsburgh, retail sales of merchandise have held up well so far, and some think they may improve as Christmas approaches. Local financial experts believe the depression may be temporary, ana that customers of he may soon re-

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