Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 December 1937 — Page 3

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 1, 1937

PROPOSE LOWER | ESTATE ANDGIFT | TAX BRACKETS |

House Committee Move Would Add 15 to 20 Millions to Coffers.

Doris Joins First

Lady on Tour

(Continued from Page One) (Continued from Page One)

(Continued from Page One)

(Continued from Page One)

Municipal Court today and hearing continued on the drunkenness charge. She was held on $100 bond. A charge of child-neglect also was placed against her by Capt. Petit.

asset-listing had “no place in a taxpayers’ report.” “I'm not certain about the le-| gality of such a requirement by the Treasury,” he said. “It certainly is not germane to an income tax report. If such a proposal were made in connection with tax legislation in the Congress it would be thrown out

New minimum ton prices at Indi« na mines and present prices are: New Price Old Price, Domestic lump $2.10 to $2.75 $1.75 to *2.78 Egg (large ... 200to 2.65 160to 225

Eleven-vear-old Louise Coulton came to Indianapolis yesterday from Murfreesboro, Tenn. She said she] was to have met her mother at | {he bus station, but that her mother was not there. So Louise, after waiting for some time, went to a movie and stayed through two shows. Having caught up on her movie going, she went to a policeman and told him she was lost. “Mother failed to meet me. lives here, and gets her mail general delivery, but I don’t know her address,” she told the officer. * ~-She spent the night at the Detention Heme and today police are seeking her mother.

90 30 ; 2.15 1.6 2.10 “Indiana premium domestic lump present price is $3.15. tStoker coal.

Reserves Comment Senator Clark (D. Mo.), member of the Senate Finance Committee, indicated doubt as to legality of the forms but reserved comment pending a Treasury explanation. In the meanwhile, the Adminis- | tration drive for enactment of Wages-Hours legislation at the special session of Congress neared 2 crisis today as legislative skirmishing on other points of President | Roosevelt's program extended. President William Green of the | American Federation of Labor | called his executive council to meet | Friday to consider the wages-hours situation. Unless 218 House members sign a petition by this weekend to bring the Wages-Hours | Bill to the floor for action, consid- | eration at the special session will be | impossible.

Plan Farm Bill Foray

Wages-hours supporters planned | a foray against the Farm Bill un- |

new

Old Price to $3.38 to 3.4

ow

I EILIED

| Domestic Egg Nut and pea. ... Railroad Industrial

lump. . §

L130

15 .00 10 15 50

— on PT Q J D ow

YOUNGSTER, 14, | City Detective APOLOGY ENDS FINDS MOTHER | Probes Theft lieve one of the finest qualities a man can have is spunk. A-weakling Toone dno, went sadly abou: | Hints State Department Is with spunk. vou Rise Is to Be 50 to 75 Cents his work at police headquarters to-| «Sime i can expec 5 16 5 Satisfied After Japanese | After Dec. 16, Say harges. | C 9 appeared from its parking place at | my nih Clg St. Clair and Meridian Sts., last my Uncle Squinpoetry and when | Pay approximately $525,000 more for the editor read it under the new prices. It was the first time during the | entire Chinese-Japanese war that | lated. | so! ‘Well, mister, I'll tell you some- | 3 Without smiling, the Japanese |thin’ that'll take you down a Deg | po. Company Extends Deadline; Violence Flares in officer approached Mr. Hunt and | a ton prices and they shook hands. She | reached into his pocket for a calling | New Price and guards engaged in fisticuffs | card and scribbled on it the equiva- | BY BEN 2.80 to $3.20 WEST VIRGINIA One Minor Crash Reported | pomecic ump . 53501034

IN Ol | | | RISON will always give up and quit when | , 15 ; day. blow in return. Return Vessel. Dealers. night. chy. He went up Ttalian-owned tugs which they had it, he turned to| New Prices Listed a foreign power had obtained full | chy and he said sailors left the tugs and returned to | or two! You ain't the only one | Industrial slack. New minimum for New England. After some confusion, it developed after the stoning of the first | lent of “received, one tug.” The %0 to 3.30 $2 50 to $2 50 To Police Overnight; |5:

| FLAG INCIDENT, Says: —] WiLL INCREASE Detective Sergeant Morris Corbin, he gets a hard blow, but when you Waits in Detention Home as His first task was to investigate | Thats why I've to St. Louis to BUS STRIKE IN appropriated, along with the Feit- | my Uncle SquinJapanese recognition of any prin-| «we don’t print such stuff as this!” a their own vessel. A polite, mus-| hat won't print it!” Railroad fuel approximate present prices | Pocahontas and West Virginia fuels that the consular officer wanted a | | at the mines are: 10 to 2.25 Greyhound bus to leave Boston in| officer obtained similar receipts 35 . 2.40 to Pea . . Ind Eight Are Fined.

Old Price $2.45 to $2.78 1.70 to 2.35

2.10to 2.35 1.50 to 1.90

TES Rs Oi | Y COAL PRICE who is in charge of the stolen au- |give a blow on the chin to a man Parent Faces Two the theft of his own car which dis- | always admired sell some of his|buy 1500000 tons annually, will ing. | NEW DEADLOCK ja it felt the Japanese had Vvio-|pncle Squinchy says “Oh, is that | tachioed Japanese consular police | (Copyright, 193) (Continued from Page One) receipt for the tug. Mr. Hunt POCAHONTAS Sh Yew to several days. | from the Italian authorities. Siac .. 2.00 to

In Pawtucket, R. I, six men| 0 to

stoned a bus and beat the driver. | Far-Reaching Move 0to

(stoker) ustrial Railroad

15 2°15 20

None of the 10 passengers was injured. For Peace Seen By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMS

Times Foreign Editor

WASHINGTON, Dec. 1.—It would |

An 11-year-old alleged member of a band of “street arabs” who spend |

their time wandering the downtown | . streets, was to appear before As F. L. to Consider

Juvenile Court Judge John F..Wage-Hour Bill Geckler today. | - . J | WASHINGTON. Dec. 1 (U. P.) — | be no exaggeration to say that there

Judge Geckler said he would ask 13 rE him to explain why he preferred | President William Green of the | is now under way the most far- | 6 : : a the precarious street existence, sell- | American Federation of Labor called reaching world peace move since | oa : a od | ing trinkets or magazines to get a | his executive council to meet in yersgilles. i ‘ : | clude recent wage increases to | = 5 de few coins, to & normal life at home. | Special session Friday to consider) yp .wjj pe carried out, mot by | 1 ey Siig Two night. | iners and provide for a margin » Y | The traffic court docket was the | ofit 1 t he “ex | means of one gigantic conference |lightest in recent months with | of profit for operators, he "

Police said the members of the | the possibility of wages-hours legis- | “Minimum rates of pay and such as that following the World | Judge Dewey Myers fining eight | plained.

0 5 ——— 21 i

$1.9 iNo com

See Stabilization Marion County enjoyed 24 hours | sa . traffic safety, police reports | The Commission's minimum showed today | prices and regulations should serve One ninor “Bent-fender” accident to stabilize a basic industry, Mr, was all that marred a perfect Yec- | Sigmon said. Minimum prices in=-

5 . ve *On line parison. tOff line,

| of

»

= : “ "os ; | lation. Visiting miners in their homes to see how they eat and sleep and Glan glept'in vetan: Houses wid | : truck coal

less Seuthern Representatives drop | opposition to the labor measure. Other developments: Presidential housing

dations were studied by House and | Glass |

Senate committee. Senator (D. Va.) criticized the proposal as extending Government competition with business Senator Thomas (D. Okla.) injected an appeal for his plan to sta-

bilize the dollar's value in terms of |

commodities into discussion of the Farm Bill

‘Deal’ May Free Pay-Hour Bill

By THOMAS L. STOKES Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, Dec. 1—President Roosevelt has hardly landed a decent mess of fish in Florida waters before harried House leaders find themselves plagued by

recommen- |

a‘

live in poverty, Mrs. Cromwell, the

The tobacco heiress, who recently more,” Cromwell are shown with miners velt’s column, Page 13.)

strife

| new outbreak of sectional over

within the Democratic Party the wage-hour and farm bills. | The renewed factional warfare broke out when Democrats from the East, North and Middle West interested in passage of the WageHour Bill banned together to prevent Southerners from getting what they want for cotton in the Farm Bill, now before the House, the Southerners help to break the Rules Committee's grip on the Wage-Hour Bill by signing the discharge petition on Speaker Bankhead's desk. Threats of such action had been

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Here's County Traffic Record |

Deaths (To Date) 193% eo 1936 | Deaths in City 1937

Accidents 30) _ Accidents .... Injured

(Nov.

Arrests (Nov. 30) Speeding 4 Reckless Driving 9

Running Preferential Street

ning Red

i Run oo Light 2

| Drunken Driving 0

Others 8

MEETINGS TODAY

County Prosecutors of Indiana, stalewide conference, Claypool Hotel, all day. Irvington Artists, annual exhibit, 5438 Washington St., 7 to 10 p. m. : Indiana University Club, football dinner, Indianapolis Athletic Club, night. Indianapolis Amateur Movie Club, meeting, Claypool Hotel, 8 Lions Club, luncheon

E

p. m. Hotel Washington,

noon Indianapolis Council of Parent-Teachers. meeting, Hotel Washington, 10 a. m. Foundrymen’'s Association, dinner, Hotel Washington. 6:30 Beverage Credit naeum, noon. : Kiwanis Club, luncheon. Columbia Club,

p. m Group. luncheon, Athe-

oon Young Men’s Discussion Club, dinner, z n 6

. o . . Purdue Alumni Association, luncheon, 1 Severin, noor District American funcheon, Board of Trade, noon. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, luncheon. Board f de, noon. Ol Riana Po Real Estate Board, Property Management Division, luncheon, Ca-

nary Cottage, noon.

(See also Women’s Events, Page Eight)

Legion,

MEETINGS TOMORROW

Advertising Club of Indianapolis, luncheon. Columbia Club, noon. § County Prosecutors of Indiana, wide conference, Claypool Hotel, all day. Irvington Artists, annual exhibit, 5436 E. Washington St., 7 to 10 & m. Fine Paper Credit roup, luncheon, Men's Grille, William H. Block Co., noon. Indianapolis Real Estate Board, luncheon. Hotel Washington. noon. Sigma Chi, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon ! American Business Club, umbia Club, noon I luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. Sigma Nu, luncheon, Hotel Washington,

state-

luncheon, Co-

ROCaravan Club, luncheon, Murat Temple, noon : Indiana Motor v Traffic ncheon, Hotel Antlers, noon. ty Club, United States Department of Agriculture, luncheon, Board of Trade,

Hogi Club, luncheon, Severin Hotel, noon. Construction League of Indianapolis, luncheon, Architects and Builders Building, noon . Alliance Francaise, ton. 8 p. m. Tar Retail Research Group, meeting, Lincoln Hotel, a Ladies Oriental S

tel. 8 p.m amma Phi Zeta, meeting, Lincoln Ho-

el, 8 p. m. a , In Daa Auxiliary, Firemen's 7p. m

Association,

meeting, Hotel Wash-

«Sm. ; hrine, meeting, Lincoln

t dia ! meeting, Lincoln Hotel, 7

BIRTHS

Girls Wond,

Association,

Kenneth, Betty at “1310 WN. Pershing. : Earl, Sorothy Myer, at St. Vincent's, James, Marie Doyle, at St. Vincent's. Rolland, Emma Skomp, at Methodist. George, Maxine Burkert, at Methodist. Eber, Marie Pickett, at Methodist. Joseph, Eva Sidener. at Methodist. John, Osa Lloyd, Methodist. * Clarence, Ruth Christopher, Meth-

Meth-

al

Emma VanTreese, at odist Golden, Dorothy Arnett, at Methodist. Joseph, Edna Williams, at 1506 W. Ohio, Theodore. Mary Young, at 929 W. 25th. Charles, Dorothy Wollenweber, at 820 N. Sherman Drive. Samuel, Theresa Comado, 537 E. Merrill.

at

Boys James, Mabel Nicely, at St. Vincent's. Arthur, Roberta Feltman, at St. Vincent’s. Orville, Emma Blacklidge, at St. Vincent’s. Jay, Jerrie Nash, at St. Vincent's. careth, Lucile Schilling, at St. Vin'8.

J Washington,

Lloyd. Dana Brooks, at St. Vincent's. Wvatt, Grace Wood, at St, Vincent's, Robert, Dorothy Talbot, at Methodist. Willie, Freda Stoner, at Methodist. Conrad, Josephine Black, at Methodist. James, Jeannette Loer, at Methodist. Leon, Pearl Levi, at Methodist John, Frances Hughes, at Methodist. Creston, Thelma Butz, at Methodist. Miller, Norma Sherman, at Methodist. ster, Kathleen Clinehens, at Methodis

St Butler, Catherine Campbell, at 2331 ew. . Edna York, at 4360 Baltimore.

Zarland, Anna Burton, at 4907 E. 16th.

DEATHS

Daniel W. Bristow, 22 tumor i Irma Kunkel, pneumonia Elmer Kiefer, sarcoma. Espy L. Bell, teriosclerosis Sarah Taylor, 47, hernia. California J. Doll, 76, arieriosclerosis Anna K. Kline, 72, 2708 S. | toxic goiter. William Smith, 64, at 211 N. East, coro- | nary occlusion. 76,

| Michael Sheedy, | nary occlusion. Aline Mae Hoffmann, 59, at Central Indiana, chronic myocarditis. arry Harland Harris, 27. at 1402 Oliver, chronic interstitial nephritis. Jackson K. Langdon, 96, at 3033 N. Illi- | mois, hypostatic pneumonia, | Trvin Bell, 43, at City, coronary occlusion . _Eldoris ¥Y. Green, 71, cinoma, Anna Hancock Byard, 68, arteriosclerosis. Martha Jane Reese at 2218 Ken- ’ , acute myocarditis. George K. Sanders, 72, at 2103 Alfree veyenral ZPoplexs, ! izzie ead, 66, at 924 W. 25t} - Wy Ww 5th, hemi Minnie nephritis. James

., at

an al

at Methodist, broncho41, 3616 N.

61,

at Illinois, Central Indiana, at Long, at at Meridian,

at 214 Leeds, coro-

|

| at

Veterans, car-

at 654 E. 13th,

ne il,

Groves Goldston,

68.

52, ‘at “City,

N. Tibbs, at Schofield,

t 232 W. 18th, influenza. at 1635 Yandes, mvo-

H Duwayne Munden, 2 miliary tuberculosis. : Susan Ann Boruff, | arteriosclerosis. Daisy 48, cinoma,

Davis, Lena E. Bloomfiel 7 V t boprena E. eld, 57, at 850 N. East, 1 day,

| . Infant Montgomery | intracranial hemorrhage. St oman Rudolph Allen Jaenisch, 17. at City, skull

acture Mary C. Corbin, 43. pulmonary tuberculosis Sophia Spier, 69, at fracture of left hip. Louise Mary Carey, carcinoma. Hugh Bass, tonitis.

J. Jermain, coronary occlusion, Robert Francis, chronic nephritis, ITda Noonis, 59, Macy Moore, carditis. Haden

at 620 2702

— i,

a 73,

at Riley,

79, at 1315 Spann,

at 1529 Lawton,

| fr

at

at 1133 W. 18th, Central 70,

at City,

Indiana, Methodist,

general peri-

at 46,

OFFICIAL WEATHER

ewe United States Weather Burean

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST: Cloudy and unsettled tonight and tomorrow; lowest temperature tonight about 26; somewhat warmer tomorrow.

Sunrise ......6:38 |“Sunset ...... 4:20

TEMPERATURE —Dec 1, 1936—

. 18 1%. m0 BAROMETER a. m...... 3048 Precipitation 2 hrs. endin otal precipitation Eyam Excess .

" MIDWEST WEATHER Indiana—Mostly unsettled toni stly uns onight IOmOTIOW Bog quite so cold a 2nd S centra portions 0 i ; Warmer tomorrow. Wrihl, Naa Hlinois—Considerable cloudiness tonight s s tonigh and tomorrow, not so cold extreme Rosth tonight, somewhat warmer tomorrow. Lower Michigan—Mostly cloudy tonight and tomorrow; not quite so cold HH central portion tonight, somewhat warmer tomorrow.

Ohio—Partly cloudy tonight and tomor-

tomorrow.

Kentucky—Mostly cloudy tonight and tomorrow, not much change in temperature.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT Station, Amarillo, Bismarck,

A.M.

Tex. N.5D.

Cincinnati Cleveland, O. ... Denver is Dodge City, Helena, ont. Jacksonville, Kansas City, . See Little Rock, ATK. ...uu. Los Angeles .. Miami, Fla. Minneapolis Mobile, Ala. New Orleans

Omaha, ‘Neb. Pittsburgh ; Portland, Ore. San Antonio, Tex San Francisco St. Louis .. Tampa, Fla

..Cloudy Cioudy Snow

5 «+.,Clear D.C. ....PtCldy

™n

«world’s richest girl,” are shown above after stopp

Franklin D. Roosevelt and Mrs. Doris Duke

ing

alleys and ate when and where they could.

at the Quaker community homestead

project ‘near Republic, Pa. The cases of four ‘teen age |

maximum hours, which the council | war but by a series of more or less | motorists $61 and suspending anbelieves should be incorporated in | : { other $21.

wages and ‘hours legislation ‘will ‘be | integrated diplomatic efforts. Only 20 motorists were arrested |

Individuals who now | from the mines, buying it at varye ing prices and selling it in Indian

announced no motive for her tour.

unless |

Long, brain |

ar- |

inguinal |

car- |

row, slightly warmer in northwest portion |

“from 12 to 18 millions Mrs. Roosevelt and Mrs. (Mrs. Roose-

inherited

wives and children.

heard in the corridors for several days, but even those promoting them held little hope until they discovered that under the pending measure cotton will not be brought within the Farm Bill's scope for a year and that compulsory cotton control which some Scutherners favor, is not provided. Southerners plan to offer amendments to make the measure more | to their liking. The Wage-Hour bloc are saying they will oppose these amendments unless Southerners permit a House vote on the Wage-Hour Bill. The threat seemed to carry effect when Chairman Jones (D. Tex.) of the Agriculture Committee, whose job it is to pilot the Farm Bill through the House, signed the discharge petition and 13 other members, including Southerners, followed suit. Among them was Rep. Ramspeck (D. Ga.), ranking

He is the only Georgian to sign. Today when the House met to continue debate on the Farm Bill of the necessary 218. The lobbies buzzed with conferences, cent of preludes to fights in the House. If 218 signatures are obtained by | Friday, then the Wage-Hour Bill | can come before the House Dec. 13. If not it will be January before the measure can come up under the discharge rule.

1337 E. Market, |

STATE PRINTING LET TOFIVE CITY FIRMS

| Contracts Total $54,000 for

Two Years.

i About 10 per cent of the

Democrat on the Labor Committee, | which drafted the Wage-Hour Bill.

the |

vouths, Indianapolis auto and driving it t California on a pleasure jaunt, wa continued until Dec. 15 by Commissioner Howard Young.

The leader of the band, 14-year-old Indianapolis boy, escaped jail in Missouri and is a fugitive, Assistant U. S. District Attorney Paul |

Pfister said.

The four were released on their

own recognizance and immediatel arrested by Indianapolis

Home. Three of the boys are from In dianapolis and two from Brazil.

charged with stealing an |

U.S.

police. Three of them were taken to jail and one to the Juvenile Detention |

The recent letters exchanged be-

| gress for favorable consideration and | tween Premier Chamberlain, of s | action,” Mr. Green said. | Great Britain and Premeir Mussolini | The Federation announcement |pf Italy were a part of the gen- | came as last-minute attempts were | eral scheme. So were Lord Hali- | made to get enough names on a | fax's visit to Chancellor Hitler, and petition in the House to break the |this week's conference at London pending Wage-Hour Bill there out |petween the leaders of Britain and of the Rules Committee. | France. “Methods of enforcement of such | Secretary of State Hull's program minimum and maximum require-|of economic appeasement, world ments, together with the adminis- | (rade. war-debt settlement and arms tration of a wages and hours -act | jjmitation also fits into the picture, will be formulated and incorporated | 55 do the activities concerning the in recommendations for hours and | ma; East. wages legislation by the executive | Reduced to the simplest terms, the council, Mr. Green said. | purpose of the “haves” is to obtain It is probable that the meeting | from the “have nots” the frankest of the executive council will con- | statement of their aims,

: : : | possible tinue for two days, Friday and Sat- | then come to terms by a process of

| drafted and recommended to Con- | 0

v

Dog Gone

Woman Saved From Pit Where Her Spaniel Perished.

the petition had 194 names, 24 short |

reminis- | other bitter

|

| |

| |

| | |

State's |

| printing contracts on supplies for |

the State Printing Board. All awards, involving $54.444.45, were let. to Indianapolis firms.

Class 1 printing, booklets and pamphlets, amounting to $19,529.28, went to the William B. Burford Printing Co., 40 S. Meridian St. Last vear it was held by the Ft. Wayne | Printing Co. Class 2, flat work, amounting to $22,588.73, also was awarded to the Burford company.

lishing Co., Lafayette Class 3, stationary, amounting to $1,778.14, went to Stewart's, Inc., 44 E. Washington St., which held it the last two years. Class 4, legislative printing, | amounting to $2,272.05, went to the { Hendren Press, 225 N. New Jersey | St., and last year was held by the lC. E. Pauley Co., Indianapolis. | Class 5, court forms, amounting to $2,276.25. was returned to the B#ok-walter-Ball-Greathouse Co., 1520 N. Capitol Ave.

"Your Nose in a Book"

Means Your Eyes Need Attention’

ble.

Free Bus!

It was held the | last two years by the Haywood Pub- |

{the next two vears was let today by |

OS ANGELES, Dec. 1 (U. P). —A woman who flung herself into an abysmal asphalt pit in a foolhardy attempt to rescue her pét dog, was confined in Georgia Receiving ‘Hospital today suffering from sh®k and hysteria. She had sunk to her armpits and her head had dropped forward into the sticky, black mass by the time three park workers formed a human chain to seize her wrists and haul her out with only a few minutes to spare. She was identified as Mrs. Alice Harris. At the hospital she still screamed “My baby, my baby.” Attendants learned that she was calling for her cocker spaniel which evidently fell into the pit and perished. La Brea pits have been traps for animals since prehistoric ages. Bones of sabertoothed tigers, giant elephants, ancient bears and other beasts have been recovered from them, perfectly preserved. The pits are surrounded by three-foot walls. Their grip and suction on an object is more treacherous than quicksand or peat bog. Sam Warren, park crew foreman, was standing nearby with two workmen when Mrs. Harris climbed the wall and leaped into Pit 9. The men ran over, two of them braced themselves against the wall and held to the third man, who reached out and seized Mrs. Harris’ wrists, It required all their strength to save her.

M’NAMEE UNDER PAROLE

NEW YORK, Dec. 1 (U. P)—

Graham McNamee, 49, radio an

urday. | mutual accommodation.

Two Ford Plants Three-Point European

Face New Strikes Peace Plan Pushed

| PITTSBURGH, Dec. 1 (U. P.).— | I bed ine ‘Omited ‘Awtomobile Workers’ |. LONDON, Dec. 1 (U. P.)—Gtreal | Union will carry its strike against | Britain and France began the pre-

{| Beach, Cal., next week, Richard T. | Frankensteen, U. A. W. vice president, said today. With the union in a desperate | struggle to unionize Ford plants, | Mr. Frankensteen revealed at Wash- | relieve heightening tension between ington yesterday that union mem- | the democratic and totalitarian bers in both plants were instructed | powers. to walk out on a moment's notice.

| examination of the possibility of a | broad, three-point program for a European peace settlement designed to halt the wild armaments race and |

BERLIN, Dec. 1 (U. P.).—All at- | tempts for an international “New. Deal” have been obstructed by | | Anglo-French solidarity,

‘Hutson Predicts political

‘A. F. L.-C. |. 0. Truce | sources asserted today in comment- |

| FRENCH LICK, Ind, Dec. 1 (U.|jng on the outcome of the two- | F.).—A voluntary movement for co- | power conversations in London. operation within the ranks of labor indicates the American Federation of Labor and the Committee for In- |g strongly worded editorial, at- | dustrial Organization will sigh al|tributed to Premier Benito Musso- | truce “within a very short time," | jini which ridiculed the Brussels Thomas Hutson, Indiana Labor | par East conference, predicted JaCommissioner, said today. | pan’s victory over China, and adSpeaking before delegates at the |yjsed China to sue for peace. Indiana Highway Construction As-| The editorial declared that the sociation convention, Mr. Hutson |powers are incapable of halting pointed out that labor organizations | invulnerable” Japan. It was sarat present generally are consolidat- | castic about the role of the United | ing their gains, disciplining their {states in the Brussels conference. It | ranks and “establishing sane lead- | said: | ership.” “Norman Davis—the prudent “While a paper feud still exists Norman Davis who ran away with | between the A. F. of L. and the | the speed of a marathoner when he | C. 1. O. there has been within the | feared for a second that he would last two months a voluntary move- | be invited to London — Norman ment for co-operation,” Mr. Hut- | Davis was the man who certainly | son said. | would have unravelled the confu- | He pointed out that establishment | sion. | of the Indiana Division of Labor | “The first participation of the “marks the first serious attempt on | United States in a European confer- | the part of the State to help em- [ence for collective action, and | plovers and workers settle their dis- | around whose participation the Chiputes in a sane and orderly man- | cago speech had lighted the flame | ner.”

lof many hopes, had the saddest | RETURNED

| ending. Norman Davis is by now | | convinced himself that the confer- | Overland Jackson, charged with ee first-degree murder in connection

| ences whose uselessness is clear even | —— 5 with the fatal shooting last year of | DISBARMENT EFFECTED

| to a child, must never be convoked.” | Harry Ploch, Beech Grove liquor | — dealer, today was ordered returned Circuit Court Judge Earl R. Cox |

| MILAN, Italy, Dec. 1 (U. The Popolo d'Italia today published |

J —

|

TO JAIL

{ overnight, including four alleged

| speeders. { The case of Joseph B. Davies, 24,

| of 207 E. North St., a taxicab driver, | man- |

charged with involuntary slaughter in connection with the | traffic death of Albert Faenrich, 52, lof 119 N. Noble St., was continued | to Dec. 1. Mrs "a coal truck collided with her car at | 40th St. and Carrollton Ave. and | flipped it on its side.

"FIFTH CAESAREAN ‘BABY IS DELIVERED

CHICAGO, Dec. 1 (U.

| Isabel Barrett, 33, was delivered of | a baby by a Caesarean operation for | the fifth time in 12 years late yes- |

terday. The infant, a boy, weighed five

| }

at Mercy Hospital. Chicago phy-

iia . sicians said that more than two such | | Ford to Kansas City and Long | liminary work today for a detailed | goerations on the same

patient would be “very hazardous.” Both | mother and child were doing well, Dr. Morgan O'Connell said.

I. C. C. DENIES NEW

AIRLINE FOR CITY

WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 (U. P.).—

An application of the American Air- |

lines, Inc. to establish off-line service between Detroit and Cincinnati and Detroit and Indianapolis, was denied today by the Interstate Commerce Commission. The proposed service was opposed by North American Aviation, Inc, and Pennsylvania Central Airlines, Corp.

WPA ROLLS TOP MARK OF 1,500,000

WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 (U. P.).— Works Progress Administration relief rolls increased to more than

1,500,000 for the week ending Nov. | 13 according to statistics released

today. The number on WPA projects for the week was 1,500,094. For the week ending Aug. 21, the last time the figure exceeded 1,500,000 the figure was 1,504,493.

Bertha Elliott, 4710 Carroll- | ton Ave., was uninjured today when |

P.).—Mrs. |

and one-halfswpounds and was born |

nouncer, was under parole today to | appear in court Dec. 9 to answer charges of assault and leaving the scene of an accident. The complaints alleged that Mr, McNamee’s automobile struck William Gahr, 70,

to the Indiana State Reformatory as | today signed the order making | a parole violator pending trial here | effective the disharment of Howard later this month. He has been held A Bates, attorney convicted of em-| in the County Jail. ‘bezzlement in Federal Court.

Nov. 24. Mr. Gahr is in Harlem Hos-

| pital with a fractured skull.

Holding a printed page too close or too far away from vour eyes definitely means that your eyes need attention! glasses will materially aid the trouIf your vision focuses at the wrong distance vou owe it to yourself to have an examination!

Dr. Wm. D. Elson

Registered Optometrist—Office at Sears. Roebuck and Ceo.

Alabama at Vermont

In most cases proper

Evening Dinner at the Russet for Economy

The delights of dining out are greatly enhanced when you know your dinner at home would probably cost

than here—not counting the

more

bother of planning, prepafing and cooking it.

immediate eye

Free Parking!

S

East Washington

usset

The Unusual CAFETERIA

Second Floor Take Elevator

Look

That's the first excited r

| apolis at low cost, will be required | to observe the Commission’s action, he said. Thus a source of cheap fuel, blamed for some of the smoke nuisance here, will be controlled, Mr. Sigmon claimed. Indianapolis coal dealers at present are working on a proposed ordinance which would require licensing [of all truckers and dealers and inspection and weighing of coal in an | effort to standardize the local business

Other Rates Listed With a reasonable profit assured through minimum prices, operators | will be in a position to supply cleaner, better coal to consumers, Mr, | Sigmon claimed. | New minimum ton prices at the mines on coal produced in other sections are: WESTERN KENTUCKY

Domestic block, $2.25 to $2.05 Furnace egg, $2.05 to $1.90. Nut,

$1.90 ta $1.60 Pea, $1.75 to $1.40 Industrial slack, $1.35 to $1.00 Railroad fuel, $1.95 ILLINOIS Domestic lump. $2.75 to $2.10 Egg (large), $2.65 to $2 Nut, $2.45 to $1.90 Pea, $2.45 to $1.90 Industrial slack. $1.85 to $1.30 Railroad fuel, $2.15 IOWA Domestic lump, $3.80 to $2.85 Ege. $3.60 to $2.70. Nut, $3.50 to $2.75 Pea, $3.50 to £2.75 Industrial slack, $2.50 to $2.05 Railroad fuel, $2.70 to 83.55 OHIO

Domestic lump. $2.40 to $2.10

Fgg, $2.25 to $1.90 Nut and pea, $2.15 to $1.80 Railroad fuel, $2.15 Industrial slack. $1.76 to $1.41

"Phil A. Penna, Ex-Coal ‘Official, Is 80

| TERRE HAUTE, Dec. 1 (U. P) = | Phil A. Penna, retired secretarytreasurer and Commissioner for Indiana Bituminous Coal Operators, observed his 80th birthday quietly at his home here yesterday Until his retirement in 1928, Pen- | na had acted as spokesman for coal | operators in many national confer- | ences.

'EX-BANKER

IS PAROLED

LEWISBURG, Pa. Dec. 1 (U. P) J. Arthur House, Cleveland banker who has served two years of a fourvear sentence on a banking law | violation charge, was released on [parole from the Northeastern Ped- | eral Penitentiary today.

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