Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 January 1938 — Page 16

“~

PAGE 16

PAE EI mS OES A TOR Anis i * . * » ) i

HINT PROFESSOR AS POSSIBILITY

FOR HIGH COURT

Wyoming Man on Faculty At Yale Added to Rumored List.

By HERBERT LITTLE

Times Special Writer

WASHINGTON, Jah. 14 —A witty

and erudite Yale professor, Thur-

| |

™ *

Louisiana

| |

|

|

I NA rn woe y

man Arnold of Wyoming, was dis- | closed today as the latest oi some | fwo-score of lawyers being consid-

ered for the Supreme Court. Prof. Arnold has attained wide attention this winter as the author Ol volume seeking some current-gay as mere superstition. President indication of choice, expected soon after Justice tires next Tuesday. other circles, centers largely around the of Stanley Reed, U. S General; Judge Florence Allen

to explain

the direction of Sutherland

In

discussion

‘The Folklore of Capitalism,” a | away | economic beliefs |

Roosevelt has given no | his to be announced | re- |

now ! names | Solicitor | of |

the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals, | and ex-Senator Sam Bratton, also |

on the Circuit Court. Others mentioned prominently include Donald Richberg, former NRA executive; Senator

Wisconsin, Another name on the unofficial is Frank P. Devaney of Minnesota, former State Supreine Court justice and head of the new American Lawyers’ ‘Guild.

list

Born in Wyoming Prof. Arnold is 46, a native of Laramie, Wyo., and served as Mayor Ol of the State Legislature in his early 30s. He ‘was graduated from Princeton and from Harvard Law School. Yale gave him a degree in 1931. He practiced law in Chicago from 1S14 to 1919, when he moved back to Laramie After nine years of law practice and Democratic politics in Wyoming, Prof. Arnold went to the faculty of West, Virginia College of 1928. He was on

Law in the Wickersham

Commission's advisory committee on |

prohibition reform in 1930-31. HIS tempo accelerated when the New Deal came in. He served as special assistant to the counsel of the AAA in 1933-34, and argued some of the first AAA court cases. In 1934 he went to the Philippine Islands as adviser to the Governor General on the JonesCostigan Sugar Act. In 1936 he was back in Washington as a trial examiner for the SEC, and inh the same year he became special assistant to the Attorney General on tax cases. Called Realistic

Last year he argued several tax cases before the Supreme Court. He is a close friend of Assistant Attorney General Robert H. Jackson. He das been on the Yale Law School faculty since 1330. Former Justice Department associates say Prof. Arnold is “extremely able, realistic, and he goes direcsly to the point.” They describe him as dynamic, nervous and vigorous in expounding his views. Geographically, it is pointed out, Prof. Arnold is “right,” since the retirements of Justices Van Devanter and Sutherland, both from the Mountain States, leave this judicial circuit without a justice.

Minton of Indiana, Gov- | ernor Murphy of Michigan, Dean | Lloyd Garrison of Wisconsin Law | School and ‘Governor La Follette of

his home town and as a member i

general |

Predictions of a virtual ocean of

beneath the Gulf of Mexico, 18 miles from land, have spurred Louisiana to embark on an ambitious Above, a barge floats the derrick and drilling equipment used to probe the

project to tap the pool.

ocean bottom for “black gold.”

| evorinas for both boys and girls, Warden Lewis E. Lawes of Sing Sing is one of the governors. Some time ago, according to Executive Director Willard 1.. XKauth, the league got to wondering what boys and girls really like in the way of food, entertainment, sports and the like. Tn its questionnaire, the league asked the children to name their favorite meat, movie star, dessert, mode of transportation (airplain, train or bus), vegetable, fruit, radio figure, sport and athlete It also asked the boys and girls to state their preference between companions of their own and the opposite sex, whether they wanted to go to college and which they would NEW YORK, Jan. 14 (U. P).= rather do: Read a book, see a movie The Boys Athletic League blasted lor listen to the radio. many a lay belief and rendered| On the subject of companions the many a comic-strip and radio gag boys came closer than the girls to | obsolete today by announcing that achieving a united front, 87 per little boys prefer spinach to all other cent averring that they preferred vegetables. (the company of other boys, while Moreover, the league reported, [Only 59 per cent of the girls likea little girls like spinach, too=al- | thelr own company best. though if given a choice they Remember That Song?

ROBERT TAYLOR? 0.K. SAY BOYS: GIRLS SPURN HIN

Spinach Swell, Former Add, Thus Shattering Fable Of Long-Standing.

Fathoms ‘Oceans of

; "st. Oe that, the boys agreed Both hoys and girls chose bananas

that Robert Taylor was all right as | AS the No. 1 fruit and ice cream as a ‘movie star—although he didn't | their favorite dessert, take first honors with them--while | The sexes agreed again on the the girls ignored him. The boys |Subject of meat, each picking tur-

chose Buck Jones, Dick Powell and | key first, but the boys upset many

Shirley | Pest. The girls chose chicken, " The majority of each sex said they wanted to go to college. Th the | realm of sports the boys picked football, baseball and swimming, | one-two-three. The girls favored ahd many others about the likes and | SWimming, skating and oo ys dislikes of children from the an | SPOTL: heroes, in order, ook Deo I= swers to a questionnaire submitted | Maggio, Babe Ruth and Jack Dempto - 22/416 youngsters between the |S€V. The girls’ Sonja Hente, Dempages of 6 and 16. sey and DiMaggio. Of the boys, 24 per cent gave spin- | Both Like Movies ach as their favorite vegetable, 21 Joe Penner headed the bovs' radio | per ‘cent voted for corn and 20 Per yi ang ran second oh the girls. | punt for potatoes. Thirty per cent | Eddie Cantor, No. 1 with the girls, of the girls listed corn first, 28 per | was No. 2 with the Bovs. | cent spinach and 19 per cent car- | Both boys and girls picked the

like true feminists, gave Temple and Jane Withers a tie for | first place, and placed Tyrone Power and Sonja Henie in second and third. The league learned those facts

Catwalks link the drilling operations with land in the shallower reaches of the oil field, and once abandoned wartime freighters, below, are anchored off shore to serve as storage ships. And on hearby islands men dig silt, at top, for use by drillers at sea in cutting through the rocks.

oil in the rocks

1 i |

FOC ASKED TODENY RADIO STATION PLEA

‘No Need for It, Examiner. | Says in Report.

Times WASHINGTON, Jan. 14 —A Ted[eral ‘Communications Commission | examiner today had recomn ended ! that the FOC deny the request of | the ‘Curtis Radiocasting Corp of Evansville to erect a radio station at Richmond, Ind. The corporation is a holding com- | pany which owns the capital stock (of Banks of the Wabash, Inc. | | licknsee of WBOW, Terre Haute, | {and Evansville on the Air, Inc. li-| [censee of WGBF, WEOA and | W1OXDD, Evansville R. H. Hyde, FCC examiner making | the report, says that no public “in- | terest, convenience, or necessity” would be served by erecting another | station in addition to WKBV at | | Richmond. Final approval of the | | report must come from the commis- | sioners. | |

Specinl

GOLD UNDER PHILADELPHIA

PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 14 (U. P). | | —Philadelphians walk around on! (10 million dollars in unclaimed | | gold, but it doesn’t bother them very | much. The cost of procuring it | (from the 15-foot vein of clay in| |'which it lies would far exceed the | value of the metal,

Goes Rig ~ AND EASES ITC

Highly medicated, speedy actin | Blue Star Ointment strikes at an | soothes the itching of eczema, rash, | tetter, ringworm and other kinds | of itch. Money back if first large | Yor fails to satisfy, Trial size 35o. —Adv,

500 Pairs Ladies' Fashionable

[is editor®of Chess Review and was | Honolulu.

rots. | movies above books and the radio, [but the girls made books their second choice, the boys choosing the | radio, On the question of travel, how- | ever, there was complete agreement |

la member of the American team which won the world championship | at Stockholm, Sweden, last August.

Here's Scientific Proof

While the data obtained on spina ————— a in ach was contrary to all preconcepCABLE OPENING MARKED tions, the league proved scien- | r [tifically what everybody else had | HONOLULU, Jan. 1¢ (U. P= ynown all along: That little girls | between the sexes. The majority of | Hawaii will celebrate early next [do not like little boys and-—to pre- each said they would go by airplane | at 7:30 tonight in the Green ROOM | van the 37th anniversary of fits serve the understatement — vice [every time, of the Indianapolis Athletic Club. linking to the United States by a | versa.

Sponsored by the Central Indiana f i | The B. A. L. was founded in 1926 = Chess Association, Mr. Horowitz also | 2413-mile-long trans-Pacific cable | to co-ordinate competitive sports ac- |

will speak on international play. He |system from Sah Francisco to | tivities in hoys' work agencies and | tin recreation centers and play-

HOROWITZ TO GIVE | CHESS EXHIBITION

Israel A. Horowitz, well-known | chess expert, is to give an exhibition

THE CHICAGO STORE we

Ns

| | | | | i

ny)

RD

SUITS, TOPCOATS AND OVERCOATS

Drastically Reduced

35

$27.50 Suits, Topcoats and Overcoats

Now Nowe

1 295 1 4% 1 6

Men's $2.98 Melton Jackets Warm, all wool jackets with $ 2 59

full zipper front-—-weil made, Sale of Girls’ $495

~~ A a

$14.95 Values ' Now...

Men . , ., don't miss i opportunity to v high quality clothing at dramatic savings . hugs

selections! $18.95 $22.95 Suits, Topcoats and Overcoats

Nowe

‘DESIGNED BEAUTIFUL PLEATED

Overcoats, ILLUMINATED

HEAVY METAL 3.CANDLE FIXTURE

&WAY LIGHTING ON ENTIRE

carefully tailored! Sizes 36 to 46!

i a Corduroy Pants Were $2.95. For men and

Li) Lo Boys’ $7.98

Mtr. Taylor, in that order. The girls, | 2 Preconception by voting hash next | 4

STATE SCHOOLS 95 HOGS ASSURE PORK AND LARD

Porkers Sent to Farm for Packing as Part of Exchange Plan.

Indiana Boys’ School employees today prodded 95 fattened hogs into trucks and shipped them to the State Farm for packing. In return, the Boys’ School will

be well supplied with lard and pork |

from the Farm. “This trade fs an example of exchange that goes on hetween Tndiana's penal and benevolent instititions the year 'round,” said Thurman Gottschalk, Division of Institutions supervisor, “Tt. helps to provide meals for

— PAGE

FRIDAY, JAN. 14, 1938

nearly 20000 State charges and about 2900 employees,”

Fruits, Vegetables Packed

In an average vear, institutions use more than 138,000 vards of cot ton cloth and 6'; million pounds of meat, Mr. Gottschalk reported. Last year, canned 300,000 No. 10 fruit and vegetables, not including sausr kraut, potatoes and pickles which were stored away,

“The Division co-ordinates pluses through our plan of change,” Mr. Gottschalk said Central Insane Hospital gardens provide some food for the CHrls' School at Clermont.

institutions cans of

SUrs exe

Relieve that head cold in 8 mi th magical Jack ; membranes and feel comfortable. rd remedy for 28 atyour druggist's,

TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES

THESE WAVES ARE SUPERIOR BECAUSE: 1. They ate tonic waves and they recondition the

TONIC

air, 2, They produce a deep strong, natural wave, 3. No oil treatments ate necessary before or after

WOMEN

Long Heavy Hair Causes * HEADACHE * ENCOURAGES DANDRUFF ® And Ts Out of Style

OUR FAMOUS FRENCH PERMANENT, ONLY

Complete with Hair Trim, Double Cocoanut Of Shampoo and Puvh-Up Set hair our specialty,

* EYESTRAIN

Si

(Live Steam)

Gray. dved, bleached

No Appointment Necessary

until the

5. Plenty of curls, 2

Shampoo and Finger Wave, both

Light Of Permanent for %3.01 Complete Bring a Friend.

$2 | Super Wave | Perteanent $3 | | Complete

| 2 for $5.m

Bring the Children |

Genuine Fugene Permanent Nationally $5

Known Complete

Our

35¢ Hair Cuts 35¢ 00% y 109

Clean—Nanitary-—New Pads—Fresh Solutions—Expert Operators.

LA] wd oud

WITH 3 STAGES Or LIGHTING ON REFLECTOR!

The Perfect Lamp for Your Home... will make a

Smart ears Younger at PIN MONEY PRICES! NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

Permanents Will Make You Took

Roosevelt Bldg. Corner Minois and Washington,

T1-0438, Satisfaction Avenred

1

Special At. DEE JEWELRY CO... 8 N. Illinois St.

® (Complete)

wonderful Girt!

Why use old style lamps and ruin your eyes when this new BEAUTIFULLY DE. SIGNED style Reflector Lamp can be had so reasonable with convenient terms? It provides exactly the right degree of light and has 3 stages of lighting on reflector. We invite you to inspect this lamp without obligation. Limited quantity, Get yours NOW while they last,

SPORT OXFORDS

Including 60 prs. of Educator and Lady Douglas Shoes

59 23

Up to $3 § Qualities

SENSATIONAL VALUES!

320 Prs. Discontinued Numbers of Nationally Advertised

PUMPS—STRAPS OXFORDS

Black or brown, kids and suedes. Broken sizes. Imagine buying $6 shoes for only ..

Winter Coats

$s :

Fur a hd self trimmed . . . well made! Wanted colors! Sizes 7to 14 years! ALL-WOOL GIRLS’ SWEATERS

49¢ Vr

$qes ys

Three-Piece SUITS LAMP

young men!

LARGE FLUTED TUBING IN ANTIQUED (VORY FINISH

Long Sports ' quality Sizes 8 to years!

» Boys’ Jackets Were $3.20.

ile fabric $ 5 59

eatherettes ..

trousers! backs, fabrics! 16

In black brown They're en sizes, but every pair is a REAL VALUE.

or calf. brok-

3 STAGES Of WERE Tole) NaS NI@ Eel

Sizes 32 to 42! $3.88 Snow For girls . plaid tops and § hats! Sizes 7 to 14 years! Pure Silk Nose Full fashioned. Irregulars of 5% and Toc 39. qualities!

24.CARAT NATURAL GOLD TRIM EFFECT

WO GENUINE MOONSTONE GLASS And You

Pay Only

45¢

No

Interest wN# Oavrving Charge

Women's Fur and Self

EXQUISITE il Spec \

HEAVY NEW Inverted Junior

Cus FLOOR LAMP

BASE ~With extra heavy

Moonstone Inserts, $0.95 Complete

ONLY 45¢ DOWN

Smartly designed. Three stages of light . . . Very similar to fllustration—Cord and plug complete,

1 97

Lot Includes ® Lady Douglas ® Tru-Step ® Red Cross © Educators @ Air-O-Pedic and other famous nationally advertised brands.

base and

Up to $6.00

Qualities

Trimmed COATS $9.95 Values 3 4 5 Now... You'll be amazed at the coats in these spectacular groups . . . all worth much more. Expert tailoring « + + Quality materials! $10.98 $16.98 $29.95 500 Pairs Men's Dress COATS COATS COATS 2 Be" Reduced Reduced Reduced Ladies Shoes OXFORDS SALE PRICE— SALE PRICE— SALE PRICE— DS I DD fo foo a 3 bs b \ hi pe or $1 00 | com $1 63 SG Qs $1 ges N fords, ties heels. BroBroken sizes. | ken sizes, hi y ES Newest styles, wanted colors, well lined, warmly interlined? ki | UP TO $2.50 QUALITIES All sizes for women and misses—but not in all styles!

Hl (LLB

DEE Jewelry Co.

18 N, ILLINOIS ST. Claypool. Hotel Ruilding

UP TO $2 QUALITIES

Open Saturday Night | Wil 9 o'Clock

(@ | ; /A\ Q Qiot

16 Fast WASHINGTON S71

Close Out! Winter DRESSES $9 and $3

Values up to $6! Prints and plain colors!

138 E. WASHINGTON ST. OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS TILL 9 P. M.