Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 June 1938 — Page 2
PAGE 2
—
SUSPECT HELD IN ATTEMPTED ROBBERY HERE
Thieves Steal Estimated Total of $14,270 in Local Crimes.
A suspected robber was captured while fleeing from an ice cream parlor at 1287 Arbor Ave. early today, following a struggle with the proprietor who reported two men had beaten him in an attempted holdup. Meanwhile, police sought burglars and thieves who stole loot and cash estimated at $14270 in overnight crimes, | William A. Zumpfe, 5330 N. Meridian St., an investment banker, reported home was looted of jewelry valued at $14,100 during the week-end. He told officers the loot included two rings, a bracelet and a watch. George Morris, 20, of 830 N. Oakland Ave. the ice cream store proprietor, told police the robber suspect and a companion entered his store shortly after midnight He said one of the men held his hand in his pocket as though concealing a gun and demanded: | “Give me your money.” Mr. Morris said when he ordered the men from the store, one of them struck him
Threw Chair
He said he grappled with the men, one of whom broke away and hurled a chair at 1} As the men fled, without obtaining any money, the suspect who was captured smashed his fist through the plate glass window, Mr, Morris said. James Seigman, of 917 Division | St.,, and Samuel Billington, of 57 Arbor Ave., passing by, reported they saw the men fleeing and captured one of them a block from the store. He was treated at City Hospital for a cut on his right hand and later held on vagrancy charges. He refused to divulge the identity of his companion, police said. Carolina Motor Express Lines officials told police tools valued at more than $60 were stolen from its garage at 561 W. 15th St. Bomar Cramer, Indianapolis pianist, reported that clothing valued at more than $17 was stelen from his studio at 1431 N. Meridian St., during a recital.
ais 11S
him iin.
Tools Stolen
Zolye Waling, 35, of 620: W Vermont St., said burglars stole tools valued at $15 from his home. Ravmond LaFollete, 13, of 1513 Deloss St., told police a middle-aged man asked him to get a package | and $16 in cash for him at a] Market St. address. The boy was to receive $1.50 for the errand. Instead, the man borrowed $2.50 from | the boy so he could make a phone | call. When the boy returned, the | man was gone, the youth told po- | 4a0t Mrs. Roy Heishman, 4020 N. Capitol Ave. said clothing about was hurglarized. William J. Smith, Wayne Ave.
two men he
of 730':2
drove to 10th St. and
“a NA
Preparing to Open Swimming Pools
o
SR Sa i Ea Fas Times Photo. 26th St. beach of White River. That's the opening. Wading pools and playgrounds will be open until | dark each dav, and swimming pools will observe the same hours except in extremely hot weather. Mr. Middlesworth is instructing life guards in ! what to do in all emergencies.
From now on, hickory limbs have a full-time job for clothes hanging purposes while their owners go swimming in city pools, according to H. W. Middlesworth, city recreation director, At 9 a. m. tomorrow there will be a tremendous splash in the city's five swimming pools and in the
Aid to Marion County |*7-OIssvsoeowy
ST. LOUIS, June 14 (U. P).— Four boys drowned in an abandoned clay mine at the edge of the city last night an hour after a fifth boy had drowned in a water-filled quarry. The mine was used as a swim-
Jobless $90,000 to Date
jobless have re-, working part-time have filed claims for partial benefits. Checks written | to date average $11.16 each. { borhood.
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Marion County ceived approximately $90,000 in unemployment compensation since April 26, Clarence A. Jackson, In- | diana Unemployment Compensation Division director, said today. A total of 2251 persons received benefit checks last week out of a total of 6396 claims approved in Marion County and Greenwood up to last Saturday. State payments totalled over $1,.000,000 up to Monday night, Mr. Jackson said. SELF-SETTING At the close of business Saturday, 2 ANE = 89.352 checks had been written totalling $997511.84, and approximately 6000 more checks amounting to over $60,000 were issued Monday. A total of 31,634 checks, averaging | more than 5700 per work day, were issued last week.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ming hole by children in the neigh- |
AUF ArT S pry TR
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1938 !
CARRY BODIES FROM AIRPLANE WRECKAGE
Rangers Report Pieces of
| Craft Widely Scattered.
WAWONA, Cal, June 14 (U. P.).
—The bodies of nine persons who | died March 1 in the crash of an
2 FROM COUNTY GET
| Times Special
| LAFAYETTE, June
to Purdue University from
PURDUE U. PRIZES ».
81 |
| counties in the state for the 1938-39 | | academic year were announced here |
| today by Dr. H. H. Remmers, educational reference division director,
The State law provides for the { appointment of two students from
|
| airliner on Buena Vista Crest, high | each county in the state, who, |
in the Sierra Nevada Mountains,
were carried from the wreckage to- |
day.
The victims, wrapped in canvas |
and strapped to pack horses, reached | here this morning from the crest, | 16 miles away. Forest rangers who brought out
| the bodies said they would be sent | immediately to Fresno, the direction | W. A. craft was|
| in which the T. | headed when it lost its way in a | storm and crashed against the snow-capped crest.
‘BABY DIES OF BURNS; | FUNERAL SET TODAY | Funeral services were to be held | this afternoon for Cecil Dushey, 21- | month-old daughter of Mr.
|
[seh St., who died yesterday after- |
| noon at City Hospital from burns | received May 12 in her home, | A pan of hot | |
Mrs. Rena Dushey, her | mother, also was badly burned at | the time. Services are to be at the RubenAaron Funeral Home.
| the home.
and | {| Mrs. Charles Dushey, 1153 Tecum- |
water was acci- | dentally spilled over the child at
| upon entering Purdue University, shall be exempt from the payment | of certain fees, amounting to $60 a year. The Marion County appointees | are Herschel W. Lowes, Franklin | Township, and Joanne Reifenberg, | St. Agnes Academy. Suzanne Master, Castleton and | Amy Louise. Meyers, New Augusta.
JAILED ON AUTO CHARGE
Three Indianapolis men were held
|
Alternates: |
|
[in County Jail today under $1500 |
|
| porting ci a stolen
| bond each for the alleged transautomobile | from Madisonville, Ky., to Franklin.
| They are Clarence Pool, 26, Alonzo |
Jones, 24, and George Carter Owens, They were arrested in Franklin
27.
and brought to Indianapolis by U. | S. Deputy Marshal Edgar Collins |
{ for a hearing today before Commissioner Howard Young.
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valued at | $80 was taken when her home |
Ft. | cab driver, told police |
Ind , robbed him of $14 at |
int of a knife.
PC
WARNS STUDENTS OF WORK REQUIREMENTS
High school pupils and college students who find summer employment today were warned thev must
chtain social sgecurity account num- |
bers Before
whether
beginning part-time, temporary permanent, graduates first must have a social security registration, Peter J. Van Geyt, manager of the Indianapolis field office Social Security Board, announced 3 FACE U. S. JURY ON MARIJUANA CHARGES
Three persons charged with sellIng marijuana cigarets will appear before the Federal Grand Jury, June
27, according to Howard Caughran, |
Assistant U. S. District Attorney.
employment, | or |
|
|
| |
They are Juan Lopes and Mauro
r aloe Morales,
well.
police several weeks ago.
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Mexicans, and Veo Hollo- | They were arrested in Indian- | apolis by Federal officers and City |
despite her nerve-nagging days of phones, buzzers, interviews. “If anyone needs healthy nerves, I certainly do,” Miss Tucker smiles, adding: “That’s one reason why I smoke Camels
JOE DI MAGGIO, country-wide idol of baseball fans, speaks for millions of smokerswhen he comments on his favorite cigarette: “I'm a steady smoker, and Camels don’t irritate my throat. That shows Camels have real mildness all right. Watch the ball players pull out Camels!”
DRAMATIC PHOTOGRAPHS are the specialty of camera-genius Margaret Bourke-White. Many points about Camels appeal to Miss Bourke-White, who sums up her preference for Camels in: “Sticking to Camels makes a big difference in the fun and contentment I get out of smoking.”
WELKER COCHRAN, who has won many important championships at billiards, voices Ass choice among cigarettes: “Camels give me rea! smoking pleasure. Under the strain of a championship match, Camels never make me feel jittery or unsure. 'I'd walk a mile for a Camel’ too!”
PEOPLE DO APPRECIATE THE
COSTLIER TOBACCOS
IN CAMELS
Camels are a matchless blend of finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS « Turkish and Domestic
THEY ARE THE
FURIE JRE] [e
CIGARETTE IN AMERICA
ONE SMOKER \\ TELLS ANOTHER
CIGARETTES MAY LOOK ALIKE—=BUT WHAT AN APPEALING DIFFERENCE THERE IS IN CAMELS!
said to Miss MacGregor about the difference between Camels and other cigarettes {below},
As a smoker, you'll be interested to read what Miss Tucker, successful young office manager,
"Olive, do you always serve Camels because you feel that there's a big difference between Camels and other cigarettes?”
BRITISH FREIGHTER AFIRE SAN PEDRO, Cal, June 14 (U. )—With a fire in her hold and | smoke pouring from her hatches, HAAG Stores 98¢ | the British freighter Anglo-Indian |
| ~ 14—Names | headed toward Los Angeles harbor | of the county scholarship appointees today
| Retonga at all
3 for 2.50
]
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1938
“I'm very glad you've brought
BUSINESS GIRL —1938 MODEL — Office manager Olive Tucker keeps disarmingly calm regularly. They never get my nerves upset.” Later — much later — Miss Tucker skips to the roof-top gym for a quick work-out. Next —a shower — a rub — a Camel — and she’s up and off again! Tired? Here's Miss Tucker's answer: “Camels give my energy a refreshing ‘lift,
“You bet Camel 1s our choice in cigarettes”
say these tobacco planters = and they know tobacco
because they grow it!
“I know just what tobaccos the cigearette companies buy the auce tions,” Mr, John Durham, Jr., well-known plant-
at gays
oe Tae BR er. ter another, I've seen Camel buyers take the finest grades in the market ~—the best of my own crops and those of my friends. They took the best part of my last crop too. So, like most planters, I smoke Camels. I know the quality tobacco in them!”
“One year af-
% ; “There's quite a difference between fine tohacco and ordinary grades,”saysMr. Calvin Wiggins, who has sold tobacco to Camel “ for 20 years. x 4 “From my own experience, it's Camel who buys the best. Camel bought the really fine baskets of my last crop. I smoke Camels, mye self. Most of my grower friends do too. I know, and they know, Camel
uses costlier tobaccos!”
'»
[Ay
Planter Joe Brews er had a fine tobacco crop last year. He says: “As they have for Pa, many vears, Came k el bought the best ? Bis: ®:l lots, and paid me the best prices I ever got. Camel has been my cigarette for years. There's a real difference. Camels are the favorite smoke of planters. They know they're getting extra-quality tobacco in Camels.”
—
ry
OLD MAN BUSINESS licked for another day, Miss Tucker entertains dinner guests — thoughtfully! There are lots of Camel cigarettes around her living room. Miss Tucker observes: “Camels are the favorite with my guests and are delightful for topping off a meal. During and after dining, I smoke Camels ‘for diges-, tion's sake.’ That's another way Camels set me right!”
that question up, Helen. I've tried as many kinds of cigarettes as most people have, I guess, and I'm amazed at how different Camels are. Camels are extra-mild — they never bother my throat at all! Camels taste so good and rich, yet they never leave me with that ‘cigaretty’ after-taste. Really, in so many ways, Camels agree with me.”
On the Air Monday Nights
EDDIE CANTOR
America’s great fun-maker and per. sonality brought to you by Camel cigarettes. Over Columbia Network, See your local newspaper for time.
On the Air Tuesday Nights
BENNY GOODMAN
THE "KING OF SWING”
Hear the great Goodman Swing Band, Every Tuesday at 8:30 pm E. S. T, (9:30 pm E.D.S.T.), 7:30 pm C.8. Ty 6:30 pm M.S. T, 5:30 pm P. 8S. T, over Columbia Network.
Copyright, 19%, R. 7. Reynalds Tohaces Company Winston-Salpm, North Caroline
