Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 September 1938 — Page 4
PAGE 4
TATE BUILDING | WILL PROVIDE WORK FOR 6500
Program to Make 15 Million Man Hours of Work, Governor Estimates.
11-million-dolla "Og gram. authorize
C of
an
1% tutio 1 | Sessio prov de work, Governor
today
vy the Special
own send cate empl oyment for 6500
or 1.937.035 eight-
T( i nor State
said. Budget 4 - work would be those tion and would
ed that
there ar ch Indidstries ¢ wood-wort
" ColWomen's
Yani pliant,
14 NAMED TO POLICE FORGE
S—
Safety Board Appoints From List of 50 Who Took Merit Tests.
Rain Suits Neither Suit Nor S
l1oux
YOUTH BY
1S KILLED ‘UNLOADED GUN’
an
WILLIAM GREEN EN ON EVANSVILLE PROGRAM
th rs 7,
OLD COAC] HES NOW COTTAGES ELYRIA, O. Sent 13 (U. P) fany of the 200 aches of the Lake Shore Electric inten line are being turned into st Lake Erie. to be sol
room at Lorain,
dem
m=
The
Was
hil oye
d
yf
*11533. “82 *3298, "HH isis.
871 *225% +10835, =8301, *14256,
364 *133€8. Shae “8583. *13613, *13246, *13605,
Tammany Leader's Kin Rejoice
|
1 . : dered a mistrial on
(found an advantage today ‘mistrial of Tammany Leader James J. |charges—an opportunity to seek a
DEWEY WEIGHS STRONGER CASE AGAINST HINES
Hopes to Turn Mistrial to Advantage by Bringing Conspiracy Count.
—
NEW YORK, Sept. 13 (U. P). District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey in the lottery conspiracy
Hines on
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TUESDAY, SEPT. 13, 1938
BUSINESS FAILURES REGISTER ER DECLINE
NEW YORK, Sept. 13 (U. P)—| United ! week ended | Sept. 8 declined to lowest level since |
Business States in
failures in the
the holiday
the week ended Oct. 7, Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. reported today.
| Total failures dropped to 161 from |
226 in the preceding week and compared with 96 in the corresponding | 1937 per iod. Applications for reorganization under Section 77B (not included Ri total failures) totaled 13 against 27 in the previous week and | 14 a year ago.
MURDER CHARGES
SOUGHT FOR YOUTH
GRAND RAPIDS, M Minn. (U. P.) —Harry Yern, 17,
Sept. 13 who con-
| wite, 55, and their foster daughter, |
Aili, 25, today faced a possible Bgee der indictment.
County attorney John Benton said i
he would ask District Judge H. H. Fullerton to issue a call for a special grand jury before which he would demand first degree murder indictments on three counts. The youth had lived for fhe past
three years at Deer River with the Jamas, who planned to adopt him. { Mr. Benton said he had been told the boy had been given a mental test a few years ago at Walker, Minn.
NUDISTS BREAK CAMP STOCKHOLM, N. J., Sept. 13 (U. | P.) —Members of the American Sun-
| bathing Association put on their [clothes and went home today after [pledging about $200 for the de-
'fense of 13 fellow nudists arrested!
[stronger indictment, charging Hines! fessed slaying Matt Jama, 60, his last week in Ohio.
additionally with obstructing justice. ! Justice Ferdinand Pecora, who or-|
the grounds
| that one of Mr. Dewey's questions’
| | | ! 1
Times-Acme Photo. | Three daughters-in-law of James J. Hines planted Kisses on the Tammany rict leader's beaming countenance yesterday after a mistrial had been declared in his case before Justice Ferdinand A. Pecora.
aist
Text of Sudetens’ Ultimatum to Czechs
PRAHA, Sept. 13 (U. Sudeten German ultimatum to Czechoslovakia follows: (From Karl H. Frank, Sudeten parliamentary leader and deputy to Konrad Henlein, head of the party, to President Edouard Benes.) The leaders of the Sudeten German Party point out that since a large number of Sudeten Germans were Killed or injured by the Czech state organization and members of frontier organizations, the Sudeten Partly leadership is not in a position to freely conduct negotiations with the Government on the rights and the fate of Sudeten Germans without being subjected to pressure if the Govrmment fails to take the following measures: Firstly, to repeal martial law immediately. Secondly, te withdraw Czech police from those districts with German majorities and place the police powers in the hands of burgomasters who will be responsible for organizing substitute forces for the maintenance of order Thirdly, to restrict the gendarmerie and other organizations of state security to their normal functions and normal strength. Th ese organization , simultaneously with the withdrawal of state list understanding with the burgomasters in unnecessary bloodshed Fourthly, to keep military barracks separated from the civilian Sudeten Germans for restoration of 1 ¢O ns 1} e accepted, decreed and published within hours—the > Su ideten German Pariy declines responsibility for all developments
norma SIX further
when they
s8ias. : “Ie. |
Union Pickets Blockade Roads |
Near Omaha in Truck Dispute
OMAHA, Neb, Sept. 13 (U The International Brotherhood of and Chauffeurs sent “flying squadrons” of pickets today de all highways leading into Omaha and halt cross-country rucks operated by approximately 180 companies. Thomas Smi secretary of the lon, Local 354, an affiliate of the A. F. of L. said 350 men had been assigned to the blockade. It was etsablished only a few hours ons 3000 members ously to stop work in protest refusal of some Omaha op-| to grand demands for a city | maximum work week of over-the-road wage and hour !2!; cents a mile base pay ment
P)-
o11t out
Teamsters to blocka {freight Th th un after®>— . voted loading and unloading during road trips.
34 hours, i and 45 ee
loading during trips. 1
i La Follette Probers : May Visit California
Times Special WASHINGTON, Sept. 13 (U. P) The La Follette Civil Liberties ranging up on the Committee is considering a trip to He said three companies—Union California to investigate antilabor Ty Watson Brothers and |violence, it waselearned today. Co.—had or Tough the} The proposed investigation of to a crisis last riday ies : ; mr took all their trucks oft | Mayor Hague's alleged suppression the road. He said the companies of free speech in Jersey City has d claimed they had hot signed a |3Pparently been dropped by the labor agreement executed at Chi- | committee. Coins ’ ago three weeks ago bv the union! Ihe California investigation would ‘ cking companies. | P¢ held on the scene because of the overs greater expense of bringing witnesses high av to Washington. n states Recent outbreaks against pickers at Salinas and the expulsion of C. I. O. members from West-
that there isorders. Man Ks cared foodstuffs and perishables. Smi
been been
us
th said red out Omaha operators
the drivers had to protest a “lockcreated bY
union.’
ation
approxitruck | It] reprehi ighwa Ay
ee
{wood are two of the California in-!
cidents which may be probed. The | Com mittee is not expected to go |into current waterfront and department store labor troubles.
The trip would not be made be- |
fore mid-November.
—— Evansville Strikers Return to Work
EVANSVILLE, Sept. 13 (U. P) — Twelve hundred employees of the Briggs Indiana Corp. returned to | work today after a strike called early yesterday alleged contract violations. The workmen, members of the United utomobiie Workers | America, a C. I. O. affiliate, had claimed that the company had refus to listen to grievances concerning seniority rights and work- |
ine Ng
HOOSIER OFFICERS | JOIN WAR GAMES
Reach Ft. Knox to Direct Defensive Tactics.
PD)
reserve
FT. KNOX. Ry.
Approximately
Sept. 13 (U Army states mobilized | to direct defenlune” army against ading foe.
500 The after a four-hour tween an employees’ committee and company officials. Details of the’ (settlement were not made known.
settlement was announced ! conference be-
ers from t. Knox
tics of a =
en
Sey today tac 1
ary
ma oi IMILINAL
| had | taches
nullified; {guarding of witnesses and {had proved fruitless,
turmoil
P.).—The full text of the ps
charge. |
HORSES DASH BY.
| BRAZIL,
lettuce |
in protest against!
of !
conditions, | gpd
constituted a “fatally prejudicial error,” was criticized today in newspaper editorials. Court atestimated that the mistrial
{had cost taxpayers $50,000.
Four weeks of testimony were! the long confinement and jurors and the state political situation, based on Repub-| lican plans to draft Mr. Dewey as candidate for Governor, was left in
Dev was stunned and sat silen but his assistant, Sol Gelb, said ay that Mr. Dewey would ‘move for a new trial as soon as he (was ready Justice Pecora had said last week! his doubts about the validity of the Indictment would have been removed had there been included a charge of conspiracy (0 obstruct justice, and there were indications that Mr. Dewey might ask a superceding indiciment containing that
py
| |
“FINDS MATE DEAD
Sept. 13 (U. P.).—-When Mrs. William Butts of Van Buren Township saw her husband's runaway team of horses charge wildly past their farmhouse today, she ran out to the road to find the lifeless body of her husband lying in front of the gate. | Mr. Butts, 68, tured skull, after having been dragged about an eighth of a mile by the frightened team.
LARGE-SIZE BILL APPEARS
BUTTE, Mont., Sept. At least one American citizen Knows what to do with currency that is out of circulation. He sent in one of the old 1914 $5 bills, which have been out of circulation for years, in | payne; of his taxes.
ay rife ll a (a Shin
The present scale in Omaha is a |
| eents an hour for loading and un- 8
CUA A AA
! TO man or woman wants to have a N finger poked at them or receive sympathy because of an unhealthy skin appearance. Some skin troubles are tough to correct, but we do know this—skin ussues | like the body itself must be fed from within, To make the food we eat available for strength and energy, there must be an abundance of red-blood-cells S.8.S. Tonic builds these precious red cells. It is a simple, internal remedy,
| tested for generations and also proven
| by scientific research. You, too, will want to take S.S.S. Tonic to regain and to maintain vour | red-blood-colls . . . to restore lost weight | « «+ tO regain energy . . . to strengthen nerves... and to give to your skin that natural health glow. { Take the S.S.S. Tonic treatment and shortly you should be delighted with the way vow feel . . . and have your friends compliment you on the wav vou look. There is no substitute for this | time-tested remedy. No ethical druggist { will suggest something “just as good.”
JC Tei Shomnilloler Ho Low ding onal
The officers were under command | of Maj. Gen ugh A. Drum, commandant of the Second U. S. Army. The officers came from Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, West Wirginia, Wisconsin and Kentucky. When they reached Ft. Knox, the e unit staffs discovered “adtroops” already in the field to hold off the “enemy” in the mythical war which theoreticalVv was declared July 17. The imaginative invading troops have crossed the Kentucky-Tennes-see border northward to split the Blue” nation between the Mississippi River and the Appalachian gunn ns, a maneuver designed to ihe agricultural West from rial East,
LOANS From
$1 Up to $300 on
@® AUTOMOBILES @ DIAMONDS @® WATCHES, RINGS ® TYPEWRITERS @ MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS @® FUR COATS @ MEN'S SUITS @® OVERCOATS @ SHOTGUNS, ete.
SACKS BROS.
On Beauty-Mart’s
YEROrv reser Hurry! this week!
a
ANce
trying
that we cannot continue i
SHAMPOO AND FINGER WAVE. BOTH
SHOP No. 1 - 201 Traction Terminal Bldg. LI-0527
2 t and
‘BEAUTY SHOPS |
POSITIVELY THE LAST WEEK
31.50 Permanent
Our sensational offer of a Beauty-Mart Permanent W ave for 1.50 ends Our lowest price will be higher next week! Take advantage of Beauty-Mart service and expert work at a price SO low indefinitely!
This Week
Come in Wednesday!
20
AE. No Appointment
Only TAKE YOUR CHOICE
1 des Hair 's h a m poo Finger Wave. A $5 Value Star Permanent (a $6 value) only Peter Pan (Reg. $3.50 value), guaranteed
Helene Curtis, tN iin $5
Nationally Advertised SHOP No 3808 College Ave. TA-0540
No Appointment Necessary
suffered a frac-!
13 (U. P) —!
VT Ry( id
THE MOST IMPORTANT EYES Pa
IN THE WORLD ARE YOURS
Guard Them Well!
NOW IS THE TIME TO GET A TRUTHFUL EYE EXAMINATION
Don’t let eve dis-
Glasses (ITCH
Credit PAYMENT EL DR. WEST
Registered Optometrist
“MILLER JEWELRY CO.
pA NTR TR gw AC Ye
RX
2 Doors from Power & Light Co.
XY (TR
$20,000 WORTH OF
HIGH QUALITY MERCHANDISE
ENTIRE $15,000 STOCK OF F.L. CONVERSE SHOE STORE
W. Warren Ave, Detroit, Mich.
ENTIRE $5,000 STOCK. OF WEIN SPECIALTY SHOPPE
Chicago Ave. Chicago, Ill
Two Stocks of Nationally Advertised Goods, the brands of which we are not permitted to advertise, because these brands are sold in other Indianapolis stores at the regular prices.
Women's 32.95 F ali
N ESSES
of Dirndl Styles Crepes Spun Rayong Taffetas Chalk Stripes Pin Stripes
Plenty
Rayon
IY Wanted mus to 3p Cd color for i
59c 1
Smock
cell
0 $1.00
were
Always @
Pure Thr
Silk
Selected Seco
’ o $1 Womens Y
cOTTON DRES
s and Hooverettes
per-
Sell-
5,000—Reqgular 15¢
Ww omen and
Regular 69¢
chil-
YOU SAVE HALF OR MORE IN THIS SALE.
Boys’ Honey Bright
Yank Jr. Play Suits
Irregs. 59¢ and 79¢
Covert,
hickgo rv 3 for $109
&
Lace Cartains
ins
a Weaves,
SES
for if
35:
Closely woven, Fine for mattress covers.
49c—21/5-Lb. Stitched Comfort Batts
Unbleac he dq cotton oR t i
ee ev ent | 1 i oo
Light House
Regular 30c Value Curtain Rods
3 7 < Men's
200 Pair
Regular 7!/c. 36-In. Unblea. Muslin
Yd. 4c A New Low Pricer
MEN'S work SHIRTS
: 2 Jc
5c CLEANER
Well known Scouring Powder.
dw]
Regular lc Box
Safety Matches
We dnesday y ly wl
V doz. last
Out! Wont's ead
Hose
nds, 35¢ Value
double bed size. Assorted colorful plaids.
Large
5 grain aspirin tablets. Bottle of
| Junge
Regular 69¢c Cotton Plaid Blankets
Os Wool Blankets
Sateen Bound Block Plaids
47-
| % LA Got “Everything” in This Gigantic Shoe Purchase
FIT Prs.
Famous Brands Women's FOOTWEAR
Reqular Retail $3.50 to $8.50
Arch Types. Dressy Novelties. Street, Business and Sports. Kids, Calfs, Patents, Suedes, Combinations.
Sizes 3 to 10 Widths AAAA to EEE
But not all sizes or widths in every style.
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
SHOES
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS
MEN'S SHOES
Sold the Country Over at $5.00 to $10
Others at $3 and $4
® Calf Calf
SORRY—We are prohibited from advertising the names of the brands, but do stop in and see them. You'll thank us.
@ Reverse Kangaroo o Broa row Toes 3 to 13. AA to EEE. But not in every style.
