Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 September 1938 — Page 4

PAGE 1%

SLOVAKS ‘BURY HATCHET,’ BACK CZECH POSITION

Warsaw Reports Move Made For Transfer of Strip 20 Miles Wide.

(Continued from Page One)

place our lives and the entire future

were Soht

ICQ ul

Hoover-

the people “Save food

+h une

Poles Report Offer

Of Teschen Area WARSAW, Poland P.) —Poland bargain wit! in thei:

pute

Text of Roosevelt’s Plea

VASHINGTON, Sept. 28. —Following ts the text of President Roosevelt's message last night to Hitler:

I desire to acknowledge your exceliency’s reply to mw telegram of Sept. 26. I was confident that you would coincide in the opinion 1 expre essed regarding the unforeseeable consequences and the incalculable disaster which would result to the entire world from the outt k of a European war. 1 question before the world today, Mr. Chancellor, is not the question of errors of judgment or of injustices committed in the past. is the question of the fate of the world today and tomorrow I'he world asks of us who at the moment are heads of nations the supreme capacity to achieve the destinies of nations hout forcing upon them as a price, the mutilation and death of millions of citizens Resort to force in the great war failed to bring tranquillity. Victory and defeat were alike sterile. That lesson the world should have learned. For that reason above all others I addressed on Sept. 26 my appeal to your excellency and to the president of Czechoslovakia and to the Prime Ministers of Great Britain and of France. two points I sought to emphasize were, first that all matdifference between the German Government and the lovak , Government ould and should be settled by pacific second, that the threatened alternative of the use force on > likely to result in a general war is &s unnecesas it is un sifiRe, It is, therefore, supremely important negotiations should continue without interruption until a fair and constructive so ution is reached. My conviction on these two points is deepened because responsible atesmen have officially stated that an agreement in : already been reached between the Government of n Reich and the Government of Czechoslovakia, althe precise time, method and detail of camrying out that remain at issue. Whatever existing differences may be, and whatever their erits may be—and upon them I do not and need not undermy appeal was solely that negotiations be continued settlement is found, and that thereby a resort to

il

reement

me take to pass until a peaceful force be avoided > negotiations still stand open. They can be continued if vou will give the word. Should the need for supplementing them nothing stands in the way of widening their scope a conference of all the nations directly interested in the prescontroversy. Such a meeting to be held immediately—in some spot in Eurcpe-—would offer the opportunity for this and elated questions to be solved in a spirit of justice, of fair dealand, in all human probability, with gerater permanence. In my considered judgment, and in the light of the experience of this century, continued negotiations remain the only way by which the immediate problem can be disposed of upon any lasting basis, Should vou agree to a solution in this peaceful manner I am hundreds of millions throughout the world would service to all

become evident

convinced that recognize your action as an outstanding historic humanity llow me to state my unqualified conviction that history, and of every man, woman and child whose lives will be lost threatened war will hold us and all of us accountable \ we omit any appeal for its prevention The Government of the United States has no political invelvements in Europe, and will assume no obligation in the conduct the present negotiations Yet in our own right we recognize our responsibilities as a part of a world of neighbors, The conscience and the impelling desire of the people of my countrv demand that the voice of their Government be raised again and vet again to avert and to avoid war,

might nate Poland

Germany

beal Mos- F

1938 ........ 83 Reckless 1937 J... 108 Priving ...

1938

1937

the minol } in Czechoslovakia of which the 3.500.-

000 Sudeten Germans were the larg- Accidents 9 Injured ..... 3 this minority had !Dead .. «8

est Nevertheless, Poland iemand for custody of Placed

claims

Czechoslove ha ! aent Mo h 1e agreed ith |W

t 1

it potent v alongside Ger- Arrests

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Jere Is the Traffic Record | BIRTHS

County Deaths Speeding ..., 6 {Ta Date) in |

Bonn Marg

Running Prefer- “pot oo... Shelton, at 514 Dorman, Dorma

City Deaths ential Street 4 ul ‘harles, Dorothy Jacobs, at

{To Date) Running Red Boys Light 3 C NTI 00d. rma) fedn Golden, Rul )V Sparks. a Bro! her,

Sept. 27 : Drunken prying

32 Others

MEETINGS TOD: AY

Kiw anis Club, che

LiohS Club Beverage Credit Group

Indianapolis Sales Congress, nerica L ed life Insurance C Indianapo is Apartment Owners’ Associaon Ho Washington. nooy

Zelathea Club cheo

Co-Operative Club of Indianapolis

Young Men's Discussion Club, dim M. C. A ' Association,

Purdue Alumni Set ! Y

Ywelfth District Legion, Bear

ment, were I courier 3efore irafting the note ! ed with dz, ForPremier

ani

Smigliy-Ry

> ryon 3 Beck and

aipl elleved that tl tension Betws een the countries had been relaxed SR 3 At Bu , King Carol at a sessoin f the council. In London, the Daily Telegram reported that full mobilization had in Hungary, but this was not confirmed at

presided Rumanian

been ordered

there

“Indiana Motor Traffic Association, lunch- yy... 2017 wr > el 3817 N

AUTOS HURT THREE y: 32 ARE ARRESTED

Man Run Over as Car Starts While

Y Three persons received minor in-

i n auto acciaents reported

overnight as police arrested 32 motorists wi traffic law violation charges When two au llided at 30th and Washington Blvd. Miss \ ( 1 1ckle St Injuries ar Hospital She v iven by Rich2920 N. Oley Acton was driver of Mrs. Carrie Wellman Sheffield Ave. was ty Hospital { iries received when as she crossed the 3200 block WwW hen | car t he cranked Baglan, 74, o ceived face taken to ident occurred

Sigma Alpha Epsilon,

noon Indiana Fanters Ne C i 1 Fr or der f Polic e of Indiana, “1. a : aternal rd 2 ol eo hi Mrs. Gladys Indianapolis Sales Conference, A

torium, 7::

indianapolis Camera Club, meeting, 110 though Mrs Rr N T 8

Reta Theia oh, Bincheoh.

therefore, is not responsible for errors in

Being Cranked. on

George XN McCoy, nre neparins J. Thomas, 352, 2322

MEETINGS TOMORROW

Wheeler

rie BE. Wailers, 24, at 3403 E. Wash-

India na polis Re ; Estate Board, lunch ngion, Hodgkins disease

on, noon rah Dunber, 93, at 3615 Watson Road, Advertising cin of Indianapolis, lunch- broncho pneumonia. TEL

noon.

Niet, Bess Gab, tncteon, © * GLADYS L. MILLER

Fine Paper Men's Gril

Credit Group he Willi

Association, regional | ————— tel, Pp m | Lucas Miller of lecture, | Logansport, member of a pioneer

ance Co. andi-| Miami County family and a fre-

ng. C1 tel nerican 2 tet Life Insur

indianapolis Hotel Association, Ih Washington on “3 i ) ror ; FA] Sigma Nu nchec ie Hotel Washingion buried in Converse tomorrow, fol-

noot lowing funeral services at I.ogans-

Board of Tra noon Board Trade,

Acacia, luncheon Sigma Chi. uncheon,

port. Mrs. Miller died yesterday at the home of her son, Robert T. Miller, Pennsylvania St., after a brief illness. Oil Cluh Wuncheon, Hotel Severin. nobn The Lucas family was among the Construction League of Indianapolis, earliest settlers in Miami County 1, Architects and Buil s Bldg. Tl ily fe i “ ¥ I'he family home is in Converse, alMiller spent the last | 30 vears of her life in Logansport. As a visitor at her son's home here. she had a wide circle of friend & . sh 1 & rele c iends IARRIAGE LICEN ES in Indianapolis. Besides her son. (These lists are from official records she is survived bv her husband the County Court M . The Times Xop1 Sor Aa State Shia ounty Cour ouse. The Times, | George H. Miller, and a sister, Mrs. D. L. Cowan of Pittsburgh.

noon

Guild, meeting, Hotel

niler

R dio Engineers’

Canary Cot-

names or addresses.) ' 4 CONSECRATION RITE SET | SAN P).—The Rev. Karl Morgan Block. St. Louis, will be consecrated

bishop coadjutor tomorrow in a holy | ceremony of the Episcopal Church

(The ceremony will be solemnized Mount | In Grace Cathedral, San FrancisJetfer. | CO’S “mother” of 568 N . — = a

Sr i DIES ON VISIT PRE

incheon, [quent visitor in Indianapolis, will be |

FRANCISCO, Sept. 28 (U.!|

Episcopalian Church.’

® THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES" BOARD MAKES ¥on offices open from 10 a. m

| to 9 p. m. today and tomorrow are: IN COUNTY TAX Today and Tomorrow [| School 69, at 35th and Key-

stone Ave; {§

ater) Register !

The branch voters’ registra-

School 27, at 17th St. and Park Ave.; School 46, at 1701 Miller St.; School 82, at 4700 English Ave.; School 31, at 307 Lincoln Ave.; University Heights School, 1350 Hanna Ave.; registration office, Court House.

Road Item Tentatively Out: 23-Cent Center Outside | Slash Provisional.

(€ ontinued from Page One)

Township's proposed $1.775 rate: cents off Wayne Township's stot; 96-

7 cents off Lawrence Township's

cent rate; 3 cents off Fr anklin | § y Township's $1.22: 1 cent off Decatur's 60 cents; 4 cents off Pike's|

$1.06; 1 cent off Warren's $1.04; and | 2 cents off Washington's 56 cents. |

Comparative’ 1938 rates of the townships are: Perry, $1.60; Wayne, Rep. Bates Stops Here After $1.57; Lawrence, 88 cents; Franklin, Naval Survey; Ludlow $1.20; Decatur, 41 cents; Pike, 8 cents; Warren, $1.26; Washington, Urges Conference. 33 cents. ——— i — A. B. Good,

rector, informed the Board at its : a ,» jout of war “if he doesn't talk too meeting last night {hat Mr, Albers. | much,” Rep. Seozge J. Bates (R hardt, had requested the Mass.), a member

School | vo val ‘Affairs Committee Board to make a 3-cent reduction in | Naval AllAlrs Be, te yet | today. its budget. The School Board members said their | ygval Committee election is nonpolitical, they serve gtopped at the Municipal Airport on without compensation, they declined to be candidates for re- naval armament inspection trip on election, and “we have no more in-|the West Coast, said he believed centive to expend money than have| that last night's Presidential declathe members of the Adjustment]

School business di-|

said here

tures. At no time during our term| European dispute.” of office have we placed in our] Other members of the Congresbudget a single item with the sional party were Rep. W. Sterling

members who

| President Roosevelt will keep us|

of the House |

|

Congressman, one of three

{

have | their return to Washington from a |

: 1U| ration on the war crisis “may help | Board to approve excessive expendi-| to bring a peaceful solution to the]

thought that it would constitute a! Cole (R. N. Y.) and Albert E. Carter

margin of safety in the event of a| Po Cal). reduction,” they declared. RN “We have included in our wey] Ludlow Credits $214,875.00, which represents a part of the cost of constructing a new Roosevelt Appeal building at Technical High School which has long been needed. At present, 6800 pupils are attending that school in buildings which will | ouis Ludlow, adequately and safely house only referendum in Congress,

4000. Of the buildine cost $100.000 President Roosevelt's second messis to be raised by the issuance of |28€ to Herr Hitler with bonds and $257.625.00 through al . i orant from the PWA. which has /in€ about the four-power conferalready been made,” they explained. | ence and preventing immediate

The proposed reduction in the | War. school budget would mean the aban- | donment of this building project | War hysteria in Europe so that this and the probable loss of a quarter of | Cris is 1s safely past, our COUNTY a million dollars in a Federal grant, {might again assume world leade the School Board members said. [Ship for permanent peace by (he | President colling a new disarmament conference,” Rep. Ludlow said. | Rep. Ludlow cited his “peace resolution” in the last Congress, which would have put the United States on record as favoring a naval buildINDIANAPOLIS FORECAST — Fair to-| ing holiday until 1940 and calling night and tomorrow; slightly warmer to- lon the President to summon a dis- { night ; OA _ armament conference, as the ‘sort right

| Times Special

“Should that conference allay the

OFFICIAL WEATHER

United States Weather Bureau

Sunrise .. 5:38 | Sunset ......5:38 |of thing that should be done

~ TEMPERATURE . | now.” "2 I pom svise. OF —is BAROMETER = RESTAURATEUR DEAD EVANSVILLE, Sept. 28 (U, P) mr Otis Dillingham, 46, vice president

37 ox yi 334 of the Indiana Restaurant MIDWEST WEATHER : tadiana -— Pair ht operation for peritonitis Saturday Y por ¥ 1Hlinois—Fe

Lower Michiga

Ohio—Fair Kentucky — Fair

v cooler

30.12 30.06 30.06 30.00 29.96 30.12 ..Cloudy 30.00 Cloudy 29.88 C loudy 29.94 le ar 30.02 : dy 29.94 29.96 30.10 30.04 30.10 30.12 29.82 29.96 29.96

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Nhe BEE Miss Ruth Chambers... sis OIN I: S School Suggests That You Consult Dr, J. W. Farris and—

BOOKBINDING NOTE: We have used Law Books for Sale.

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42 WEST WASHINGTON ST.

. M. B., The Times Cooking

Vision—

ag DR. J. W. FARRIS

| WASHINGTON, Sept. 28—Rep.| sponsor of the war] credited |

being a | ‘large contributing factor in bring- |

| | 1 | |

Associa- | ition, died today. He underwent an|

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 28,

FRIENDS CONGRATULATE EACH OTHER

TIMES COOKING SCHOOL

What a glow of pleasure comes to every woman who sees her old friend E-Z-BAKE

E-Z-BAKE.” . . . Meantime, get acquainted with E-Z-BAKE. At your grocer’s,

on the Cooking School stage! It is truly a : ow %

time for congratulations. Congratulations to E-Z-BAKE for unrivaled popularity in Indianapolis, and to the homemakers who recognize the superior qualities of this fine flour. ...E-Z-BAKE’S performance at these annual schools wins many new friends too. . . . Come to the Cooking School this week and see "baking made easy with

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INDIANAPOLIS

No matter who tastes it or when—it sure gets a real reception!

This picture shows us handing out refreshments to the Kiski Valley volunteers the day Cash Andrew’s parlor took fire. Of course, you might say any whiskey would taste good to a thirsty fireman—Dbut the thing about Our Family’s Recipe is you'll find high society folks with all kinds of money just as keen for it as these boys here from Hose Company No. 15. All it takes to enjoy The Wilken Family Whiskey is a liking for something extra tasty. Mind you, this is the personal whiskey of us Wilkens, and we've been a family of distillers some 50 years. I

hope it don’t take a fA =. 4

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ALL OF HAAG'S NEIGHBORHOOD DRUG STORES HAVE SAME CUT PRICES AS DOWN-

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THT HE

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t