Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 March 1939 — Page 4

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. which will allow light trucks - to

~ . those present pledged themselves fo

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Pesci Ordinance Believed Invalid; West Siders Hit Flood Conditions.

{Continued from Page One) 642 Berkley Road, and Prank Sisson, b868 Broadway. Plan New. Ordinance

The chief: duty of the committee will be to draft a new ordinance

Times-A¢cme Fhoto. Genevieve de Seteville, or Genevieve de Saint-Jean, 19 years make “the necessary deliveries of| gid, of French film fame, soon: will coal, furniture and other goods. become the bride of Sashal Guitry The motion to repeal the truck| Well known French writer. She ban is before the City Council and| Will make her debut on-the Lonupon the plea of Mr. McShane, all| don stage soon.

go before the Council Monday night

{the near future.

TROUBLE. REICH ‘WARNS’ JAPAN

Report Hitler Has Appealed “To Nippon to Reserve Its Best Troops.

By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Times Foreign lKditor

WASHINGTON, March 15.—A re-

"|liable authority in the Far East re= ports today that Germany has “re-|.

quested” Japan to reserve its best troops for a possible emergency along the Biberian border. This does not necessarily mean that Germany contemplates war in It does indicate, however, that Herr Hitler foresees a showdown between the Reich, [Italy and Japan on the one hand and Great Britain and France on the other,

Japan, it is understood, could have

Pode: Now Is ‘Picture’

Of Surprise |

LAFAYETTE, March 15 (U. P.) ~The Boilermakers were apologizing profusely today, but the Hoosiers thought it was’ probably all a good ides. Purdue University publicity men sent out a picture of Jessie Graham; who had been Shosen May Queen at Purdue. photograph, which she The was the only one she had, Was obtained from a fraternity man, It was discovered that the photo was of Jessie Boswell,

. & candidate for a place in the

beauty section of Arbutus, Indiana University yearbook. 2 So Purdue said, “Beg ,paron. ”

ANDERSON GROCERY

FLOOD MENACE

[pair and Colder Predicted;

IM]

water at Ni yesterday, had 10 inches ‘today and probably will be closed. Near ‘Mohtezuma; 8 man who clung to a tree for two hours after his poat overturned in flood waters was rescued yesterday. He was Ed- | ward Jones, a state. game warden.

Michigan Blizzard Closes |Schools, Halts Traffic

DETROIT, March 15 (U. P.)—A blizzard described as the winter's “| worst swept across the upper penin(Continued from Page One). _|sula of Michigan today, virtually

ing at Logansport and Wabash, but ‘put | Plocking roads and forcing schools

%ising slightly at Terre Haute, Vin-|t0 close. cenn: Carm A snowfall ranging from five to 15 he : el, Ill, and New inches was whipped by the winds.

Three State snow plows were maWate: was falling slowly on the rooned. State Police went to the west fork of White River at Nobles-

REDUCED HERE

High Waters Race Downstate.

aid of sceres of motorists reported ville and on the east fork at Shoals marooned. Police rescued several and Seymour. Meanwhile, four roads were re-|bus ported opened and four closed by| the State Highway Commission. Roads opened were: Road 1 south of Road 28, in the Greenfield District; Road 250 east of Brownstown | “snow and much colder.” and Road 258 at Portland, in the| A passenger train was reported Seymour District, and Road 59|stuck in a drift at Little Lake.

All rural schools in the Iron River area and those at Manitique and in the Escanaba area were closed. The forecast for. tonight was

school children from a marooned |

FISHERMEN PREPARE T0 PROTECT ‘CROP’

GLOUCESTER, Mass.,, March 15 (U. P.) —Fish conservation, or deep sea “crop control,” is being considered by Gloucester fishermen, The plan calls for fishermen to return to port when they get 125,000. pounds~of: fish below decks instead of waiting for the average peak load of 300,000 pounds. Besides the Tes it is hoped that “half the catch will bring twice the price.” {

north of Clay City, in the Crawfordsville District. The four closed, all in the Vin-

PECIAL “PUSH

and ask for considcration. Several suggested that a highway skirting the city is the only solution to the truck problem. A highway rounding the City to eliminate from the city the huge overland trucks, which bore the brunt of tlie attack last night, has been under consideration by City officials for some time.

FREE SERUM READY

‘FOR STATE'S NEEDY

Free pneumonia serum for needy persons ‘is available for “delivery to any point in the state upon a mo-

- present truck ban is found unconsti- (for purchase of the fluid. In addi-

The Council is studying various|ment’s notice,” Dr. Verne K. Harroutes on the fringe of the City in|vey, State Health Director, anthe hope that a truck route avoiding nounced today. the City altogether may be de-| Distribution of the free serum veloped through existing roads. this week was made possible by Action by the Council may be de-|passage by the 1939 Legislature of layed for some months unless the an emergency $20,000 appropriation

tutional. The test case is scheduled [tion to the emergency appropriation, for next Tuesday when Mr. Miller the Legislature provided $75,000 a will file the charge of unconstitu- year in the health budget to furnish tionality at the trial of the arrested serum the next two years, available

2 altitude weather

day

truck drivers. The area in which the West Indianapolis Civic League is interested runs west of Belmont Ave. to Eagle Creek and north from Raymond St. to Morris St. The main interest lies in the future of Eagle Creek, which during each period of flood, overruns their property. Claim Creek Overuns Land

At flood stage, according to Mr. Brand, lithographer, about 18 square blocks is covered at depths of from two to six feet. | Mr. Brand said: “In the last 10 years it has cost me hundreds of dollars to clean up after the water.

Mrs. Joseph Zook, 2220 Conrad Ave, said: “I've had four feet of water in my basement year after year at flood time. Said Mrs, Thomas Miles, 2301 Conrad - Ave, whose husband is a creosote worker: “And your gardens get washed out too.” A half dozen heads nodded in unison. The WPA has been called in on the problem, the answer to which seems to be the straighfening of the creek, but the plan necessitates each neighbor giving an easement to his land bordering the creek “We don’t need any money for work on the creek, because that can be financed federally,” Mr. Brand said, “but those people have to be paid off. They claim there’s no money to pay them but I'd like to know where the one per cent

‘tax I pay for flood control goes.

“If| there's been .one survey out here there's been a hundred and there's never anything done.”

Threg Remedies Possible “Didn’t the Sheriff come out here

. once and take some stumps out,

Ed?” asked Mr. Hoff. It was decided that one of three things must be done: Either the creek must be comletely dug out, levees raised and Pr in good shape, or some slight straightening to ease the spring rush of water.

t After deciding to continue its

fight for civic betterment alone and on the platform of what is good | for a part of the City is good for the whole, the League decided to augment its membership by holding a Spelling bee soon, and adjourned.

MORE ACCURACY DUE |2 FROM WEATHER MAN x:

WASHINGTON, March 15 (U. P.). —F. W. Reicheldefer, chief of the U..S. Weather Bureau, predicted today that use of a new “radio-sone” for upper air observations will increase the degree of accuracy with which weather forecasts are made. The radio-sone is an improvement over the radio metrograph used ror several years in ‘making high observations. Weighing less than one pound, the apparatus is carried to an altitude of approximately 15 miles by balloon. The apparatus transmits radio

signals which indicate air pressure, |§

temperature and humidity every few hundred feet as the balloon ascends.

$400 IN OLD MONIES

FOUND ON DEAD MAN|

FT. WAYNE, March 15 (U. P.) —|f

Four hundred dollars, all in old

style, large-size bills, some of which | ~ date back as far as 1882, were found wrapped in a handkerchief in the

pocket of Charles F. Foss, 78, of Huntertown, who dropped dead Mon-

by Dr, C. B. Parker, Deputy Allen County Coroner, who today returned a verdict of death from heart disease. © |

REFUGEE HvETERY BARED ROME, March 15 (U. P).—A mysterious - transfer of Jewish Hl from one ship to another in the Adriatic was reported today by the Popolo d'Italia correspondent at Trieste. The correspondent said the captain claimed he had transferred 350 passengers to another Panama ship in the Adriatic on ‘orders from its owners.

Advertisement

ECZEMA

a simple way to qtiick relief from y Eczema, pimples, angry red nes and other skin irritations e to external causes is by apply-

p Peterson’s Ointment to the af-|%

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aptly. Peterson Ointment also g for tired, it

Discovery of the money was made | |

beginning July 1. “The free serum undoubtedly has saved several lives in Indianapolis already,” Dr. Herman G. Morgan City Health Board secretary, said. “Recently pneumonia deaths in Indianapolis have averaged about 40 a week and so far this week there have been only 12 deaths,” he said. The influenza epidemic is declining rapidly and the sunshine of the last few days will curb spread of the sickness, Dr. Morgan predicted. Dr. Harvey said the serum car be obtained upon a requisition of any doctor who attests to the inability of a patient to pay for it. “We can see that rapid delivery is Mage to any community in the state.”

UNABLE TO GALL AID, "PAIR ROUTED BY FIRE

Living outside city limits =nd without fire protection, Breton 3o-

lander, 55, and his wife, Clara, were driven from their home at 75th _St. and Sargent Road today. They oscaped, however, uninjured. Cause of the blaze was undetermined. Discovered by Mrs. Bolander wk en she was awakened by smoke, ‘ne flames destroyed the one and onehalf story, 75-year-old. log house. Only a few pieces of furniture were saved as the couple was forced to stand by and merely watch the cestructiof. Mrs. Bolander said the fire apparently started on the second floor. Meanwhile, Herman Lewis, 52, of 26 N. Traub Ave. attached to Engine House 18, Tibbs Ave? and WV. Washington St., was recovering after being overcome by smoke yesterday while fighting a West Side fire. He was overcome while on the roof of the hore of Otto Craft, 3649 W. Michigan St. He was carried down a ladder by Lieut. Clarence Ames and was taken to City Hospi-

Damage to the home was slight.

LOCAL STUDENT IS IN NORTHWESTERN SHOW

Times Special ? EVANSTON, II, March 15. Boris Meditch of 5627 N. Meridian t., Indianapolis, is among 75 Northwestern University students pearing in “Guess Again,” annual bs musical production being presented this week. The show is to continue here

{brought far greater pressure to bear

BANDITS GET $1000 lagainst Generalissimo Chiang Kai-

shek in China, had it not been| ANDERSON, March 15 (U. P.).— necessary to make her plans con- Two bandits who robbed the Mace ‘form with those of the two other |8rocery store here of about $1000 members of the Rome-Berlin- last night, aparently had made good

‘of Fayet tesville, Road 62 west of]

cennes District, were Road 58 west

Mount Vernon, Road. 59 north of Jasonville and Road 65 north of Princeton.

PERMANENT WAVE LEE S00

prnational Beanity School

N. Penn., Opposite P.' 0. 2nd FL

DAC Todack,

Registered Optometrist—Office at

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1939

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Tokyo axis. their escape today.

The flower of the Japanese army, reports say, is being held in reserve —in Japan, Korea and North China. For the most part, only secondstring divisions, made up of reservists and other less rigorously disciplined troops, are carrying on the war on the Asiatic mainland.

Nazi Businessmen Warned

The reason for this is known only to the general staffs directly con-|f cerned, perhaps only to the dictators themselves. But the indisputable logic of it is that the Nazi-Fascist powers have in mind one of two things, namely war, or & squeezeplay of the type so successfully , | brought off last fall against Czechoslovakia. One month .ago it was reported |ES that inside circles in Germany were | #8 expecting a showdown in Central Europe, the Mediterranean and the Far East within a month or six weeks. The tip was being passed on tof certain Nazi business interests abroad to prevent their being |# caught carrying too much sail in the event of an international storm. That story was denied by Herr Hitler's newspaper, : Everything that ‘has happened in the past four weeks fits into” the picture, down to the latest Naziengineered dismemberment of Czechoslovakia. : Today the road to the Rumanian |E wheat and oil fields is wide open |E® to Germany as soon as Bohemia, Slovakia and Carpatho-Ukraine— | now barely camouflaged German |§ provinces—are consolidated, Herr |B Hitler can press on in the direction | of eastern Europe and the Balkans. |E Meanwhile, military preparations |fi# in Italy, France and across the|fi Mediterranean—in French Tunisia | and Italian Libya—are intensifying.

Many Factors Against War

There are many factors against 8 the expected showdown becoming |g an armed conflict. The economic | and financial situation within Ger- |fs many and Italy, popular opposition | to war in those countries, the re-|% armament of Bristain and France, |B the knowledge that a major war |f would probably last a long time to |fH the ruination of all concerned, |B and, fiinally, the belief abroad that the United States would side with |f the democracies—all argue sgainst | war. But the opposing thesis is not | “== without its logic. Both Germany |B and Italy are known to entertain |f certain “aspirations,” the attain-|f ment of which presupposes a readi- |f ness op their part to resort to |f# armed force if necessary. i

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IN INDIANAPOLI IS | 110 N, tT ENNSYLVANIA

through Saturday at the National College of Education Theater.

FINAL WEEK

PERMANENT WAVES AT} PRICE |

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