Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 March 1939 — Page 8
OVERNOR SOON
MUST FILL JOBS ON NEW BOARDS
Groups Created by Legislative Acts; 11 to Be Named ; ; To Publicity Council.
“Appointment of members to six new state boards and commissions created by the 1939 Legislature will be among the first duties faced by Governor Townsend when he returns from his vacation trip next week.
“Among new boards created by|
legislative acts is the Indiana Publicity Council of 11 members. The law provides a $20,000 appropriation far the Council to use beginning July 1 to advertise the industrial and residential advantages of the s 7
Egg Beard of Five -Another new law created a State Egg Board of five members to establish egg standards and grades and issue permits. The five mem-
bers are to be selected by the Gov-| 8
ernor from each of the following groups: The State Poultry Associa-
tion, the Indiana Farm Bureau, the | §
Retail Grocers and Meat Dealers Association, the Indiana
sity. - Three appointments must be made by July 1 to the newly created Bu-
reau of Public Printing which re-|
places the present State Printing
Board. One member must represent |:
the printing employees, another the employers and a third the public. Also serving on the board will be the Governor, the Secretary of State and the State Auditor.
x Memorial Project Due “Ten appointments are due to be
made for the New Harmony Memo- ||
rial Commission created by the 1939 Legislature. The law appropriated $30,000 for the commission to construct a memorial project to early white settlers in Posey County. - The Governor also will appoint an Indiana Commission to co-operate
with other states in anti-pollution| programs along the Ohio and Wahash Rivers. i A new law also created an Indiana Watchmakers’ Board to administer laws regulating the watchmaking industry.
Chain Store Council and Purdue Univer- |}
+
Tourists peer into the huge hole of the | “moving mountain,” inundate the Pacific Highway near
COURT REFORM BACKED BY BAR
ARMY AID ‘FORCED’ TO TAKE CUT IN PAY,
j | WASHINGTON, March 15 (U. P.). Federal statutes governing retire-| ment of Army officers today compelled Brig. Gen. Edwin M. Watson | to take-a $2500 pay cut before nc assumed his new job as a White House secretary. : Gen, Watson will serve one year in the post at $7500, rather than at the $10,000 salary fixed for White House secretaries. ! The situation was caused by discovery that he could not retire from the Army with his new rank of Brigadier General until he had served at that rank for one year. Mr. Roosevelt had promoted Gen. Watson to Brigadier on the assumption he would retire March 31, reject his pension during his White House tenure, and assume his new job.
STERILIZED HEIRESS IS GRANTED DIVORCE
SAN FRANCISCO, March 15 (U.| P.).—Ann Cooper Hewitt Gay, 23-! year-old sterilized heiress, has obtained a final decree of divorce . from Ronald Gay, garage foreman. . The decree was handed her attorney, John McNab. yesterday. She did not appear in court. She obtained an interlocutory decree a year ago on cruelty charges. Miss Hewitt married Mr. Gay in 1937 after the sensational court trials in which she charged her mother, Mrs. Maryon Hewitt McCarter and two doctors, with conspiring to deprive her of her rights under her inheritance by having her sterilized. The suits eventually were dropped.
STUDENTS RECOGNIZE FRANCO—VICE VERSA
! AMHERST, Mass., March 15 (U. P.).—The brothers of Beta Theta | Pi Fraternity at Amherst College, ! who cabled ‘“recognition” to tne] government of Generalissimo Fran- | co, today proudly displayed a reply - from the Franco State Department. : “The Government of Spain wishes o thank your party for its mesage,” it read. “It is-to be hoped fhat your sympathies and action will soon be shared and duplicated by the President of your great country.”
ARRANGE M’CLURE RITES : CONNERSVILLE, March "15 (U. J).—Puneral .arrangements were ing made today for Richard E. cClure, 84, retired public official, ho died yesterday. He retired from blic service in 1929, after having erved as city clerk, county auditor,
‘Members to Suggest Ways
Gates Ketchum, 50. brother of An-
to Trim ‘Red Tape’ At Trials.
Indianapolis Bar Association
submit suggestions to aid judges of |
‘the Marion County courts in reform. | | A post-summer | from Aug. 7-26.
ing court procedure. Seven county court judges recent- | ly announced they would seek a co-: ordinated system for investigation of divorce cases and a reduction of unnecessary ‘red tape’ usually connected with trials. They favor an arrangement similar to the new Federal Court rules whereby attorneys' will stipulate certain facts instead of taking up time of judges and juries with evidence that can be agreed on before the opening of the trial. The Bar Association’s recommendations, requested recently ‘bv the judges, will be prepared by the Judiciary Committee, headed by Arthur L. Gilliom. : Fred E. Shick, president of the Indianapolis Lawyers’ Association, said the association's Committee on Rules of Procedure has been making a study of possible simplification ¥ procedure and will be prepared to’ submit suggestions to the judges.
SCOPE OF MESKER BEQUESTS WIDENED
EVANSVILLE, March 15 (IJ. P.). —A ruling affecting aproximately $32,000 in the estate of George L. Mesker had been handed 'dowii today by Probate Judge Albert J. Veneman. He ruled that a provision iri Mesker’s will giving $1000 to employees of the George L. Mesker Co. for 10 years or more and $500 to employees
for five and 10 years did not apply | ;
only to those employees of the company at the time of Mr. Mesker's
death, ih His ruling meants that all former '§i
employees. who had worked the specified period would be eligible for the bequests. It was estimated that the ruling would increase the total payments on the provision to approximately $80,000.
BROTHER OF STATE BUDGET CHIEF DIES.
RUSHVILLE, March 15 (U. P.).—
derson Ketchum, State Budge! Director, died suddenly in his office. yesterday. | Mr. Ketchum, an attorney. was formerly Rush County Prosecutor, and in 1930 and again in 193f was candidate for Circuit Court judge
~~ pleputy county auditor, deputy sher#iff and deputy county treasurer.
Replies o Compared
The famous Query which has already been conducted among womn and girls all over the South, now nters the second stage. ModeratSing weather permits the work to be ztended northward. Touring reorters are at present in Indiana nd Ohio; have reported from! Pennsylvania. ' In Harrisburg, 100 users were sked: “Were you helped by CARDUI?” and 99 of them answered kes!” To date, 1533 CARDUI sers in 14 states have been asked his same question and 1432 of them ‘out of every 100—have said
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f Women Are
here. He is survived by his widow, parents and-a sister. |
in 14 States
thusiastic that they want to come right out in public to tell others how CARDUI stimulates appetite, assists digestion and assimilation, and thus builds up physical resistance. In this way, it helps many women avoid headache, nervousness, depression, cvamp-like intermittent pain and other periodically distressing symptoms of functional dysmenorrhea due to malnutrition. Many women testify also that CARDUI, taken in larger doses, helps to allay pain and nervousness “at the time.” This all-vege-table product has over 50 years of
‘were helped by CARDUL Toa Y here are 80 en-
H
use and popularity to. prove its
which
left in the wake threatened to here and to dam
up a river.
rate of a foot an
Times-Acme Photo.
The wedge of earth, 1000 feet wide at the top and 300 feet at the bottom, moved at the
hour for a week, then slowed down.
Butler Summer Session Set for June 13 to Aug. 4
Instruction in approximately 130 classes of the Butler University summer session will begin June 13 and continue until Aug. 4, Prof. (reorge PF. Leonard, director, announced today. | Courses will be offered in the colleges of liberal arts and sciences, raligion, education and business administration. 3 | Dy. Walter B. Townsend, director of the Butler reading clinic, will
conduct an educational guidance|
confererice June 12-17, and a read-
members were preparing today to iiig clinic and conference June’
19-24. . term will be held
Announcement also was made that the Butler chapter’ of the ¥. M. C. 4. will. be host to the annual “Y” Spring Officers’ Training Conference April 28-29. Arrangements for tire conference are in charge of Bichard Dempsey, Butler “Y” presigent. | Seven Butler journalism students
i
{will work on Indiana and Kentucky [newspapers during the spring vacation period, April 1-10. They are: | William Mitchell, James Hanna, Robert Fleetwood, Barbara Phelps, {James Farmer, Elnora Hartman, 'Edward Cotton.
WHITE HOUSE GUESTS
WASHINGTON, March 15 (U. P.). —Gen. Anastasio Somoza, President of Nicarauga, and Senora de Somoza will come here May 5 as guests of
President and Mrs. Roosevelt.
CREDIT MEN OF SIX STATES DUE IN CITY SUNDAY
Also Expacted at 3:Day Session.
three-day; conference opening Sunday at the Claypool Hotel. The joint regional conference is sponsored by the National Retail Credit Association and the Asso-
ciated Credit Bureaus of America.
Visitors are expected from Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky, Michigan, Wisconsin and Ontario. Group meetings will be held Monday afternoon and Tuesday morning. Tours of credit departments of Indianapolis retail stores will be made Tuesday afternoon. A banquet and dance will be held Monday night in the Claypool Hotels Riley Room. Allison P. Koelling is local chairman. Jay L. Barrett, Ann Arbor, Mich., fifth district president of the Associated Credit Bureaus of America, will preside. Among the speak-
: ers will be Herman B Wells, Indi-
ana University president; Frank E. Sherod of Cleveland; C. E. Moorman of Jacksonville, Fla. president of the Associated Credit Bureaus of America. Herman J. Kennedy is trade exhibit chairman, assisted by P. K.
Delegates From Ontario
Credit men from six states and Ontario, Canada, are expected at a!
Maps Program
Allison Koelling
Heitkam. R. B. Stokes is registration chairman, assisted by Roy Myers, Herbert Baker, Harry Watson, Max Meise, W. F. Keeler, Miss Ruth Allen and Mrs. Mildred Latta. John PF. Raney is-educational exhibit chairman. G. S. Blue is program and entertainment chairman, assisted by Paul E. Jones and Evans Rust. Omer Farthing is hotel and errangements chairman, and Roland Duvall is transportation chairman. :
WILSON FRIEND DEAD
FT. WORTH, Tex., March 15 (U. P.).—John Rolf Bolling, 74, cousin of Mrs. Woodrow Wilson and a friend of the late President, died yesterday at his home here. Mr. Bolling, a native of Amelia County, Virginia, had been a resident of
LaWall, Ernest Freyman and Bert
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PURDUE, VALPARAISO | ARRANGE CO-OP PLAN
Times Special LAFAYETTE, March 15.—A cooperative plan for engineering students has been arranged between Purdue and, Valparaiso Universities, officials of the two schools announced today. : ; The plan will make it possible
ing at Valparaiso, a nontechnological school, take their first two or three years’ work there and then finish with two years at Purdue. Purpose of the plan is to make it possible for students of northwestern Indiana’s industrial section to take their first two years of college work near home. It will be-
for students to enroll in engineer- |
' come effective during the next aca= demic year. Advertisement
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Sizes 1
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. List Size Price
4.50x21 11.1
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5.50x 5.50x 5.50x 6.00x 6.00x 6.00x 6.00x 6.25x 6.50x
O 3.99 5.13 6.25 6.45 6.45 6.90
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Sale Price
List Price
17 14.65 $1.33 18 15.20 7.60 19 15.80 7.90 16 15.95 7.93 17 16.50 8.25 18 17.15 8.58 1917.80 8.90 16 17.95 8.93 16 19.35 0.68
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