Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1939 — Page 8

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1939

PAGE 8 | oultry Special Sat. On END CLASSISM, SELL YOURSELF, “<i Secs ewe LAND TAR AUCTION rs See Ore 1.

FORMER STATE EF RL . ii EXPERT ADVISES rm me HEARING IS Ave 20 CHICKENS. va 50m .~ Toe.Lb. OFFICER URGES WORK SEEKERS | oone on seiten to si MENS wooxs ______19¢ Lb.

Criminal Court jury for the trial of | | Secu Sam Wilson, charged with the mur- |3Side a Circuit Court order mandat-| FRESH FISH AND MEATS—COMPLETE LINE OF GROCERIES AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES U. S. Greater Than Any . Me i. Group, Schortemeier =~ oan

SO Mo NN AN sep

Typist Is Among Hopefuls

ROCKS

| The first venire of 200 jurors was |set today for June 20. exhausted and Special Judge James| The petition which brought a {D. Ermston recessed court tor one temporary halt in the tax auction [day to permit the drawing of 150 [issue was filed several weeks ago|

State Employment Service Interviewer Suggests Market Analysis.

| filling station operator. lof county tax delinquent land was INOW UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF MAX SMULYAN

new names. The examination of by County Attorney John Linder. WE CASH WPA AND PAY ROLL CHECKS jurors began Monday. The trial is|It sets out that new evidence has OPEN TILL NOON SUNDAYS | expected to last two weeks after the been uncovered and asks a new 818-820 W. Michigan jury is completed. {trial in the case.

: | {der of Edward Maze, West Side ing the sale at auction of parcels | NEW SANITARY MARKET Says in Columbus.

RI-1231

Times 81

Approximately 35,000 young peo-

COLUMBUS, Ind, June 9.—De-| mands of various classes should be| submerged and first thought given

| ple will leave school this month to | flood the Indiana labor market and | most of them will be looking for | jobs. |

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9

to the public interest and general me welfare, Frederick E. Schortemeier, | ES ; ] BETURRN 3 Finding employment reduces itformer Secretary of State, said in ay . [self to a definite sales proposition, |

an address here a eT : al 2% L according to Miss Dorothy Dugdale,

Never Before—Perhaps Never Again! fii { senior interviewer of the Indiana

Speaking before several hundred | Fines mip I if | {Al WN re BY1 M ASSIV i yd n PC. \ 0 )) 3 K LY

at a ng sponsored by the Bar-| Oattow, Cou You must sell vourself, she says.

tholomew County Republican Com- | You r : tee, the former G. O. P. state Ninety-nine applicants out of chairman said

it : a : EE (every 100 have never analyzed | ; Cu ji a L | themselves to know what Kind of a It is most unfortunate that dur-| fs . ; | job they really prefer,” Miss Dug-! : ing recent years the American LA EN | dale states. “First decide what

"1 al

people have been thinking and act- 0 \ ED oy vou're fitted for and stick to that.” . ‘ : oto. |The next step, she says, is to ana-|B Miss Janet Swearingen, clerk stenographer, examines a sample of [lvze the market for that service vou

typing from Miss Janet Dorothy Medenwald, 21 N. Tremont Ave. . : 4 Miss Medenwald is a graduate of Washington High School. Each Bave Jui 300 Sh x: emer applicant is interviewed and Classified according to their abilities. to sell to the proper market and

find the concerns who need the knowledge, experience and ability

. . | | you have to sell. H CV Girls . | Be Careful in Approach | 0

“When you have picked the par- | ticular job and company, learn all vou can about it, its products, its market, its competitors, its organi-| {zation and personnel,” she adds. |! | The next problem concerns itself | {with your approach to your pros-| | pective emplover. “An introduction by letter or tele- | | phone will help,” Miss Dugdale savs, (“but if you lack that, go in cold. creater anv group of its| A three-judge tribunal will be Y Sivance makes i Taprackiesl neople.” he said. “We shall make held in Federal Court tomorrow to G : | write for an interview, but mak tes until the businessman, hear arguments on an interlocutory PAUSE be brunet, 5 feet 5 inches | your letter brief. Simply tell what the laborer and farmer and all injunction sought by the Allstate tall, weigh 119 pounds and be ap- {job you want and why, and what other groups learn that sympa- Insurance Co. of Chicago, against{ proximately 20 7-10 vears old, the | your qualifications are. | thetic co-operation is the only basis George H. Newbauer, State Insur-| composite picture of the Big Ten | On that first visit to your pros-| NOTES anv 1 ‘tak- ance Commissioner. ; 5 . | pective emplover, remember that Ds 1 Shy UNAS. beauty queens revealed today. | personal appearance comes first, she hac Those COMPIISINg the tribunal In addition she must have a advises. Neatness not only creates will be Federal Judge Robert C . . ood first impression but creates Baltzell, and Judge J. Earl Major| 00d scholastic rating and be [2 BOOC 08 CRS Or Co enable and Judge Walter E. Treanor, both| taking a course in dramatics, [So Et tr erin of the U. S. Circuit Court of Ap- | education, radio, art, merchandis- ee veel attention 0 peals at Chicago. ing, advertising and fashions. |the main object of the interview. The insurance company seeks to| She must be interested in danc- | . prevent enforcement of a 20 per| ing, tennis, swimming, bowling, | Other Tips From Expert cent maximum premium discount! knitting, reading, photography, | on automobile insurance sold in the| music and clothes. Professor and Mrs. Henry Gelston state as ordered bv Mr. Newbaure. The specifications were taken will be honored guests at the The company states that because of | from girls selected at Big Ten luncheon at the Hotel Lincoln. lits selective risk policy and low | schoels to act as hostesses at the Following the alumni supper in operating cost, it can give a 30| New York World's Fair. the evening, class members will per cent discount from the manuai| Elizabeth Rice of Monticello gather at the home of Mr. and Mrs. rate. | was the Indiana selection.

ing in the interest of their respec-| tive groups, instead of giving their thought to the general welfare and public interest of the Nation and all its citizens [ apple rvie “We have developed distinct] | classes and are engendering = JUDGES 10 HEAR treds, and this course is un-Ameri-| | can and not worthy of American citizens. We must

learn that we | shall all go up or go down together.

“Any group has a right to present its views up to the point where that group does not gain any advantage for itself over the general welfare and the public interest.” |

+h the

Composite of Big Ten Queens Gives Secret

Company Asks Writ Against! Of Beauty. Mr. Schortemeier sail classism

Newbauer to Limit n rs hatreds, and “there is] In atred and i Auto Rate Cut.

America for hate.’ { ‘The Government of the U. S. is}

LOOMINGTON, Ind, June 9 (U. P).—To rate in the 1938 college beauty contests, a girl |

tilall

for any

ing at

any

BUTLER CLASS OF '14 WILL HOLD REUNION

Butler University class of '14 will hold its 253th reunion tomorrow. Dr and Mrs. James W. Putnam, and

Her other advice: ! | Cultivate a cheerful expression land a smooth, pleasant voice, Don't | give references until asked. Don't {have a set speech ready to fire. Let {the interviewer take the lead and answer his questions directly and hy { briefly. Don’t say you can do any- ¢ : v ..s Maxwell V. Bailey, 305¢ N. Pennsyl-| The company was denied a tem- | | thing—rather that you are willing Large, massive, modern, full-size KROEHLER living vania St, for an informal reunion. porary restraining order last week | ADDS TO POLICE RESERVES [to do anything which your quali-| room suite that truly is a value. Large, balloon cushion seats. Wood knuckle feet on chair and daven-

sree ren by Judge Baltzell. | NAIROBI, Tanganyika, June 9 (U. fications fit you to do. FUGITIVE TAKES TO MULE IP) : ANY OIiE « nat! Remember you are selling brains y . : r | [EY ech liitieh Tgntuilika Bb 1O[ . port. Your choice of several long wearing covers. You get the high quality and wearing ability that is found

GAFFNEY, 8. C, June 9 (U. P) wa] TRUCK DRIVER IS KILLED {supposed to train natives for mili- —S0 you must demonstrate them only in a higher price KROEHLER suite.

Exactly as Illustrated

'5 Down $1 A WEEK hy A

Small Charge, age vou. After each interview fig-

9x12 Axminster Rugs

|and don’t au Sil S \ X : i i i ¢ $ i : Regular S 75 3 & : 4 | R= SEA i | $34 to $39 3 RULING DUE TODAY |” i BE) or 2 3 = WE | IN OIL BID | DISPUTE Long-wearing Axminster rugs in =

| 4 F oa § TEL SAREE iE (8 your choice of several patterns and sev Superior Court Judge Russell J. | Ee Pw FF ; RA A colors. Just the rug to put that 4 > Ryan was scheduled to rule today | ; ; : 3 oh HR BN ; : added joy of summertime into your § on the Crystal Flash Petroleum | home. Values that have never been Corp.'s petition to restrain the State | possible before. Because of Highway Commission from fulfill-| limited quantities this price ing its part of a gasoline and oil] prevails only as long as contract. | they last. Full 9x { The ruling also was expected to | 12-foot size. cover the plaintiff's request that it | be awarded a contract for approxi- | mately 650,000 gallons of gasoline and 24.000 gallons of oil for the { Greenfield maintenance district. In the suit, the Crystal Flash | company charged the Commission awarded the contract to a high bidder, the Pure Oil Co., “unlawfully, arbitrarily and without the exercise of proper discretion.” Saturday in a six-hour hearing. Commissioners testified that while the Crystal Flash bid was low for the district, it was not “the best bid.” The Pure Oil was “the best,”

Cherokee County police caught and! ELWOOD, Ind. June 8 (U. P.).— tary purposes, the Government has Show that vou are accustomed to arrested a man charged with boot- Harry Innis, 30, of Frankfort, a decided to form a police reserve Uhink and talk clearly, to meet peolegging, but only after a lengthy! truck driver for an Indianapolis cof- composed of Askaris and anv other Ple and get along with them. Don't chase. The bootlegger was attempt- fee company, was killed vesterday Africans who wish to join. In time emphasize why you want the job ing to escape on a mule, but the when a Pennsylvania Railroad train of emergency they will be incor-| Put tell your employer why he officers ran faster than the animal. istruck his car here. should want you.

his car her ‘porated in the regular police force. | Finally, don't let failures discourLIVINGSTON’S : : ~ What Low Prices!

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6-CUSHION . . and shop when the store

GLIDER COVER |i Worth Many Dollars More Eureka Sweepers

Factory Rebuilt) 6 IC

115 25¢ a Week

Famous Eureka Sweepers now at this amazing low price. Every- | candidate to accent an invitation, | Makes your old glider look | Ralph Hamill, Young Republican | ! Sti ii $9" | like new. Heavy, durable 6-cushion cover in | county chairman said. | = FEE au WSR bright, gay colors and patterns. ’ | The others are Glen Hillis, Ko- | 3 BEE 3 : RE No phone or mail orders, pease. None komo; Clarence Benadum, Muncie, | None sold for cash.

prints and hishade s -— FOOT sports... daytime : . vacations . » y Wej} worth a special shopping trip.

State Senator William Jenner (R. Paoli) today accepted an invitation to attend “Big-Hearted Herbert,” a play to be sponsored by the Marion County Young Republican Organization at Keith's Theater to- | morrow night. | Senator Jenner was the fourth | {possible Republican gubernatorial |

one carries 1 year factory guarantee, A real value while they a = on REE oY sold to dealers. last. | and Judge James Emmert, o el- | : SEE ‘Sd 4 ~ by Circuit Court. Raymond E.| J Linmat 1 to a customer | Willis, of Angola, unsuccessful can- | | didate for United States Senator, | | also has accepted an invitation.

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