Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1939 — Page 8

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CHICAGO OFFERS

20 per cent greater than 1938, and

LARGEST PIG CROP the largest spring crop since 1933 SINCE 33 F ORECAST The 1939 pig crop should total 40

WASHINGTON, June 20 (U. P,.|Proximately 83,000.00 head, nearly)

Season oil Squirrels —The Bureau of Agricultural .Eco- 12,000,000 larger than 1938, and the

CANDIDATE FOR ;

DEWEY FAME

Campbell Leaps Into Legal ‘Big Time’ During Moe Annenberg Case.

CHICAGO, June 29 (NEA).—A Democratic Dewey may be in the making here. He’s William J. Campbell, whose smile is just as boyish and engaging as that of Republican Presidential Possibility Thomas E. Dewey in New York City. Mr. Campbell is the young U. S. district attorney presenting the Annenberg and Skidmore cases to the Grand Jury. He smilingly insists that he is without political ambitions, but if the Grand Jury indicts Moses L. Annenberg, wealthy publisher and race-information dispenser, or William Billy Skidmore, gambling czar, Mr. Campbell might become a national figure over night. Income Tax Cases

While New York’s Dewey built step by step his now national reputation as a prosecutor, starting with minor toughs and building up to the conviction of Tammany’s Jimmy Hines, Mr. Campbell enters “big-time prosecution” after only a few months in office. The Grand Jury is to determine whther Annenberg or Skidmore have failed to pay income taxes they should have paid. Trial of either if indicted would command national attention. Born on Chicago's west side and educated in Catholic schools, Mr. Campbell was graduated from Loyola University in 1926 with an LLB. He is now 36, a large, wellbuilt man with thick, graying hair, a young, sunburned face and a hearty handclasp. “I've never before held a political job,” says Mr. Campbell, “and I prefer to regard myself as a lawyer, with an opportunity to do a useful piece of work in my profession. “When the President appointed me as head of the Illinois NYA, it was a merit appointment. I did receive generous praise during my administration from the President, and I'm anxious to reflect credit cn those who appointed me in this job. I'm not anxious to carve out a career, however.” Still Head of NYA | Despite his duties as district attorney, Mr. Campbell still is acting head of the Illinois NYA. He has been interested in youth and its problems ever since, as a young lawyer, he defended poor young criminals as counsel for the Big Brother organization. Then, as personal attorney to Bishop Bernard J. Sheil, he became a cofounder of the Catholic Youth Organization. He considers juvenile delinquency the most important field in crime today. As NYA administrator, Mr. Campbell started a state-wide job hunt, sponsored 200 mass meetings throughout the state, and got jobs| for 6187 youths in 60 days. Recently he opened a job-creation contest in which 300 prizes will be given to youths for ideas on new and unusual jobs that can be created. Two years ago Mr. Campbell] married Marie Clotherty. They | have a daughter, Marie, 8 months old.

G. 0. P. COMMITTEE TO BE ENTERTAINED

Members of the Indiana Republican State Central Committee and their families are to be the guests of William G. Irwin, Columbus, Re-| publican national committeeman, at his Brown County summer home Saturday afternoon. Arch N. Bobbitt, chairman of the State Committee, said that the luncheon would not be an official} meeting, but that plans for party] activities during the period prior to the 13940 Repubiican State convention “probably will be discussed.”

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District Attorney William Campbell and Mrs. Campbell

ALLAY FEARS, LANDIS URGES

Hoosier Congressman Takes

Stand Against F. D. R.’s ‘Spend-and-Lend.’

Times Special WASHINGTON, June 29.—Rep. Gerald W. Landis (R. Ind.), who was one of the principal speakers at the Tewnsend Plan convention in Indianapolis, returned here today and issued a statement against President Roosevelt's $3,860,000,000 lend-spend proposal. “This program comes at a time when business 1s not declining,” Rep. Landis declared. “In the past two months business has been pointing upward. “We have recently encouraged business by revising taxes on venturesome capital and this is a step in the right direction. Private investors are not going to take risks when they see the Government branching out in every economic direction. “Private capital will lend and private business will spend the necessary money to put thousands of unemployed to work when they are reasonably sure that the Government has made up its mind not to further encroach into the field of private endeavor. “In a democracy our Government must encourage private enterprise, but it can accomplish this purpose by allaying certain fears that business and industry have harbored during the past few years.”

LAMINOGRAPH AIDS X-RAY TECHNICIAN

NEW YORK, June 28 (U. P.)— Members of the American Society of X-ray Technicians, in convention here, discussed a development in their craft which will, its proponents believe, make life less uncertain for future generations of pinswallowing children and victims of disease. The technique is known—to the men and women whose job it is to explore the shadowy interior of the human body—as “laminography.” The laminograph is designed to focus X-ray beams at desired points inside the body.

cbtain for the doctor more precise images of affected areas than were heretofore possible.

ITS A

FACT!

MODERN ICE REFRIGERATORS MAKE NO HEAT—NO NOISE!

All other types of refrigerators produce heat, which naturally adds to summer discomforts. Today’s gleaming white, silent cold icé refrigerators make no heat, no noise, need no servicing or mechanical repairs, last indefinitely. Phone your local ice com-

pany for proof of these statements.

The ICE INDUSTRY of INDIANA

It will be possible | it was said for the technicians to!

Receives 2 Divorces to Marry Again

CLEVELAND, O., June 29 (U. P.).—Calvin Martin, 27-year-old steel worker, divorced two wives the same day. Martin discovered that his first wfe, whom he thought

had divorced him, had not. Meanwhile, Martin had remarried. So Martin filed for divorce against both his wives, Thelma, his more recent mate, and Clara, whom he had married in Birmingham in 1933. “I guess youre pretty glad to be free,” Judge Frank J. Merrick said as he granted the divorces. “What are you going to do now?” “Get married,” said Martin. Within the hour he had applied for his third marriage license.

INSTANT SuUDS!

It's important to have plenty of suds to wash stockings clean without rubbing and rubbing. In hardest water Dreftmakes S times morerich,energetic suds than any soap you ever used!

MAKES DISHES SPARKLE’

Dreft really performs dish-washing miracles. Dishes and glassware dry gleaming bright— by themselves! Without a trace of scum-dulling film—even in hardest water! And Dreft is safe for your hands.

REVOLT TONIGHT

That Is, He'll Try, in Ohio Town, Which He Classes As Typical in U. S.

CLEVELAND, June 29 (U. P)— Walter B. Pitkin, author of “Life Begins at Forty,” said today that if his proposed «American middle class revolution” gets “those parasites which cause community problems, then we can go ahead and attack national issues on a big scale.” Mr. Pitkin, declaring he feared for the future of the estimated 40 per cent “middle class” men, women and children of the nation, will try to start his movement of «The League of the Middle Class” at Elyria, O,, tonight by outlining his plan to a group of civic-minded citizens. The task, he said, consists of focusing public opinion on “any community problem” such as gambling, excessive taxation, local relief or even traffic laws and studying its operation with a view to making it function as it should or abolishing it. Says Setup Is Perfect

His movement, which he described as “thoroughly nonpolitical and nonsectarian,” will concentrate first in Lorain (Elyria) County—‘a typical American community”’—and if successful there, will spread throughout Ohio's 88 counties before being extended to other states. “The people of Lorain County represent a perfect setup for my idea,” he said, “because the county, particularly Elyria, has completely diversified interests. It has only one trouble—I don’t know of any particular problems troubling them. I haven't the slightest idea where they will want to concentrate their efforts and I don’t care. If we fail there, we're through.” Politics Are Barred

He said he was not interested in influencing people’s political opinjons on any state or national issues, but only wanted to co-ordinate them, by communities, in cleaning out the “parasites and gangs who are crushing the small folk.” “These gangs—the predatory rich and the predatory poor—get together and mob up on the middle class between them,” he said. He identified the “parasites” as “ward heelers, cheap skate politicians, racketeers in labor movements and downright crooks.” “When—if the whole idea goes over—te have cleaned out community problems, then we can tackle such national problems as relief, old-age pensions, national defense and so forth. But the light must be

why they don’t return dollar for dollar, as in the case of pensions

and relief.”

turned on them all to see exactly!

Doesn’t Open Until Aug. 10.

PEN season on squirrels will be from Aug. 10 to Oct. 8, in 69 southern zone counties and from Sept. 1 to Oct. 30, in the 23 northern counties, Conservation Commissioner Virgil M. Simmons announced today. The bag limit is five squirrels a day. The regulations and open season dates are the same as last year, he pointed out.

3-COUNTY POWER PROJECT TO BEGIN

AURORA, Ind., June 29 (U. P.) — D. C. Wilber of Aurora, president of the Southeastern Indiana REMC, announced today that construction will start within 30 days on an electric power project extending into eight counties. Funds of the Rural Electrification Administration will be used to extend lines into Dearborn, Ohio, Ripley, Switzerland, Franklin, Scott, Jennings and Jefferson Counties. J. J. Owen, assistant Indiana REA Administrator, will serve as project supervisor with headquarters in Osgood.

@ Delicious flavor—Fully cooked, ready to serve, and so tender no knife needed after carvings

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Jasti-Cooked

ni!

duction of pigs at 52,314,000 head, |Bureau said.

with these features

nomics today estimated spring pro-|third largest crop since 1923, the. -

® Smart New Styling, Durable Dulux

Finish ® All-Steel, Turret-Top Construction © 10% Added Shelf Area (12.89 sq. ft.) @® Fast-Freezing Sanalloy Froster © Porcelain Food Liner, Micarta Deer Liner ® New Standard 9-Peint Cold Regulator ® Full Power Economizer Secled-in Mechanism

SEE THIS

New Two-lone Froster Door . .. Fours) piece Delphinium Blue Refrigerator Set including Butter Dish, two covered| Food Sever Dishes of Vitrified China)

INDIANAPOLIS [ower & Ligh COMPANY

Phone RILEY 7622 *

Electric Building, 17 N. Meridian *

EVEN THE FINEST SOAP FLAKES CANNOT OFFER THESE ADVANTAGES:

1. SUDS OF NON-ALKALINE MILDNESS

« + « giving you greatest protection against wash-fading

2. SUDS THAT NEVER LEAVE “SCUM”

« « . assuring true color brightness and fabric softness

3. RICH SUDS IN HARDEST WATER

.o o five times more suds than any soap you ever used

It’s a fact! The world has waited 1,000 years for a suds improvement like this! And now—in Dreft—it’s here —offering all your fine washables a brighter long life! Take the matter of wash-fading, caused by alkali. Formerly, it robbed your treasured silks and woolens of their lovely fresh colors. But now—in Dreft—FOR THE FIRST TIME you have a fine-fabric suds of true non-alkaline mildness! Dreft cannot fade silk and wool .colors any more than water will ! And Dreft is FIRST with another revolutionary improvement! With Dreft you can eliminate once and for all the age-old trouble of hard-water “scum”! You know what a problem this clinging, cloudy film . . . detected by “that ring around the basin” . . . has always been. How it clouds the sheerness of stockings, dulls lingerie and print colors, coarsens woolen textures . « « Well, you can forget that problem now! Washing in Dreft completely removes scum, restoring colors and textures to their true loveliness! And Dreft never leaves any scum of its own—even in the hardest water!

And whether your water is hard or soft, hot or cold, Dreft dissolves instantly, completely — flashing into heaps of feathery, active suds—into 5 times more suds

in hardest water than any soap you ever used!

No wonder women are saying that they've never in

eft 4

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their lifetime used a washing suds as safe and wonderful for their fine fabrics as Dreft! Get Dreft from your dealer today. You'll be thrilled by

in hard water, Dreft does twice the work of fine-fabric soap. Procter & Gamble.

Trade Mark Reg. U.S. Pat. Off., Process & Product Patented, U. 8. Letters Patent 1,068,793 to 7, incl.

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its economy as well as its performance. Ounce for ounce, -

Ovenwar: and a beautiful 2-quart Water! all de luxe! the highest! See this amazing June

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THE COLOR'S COME BACK]

Many a silk print you thought faded was probably hiding its true freshness under a film ugly scum. Dreft removes every trace of scum ~—thus often reviving colors you thought were “washed-out.” Leaves no scum of its OWR . +. even in hardest water!

CHILDREN’S WOOLENS

stay amazingly soft when washed in Dreft, That's true of a//woolens...because Dreftleaves no scum to coarsen fibers! Dreft’s amazing suds~ing power in cool water enables you to get woolens clean withoutthe unnecessary rubbing and handling that often causes shrinkage!

5610 E. Washington

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