Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 July 1939 — Page 4
IND
RES ILE 1 "OVER COLISEUM LABOR DISPUTE
Union Groups Renew Effort ~ To Settle Controversy On, Jurisdiction.
Labor leaders met in anotlier conference .today in a new effort to end the jurisdictional dispute between the Chrpenters’ and plasterers’ unions which is delaying construction of the State Fair Grounds Coligeum. " A meeting last night attended by representatives of the two unions, building - contractors, Thomas R. Hutson, State Labor Commissioner, and others failed to reach an accord. er A 7 The walkout of the éarpenters on the Coliseum job followed a protest by. the carpenters over plasterers installing accoustical equipment in Broad Ripple: High School addition. The strike was extended to the Coliseum beesuse the same contractor ds building both structures. - Deadlock Reporied ~ Both the plasterers and contractors last night were reported to have rejected a compromise submitted by W. L. Hutcheson, Carpenters’ International president.
Under the plan, carpenters would
fit accoustical material and -plasterers set it: Meanwhile, the Marion County Contractors’ Association ' members considered advisability of ordering a general shutdown of all building construction ‘work unless the dispute between the two unions, is settled. Wait Word From Green
Today is the deadline of an ultimatum the Association sent to William Green, A. F. of L. president.. ~~ @us Hoppe, president of the contractors’ association, said that following today’s meeting of ' labor leaders, the contractors would meet in. his office to discuss steps they| will take.
* DR. EDMUND HELLER DIES SAN FRANCISCO, July» 19 (U. P.).—Dr. Edmund Heller, interna-tionally-known naturalist and director of Fleishhacker Zoo, died at his home last night after a heart attack. He was 64.
JURY ‘RECONVENED;
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., July 19 (U. P.)—The La Porte County Grand, Jury convened again today after a one-day session in which it was believed the jury probed a recent prison break attempt at the | State Penitentiary here. Warden Alfred Dowd and three
_|other prison officials appeared be-
fore the jury, and Mrs. Ruth Joiner, Crawfordsville welfare worker who was held prisoner by the three convicts attempting the break while they bartered with My. Dowd for their freedom, also appeared at the Court House.
A
Hunter FOR Ang
Steal™ FUR COATS BETTY GAY BREAKS THE ’ FUR MARKET WIDE OPEN!
WARDEN IS HEARD|
Advertisement
4ARD TEST REVEALS _ ASTONISHING POWERS OF FAMOUS RETONGA
Mrs. Anna Kidwell
Indianapolis Church Woman Had Lost Seventy-Three Pounds and Had to Spend
Half Her Mime in Bed.
Troubles Quickly Ended by
Retonga. She Regains 29
“Lbs. ar. Feels Like “New
“Person. e
An astonishing revelation of the remarkable powers of ‘the famous new herbal medicine Retonga was - today furnished by Mrs. Anna Kidwell, well-khown and highly respected resident of 1528 East Market St. Indianapolis. Lebanon, Ind, Mrs. Kidwell has lived in’ Indianapolis for twenty-five years, and has hundreds of friends throughout the city. Discussing her remarkable restoration at Hook's dable Drug Store, S. E. corner ‘fllinois and Washington Sts., Mrs. Kidwell stated: : “My health was so bad that 1 went - down from two hundred ‘pounds to only a hundred and twenty-seven and was forced to spend as much time in bed as I was up. After everything else failed to help me only three bottles of Retonga ended my weakness and suffering. and restored me to spléndid health. That was a year ago, and x not only ‘ regained twenty-nine in Sight but 1 have not
Reared in
“No one has better reason “to be thankful to :- Retonga,” continued Mrs Kidwell. “My digestion was so bad I bloated to almost twice my natural size after every meal. Often I simply had to gasp for breath. Getting up to relieve my kidneys broke my rest eight to ten
were so sluggish I had to take a drastic cathartic every day. My whole body seemed a rhass of pains and aches and my legs and knees were often so painful and weak I could not walk across the room without holding ‘on to-the furniture. “From this miserable condition Retonga restored me to as healthy and happy a woman as you will find in Indianapolis. My digestion, ‘nerves, and-elimination seem perfect, and my color is splendid. Instead of slipping back to my former condition when I )stopped taking | Retonga. I seem have improved right along, which shows the lasting good this wonderful medicine did |} me. I hope everygne' suffering as 1 did will give Refonga a thorough trial for IT am confident they will be happy over the results.” Such cases have-made Retonga famous. The Retonga representative at Hook's Dependable Drug
Store, S. E. cornef ' Illinois * and
Washington Sts., in explaining this
new herbal compoundto scores every
times every night and my bowels]
Pretty, but look out—it’s your old nemesis, poison ivy.
y Twins, Stalk:
Less plentiful but more
Stick, Olly Villains Lurk
In Abundance This Year
By JAMES THRASHER
Vacationers are hereby notified to be on the lookout for a couple of slick, oily strangers who hang around in swamps and woods and prey on the innocents who commune with nature. They operate under a couple of aliases. Buf among their victims they're known simply as Ivy and Sumae, the poison twins. Poison ivy, also .called rhus toxicodendron, is a low character when
MAN HERE ASKS SHARE OF RICHES
Michael Biggins Thinks He
Is Kin of 0’Dea, Who Left Five Million.
An Indianapolis nan is one of 369 persons claiming a share in the $5,900,000 estate of the late Michael Frances O'Dea of Los Angeles, who
died two years ago and left no will. He is Michael Biggins, 4314 Pak Peiso Ave., who believes the deceased real estate operator was his grandunele. “I never knew Mr. O'Dea and never met him,” Mr. Biggins said today, “but I believe he was an uncle of my mother, Mary O'Dea Biggins.”
50 Lawyers in Court
There were 50 lawyers represéniing the “cousins” of varying degree from all parts of the U. S., Ireland and Canada in the Superior Courtroom of Judge Ruben S. Schmidt in Los Angeles yesterday. There was such a mixup of lawyers and claims that Judge Schmidt set aside the first few days of the hearing to straightening out which lawyer represents whom and what each relative’s claims are. Mr. Biggins has a Los Angeles attorney representing him through a local attorney, he said,
Cousins vs. Field
Preliminaries indicated it may be four purported O’Dea first cousins versus the field .of 365 further re-
moved relatives, dispatches said.
The purported first cousins, all residents of Ireland, are Mrs. Mary Lynch McCarthy of Limerick, Bridget Lynch Woulfe of O’Brien’s Bridge in County Clare, James Lynch of Six-Mile Bridge, and James O'Dea of Kilmihil, County Clare.
BUTLER INVITES NEW GLASS TO CAMPUS
Young men and women who are contemplating enrolling at Butler University have been invited to visit the campus and faculty members by Dr. Daniel S. Robinson, the university’s new president. Information will be available on tuition, courses of study, entrance fees and various university regulations. Most of the administration offices and that of Mrs. Ruth Deming, acting registrar and examiner, ‘will be open until the start of the fall term. Freshmen week ‘activities will be held Sept. 6-10 at Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall and the Fieldhouse. Upper classmen are to register Monday, Sept. 11, from 8 a. m. to § p. m. Instruction for all students will start Sept. Mrs, or 2 enifgded that transcripts and official records of beginning students and students new at the university should be in the registrar’s office three weeks before the start of the term. A tea for prospective women students will be held on the campus Thursday, Aug. 3. Miss Lucile
'Craigle, a senior, is in charge of arrangements. -
Prof. George A. Schumacher, alumni secretary, will have charge of the program which is to follow the tea, =
After a childhood of slinking along the ground it is likely to become bolder and sneak up a tree to do some second-stary work.
Sticks to Marshland
Poison sumac (alis rhus venenata, rhus vernix) confines itself to marshy ground, and may be anything from a small bush to a 25foot tree. Both of these botanical miscreants are more plentiful than usual this year, Conservation Director Frank Wallace warns, since it’s g fine growing year for both the just and the unjust in the vegetable kingdom. So the odds are a little better than even that your next bird walk may. leave you suffering from dermails venenata, which is what you rubbing shoulders with the BE You will find poison ivy all the way from the rock-ribbed ‘coast of Nova Scotia to Florida's balmy beaches, not forgetting the Okanagan Valley in British Columbia. The dark green, oily leaves grow in clusters of three, with the edges slightly or entirely toothed. When mature, the plant bears a white, waxy berry, which is just as poisonous as the leaves.
Favors Isolated Places
Any uncultivated area is a congenial stamping ‘ground for the malevolent ivy, with woodland bor-| ders, fences, walls and isolated trees or poles as favored spots. The sumac leaves are likewise of a slick dppearance, are sharply pointed and grow in bunches of from seven to 13. Like its nonpoisonous brother, the poison sumac has blooms and berries. But the villain sprouts its blossoms in the noich betweeri leaves and stems, while the nonpoisonous shrub’s blossom grows, as the saying is, out on a limb. Poison sumac is a little less prevalent than ivy, but it packs a mightier wallop once it gets to you. Mr. Wallace flouts the theory that dermatitis venenata sufferers get that way simply by walking in the vicinity of poison plants. It’s simply that there are some subtle ways of picking up the poison.
Warns About. Clothing
The worst thing you can 'do, Mr. Wallace says, is to run home and
‘| bathe after contact with the plant,
and then put on the same clothing.
day, retains the virulent oil. Another innocent cause of suffering is the family dog. Being immune, he may run through the noxious weed to his heart’s delight.
your lap, and you're in for if. In fact, Mr. Wallace says, you might better have wallowed in it yourself.
MEN DEFEAT COEDS IN BRIDGE TOURNEY
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, July 19 (U. P.) —Men, it seems, are better players than women, according toa
tourney, where men players carried off all top honors at duplicate contract. Coeds attributed their complete rout at the hands of the male players to “too much talking at sorority bridge parties, which spoils our game.” The men students said they played less frequently but made more of a sciente of it.
® Just “Charge It” Quality Clothes for the Family on Easy Credit Terms.
JULIAN GOLDMAN SFSE
118-122 N. Pennsylvania St.
[FLEAS
BI (Ev 2%: 1% Fo Are a
menace to health and
cleanliness. Proper treatment will
eradicate these pests quickly. Get Rid of Them 100% Kill | Guaranteed
{APOLIS TIM
young and a climber in its maturity. |"
Por clothing, unless it is aired for a
But let him come in and jump into |
University of Minnesota bridge
“ LAA h
Vacationists
potent is poison sumag,
MAPS SETUP ON CRACKERS BAN
Smith, State Fire Marshal, Given Control Under New Law, Effective Aug. 1.
State Fire Marshal Clem Smith today began mapping enforcement of the hew law banning the sale of fireworks to the public, effective Aug... The law, passed by the last Legislature, places enforcement control in the hands of the State marshal. Mr. Smith’s powers were clarified in. an opinion handed down by Attorney General Omer S. Jackson. The opinion stated that the law gives the marshal complete control over issuing all permits for public displays. ’ “The marshal may designate fire prevention group officials, fire chiefs, police chiefs or sheriffs to
issue the permits or issue all of them himself,” the opinion stated.
mitted to set off fire works without a permit. In order to get'a permit, sponsors of the display must have a fireworks: factory representative or other expert to supervise it.
1086 IN ADVANCED NOTRE DAME WORK
Times Special NOTRE DAME. Ind. ,. July 19—A total of 1086 graduate students are enrolled in Notre Dame University’s 22d annual summer school session. Of these 370 are laymen and 716 are priests, sisters and brothers of religious commounities. Seven orders of priests and brothers are in residence at Notre Dame, and 31 communities of teaching sisters are represented. The largest in the first .category is the Congregation of Holy Cross with 160 priests,
and in the second, the Religious Sisters of Mercy, 97 of whose members are taking work for university credit.
‘Summer school commencement exercises will be held on Aug. 1.
Delicious Retreshi
= crats generally if I would do so. 1
gard, and shall be glad at any time to confer with you on the subject of
=1 Another Letter Quoted
Under the law, no one is per-
brothers and seminarians enrolled, |
MNUTT-FARLEY FEUD IS LAID TO ‘RIVALRY FEARS
Steer Hoosiers From _*F.D.R.in 1932.
Times Special
faded letters were used Mere today
Peters was partly responsible for keeping the Indiana delegates off the Roosevelt bandwagon at the 1932 Democratic National Convention. The. letters were produced by] Joseph H. Leib, who said he feels that the seven-year-old political feud between Postmaster General Farley and Mr. McNutt is based more on fear of rivalry than the facts from the Chicago convention. One of the letters which Mr. Leib dug from his files today was writ: ten by Mr. Peters as chairman of the Indiana Democratic State Central Committee and dated Dec. 186, 1931. It contains this paragraph: “I am sure it would be unwise for me, as Democratic State Chairman, to become actively identified with a movement on behalf of any candidate for President. I am sure I will be severely criticized by the Demo-
have my own preference in that reyour letter.”
‘The letter referred to by Mr. Peters was one seeking his support for: Roosevelt, Another Lieb letter is from former Senator Dill (D. Wash.) dated May 7, 1932, when the Senator was busy rounding up Roosevelt convention delegates. It reads: “I have your letter of May 5 and have read it with much interest. As I told you in my other letter, it matters little to me personally about coming to Indiana, but I hope it will be possible for the Democrats there to select a Roosevelt delegation and instruct them for him if possible. “While I had hoped that Gover-] nor Roosevelt mignt win California, nevertheless, even if Indiana should not vote for him on the first ballot I think he will have over 600 votes, possibly 625 or 640. With Indiana, he is sure to haye around 650 votes on the first ballot.’ I think there is no question at all. about his nomination if he gets such a tremendous vote on the first ballot.
Had Doubts About Peters A
At the bottom of this letter is the] following postscript: “P, S. About Mr. Peters. I have heard from several sources that he is not so much of a Roosevelt man and that he is playing ball with other candidates. It seems that he has Mr, Farley fooled. into believing that he is definitely for Roosevelt.” The Indiana State Democratic convention was June 21-22, 1932, a week before the national convention. Mr. Leib contends that he arranged for and received a message of greeting to the convention from Governor Roosévelt, turned it over to Mr. Peters and that it never was read.
ley most of the time and felt then that Mr. Peters was able to deliver
three ballots, Mr. Leib ‘said. The other 16 votes from the State were divided as follows: Baker, 8; Smith, 2; Byrd, Richie, 2, and Traylor, 2 - Mr. Peters was at one time reported to have a friendly relationship with the latter candidacy. But, nevertheless, Mr, Farley always has felt that Mr. Peters was loyal to him and gave him his present assignment\as Federal Housing Administrator in Indiana after he had been ousted from the state chairmanship by the McNutt: forces.
2;
Tremendous Value! SCHOOL DRESSES Use Our Lay-Away
Leib Claims Peters Helped |
WASHINGTON, July 19. ==Timein an attempt to show that R. Earl]
Chews Up 5 5 Billsand Then Can’ tPay Fi ine
MEMPHIS, Tenn. ir 18 (U. P.).—A crowd gathered to - watch Britt Lee chew up $5 « bills. He had chewed up four when the police arrived. They arrested him on charges of disturbing the peace and being intoxicated. When they got to the police station they found he wasn't drunk, so they ° dropped that charge. In court today, the judge fined Lee $11 for disturbing the peace. He _ didn’t have the money ‘to‘pay "his fine. :
“| been my os within its walls.
ACADENY: OF ARTS To NOTE BI BIRTHDAY,
L RAD, July 19 «. P.) The 175th anniversary of the Leningrad, Academy of Arts will be celebrated next November. of Russia's greatest artists hyve e academy ‘now has departments in painting, sculpture and architécture as well as a general course in the
arts.
BIG,COOL J GLASSES
At Chicago he was with Mr, Far-|
fnore than the 14 votes which In-| | diana cast for Roosevelt on the first
| Hollywood oress skor |
TR
[J
Bring the Children
: Each Wave Guaranteed! Our Reputation Is Our Bond!
$2.50 MAXINE Wave,
en 1.89 10
$3.45 NESTLINE Wave, 1.95
2.15
‘coupo $4 NEW SHEENE, with coupon .... $4.46 KOOLOX, ‘with coupon .... $5 TRU-ARTES, Individually Pack--
ed, with coupon..
esc essere
BEAUTY MART
Shop No. 13 on Traction Lh :
Shop Ne. 2 ey College AT
BEAUTE-ARTES' P-E-R-M-A-N-E
water shampoo with individual package of fresh supplies. NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY—NO WAITING
SALONS’ -N-T-§
Vacation | Time Specials
For active, pleasure loving women, our waves will hold up under all conditions.
All Guaranteed Waves
] manents in sale include hair cut, soft and finger wave
$5.00 HELENE -
CURTIS Machineless 3 45
$7.50 PARK AVE. Machine-
os, with $8 78
‘with with coupon .... 90 q
coupon coupon 10 with coupon: .... CLAUDE TE NT d price oe
52.45 1¢ STATE LICENSED ar
ESTABLISHED 1925 Bring Coupons to Any One of These Three Modern Stops ’
$7.50 EUGENE Wave, $8.50 DUCHESS, 95 $10 FREDERICS, $8 (Not include half- \ Compl lete 1 00
ryan
601 ~. E. Cor.
Some
bo. SORES + rons ae SERENE SESE EEN HSL SS Bl Sl
LI-
\ Coca-Cola goes along... ..for ‘the pause that refreshes
When you’re out for an outing, you’
B18 ng
good time, but a
“thirsty one. Make it I with ice-cold Coca-Cola . . . for the pa
refreshes. It dues things for thirst that youl |
COCA-COLA BOTTLING co. .
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
