Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 July 1939 — Page 2
6.0. WARNED
T0 AVOID PETTY
PARTISAN ROWS
Roosevelt to Seek 3d Term, Loring Declares at - Lebanon Rally.
Tinea Spevidi » LEBANON, Ind. July 20.—President Roosevelt will run for a third term, but is fighting a losing battle, Robert H. Loring, Rising Sun, said ‘at a Boone County rally of
Young Republicans at Lindbergh
School here ‘last night. Guests at the meeting included members of the Columbia Club of Indianapolis. Mr. Loring is assistant secretary of the State Young Republicails organization. “There is but one issue here, : here in this district, here in Indiana and here in the entire country ‘and that is Roosevelt,” Mr. Loring declared. “Party lines are to be shattered and loyal Democrats will be fighting for the first time shoulder to shoulder in a political battle. ‘Make No Mistake’ “Make no mistake about it—it's the New Deal against the.nation and Franklin Roosevelt °is fighting a losing battle.” : “And don’t forget this,” he continued. “Franklin Roosevelt will run for President in 1940. I'll -bet my bottom dollar on it. He's the New Deal's last chance and they all know it. And if he should be elected for the third term it will * be the end of our form of government as we know it today. “This is the last roundup for free self-government in the United States. This will be the most important election we've ever had and if Roosevelt wins it will be the last one.
Urges G. O. P. Cohesion
“Let's you and I remember in the face of this all-important election that there are still too darned many New Dealers running around loose in these woods here for us to take any pot shots at our fellow Republicans. Let's remember that there is only one thing that can lick us in 1940. and that’s ourselves.” He urged Republicans to submerge any political ambitions they have personally and to forget factionalism_ in the interest of the party. TE ED
|
These machines must . ciated. derwoods, Smiths and removal prices.
{
cation practice. : 1
We are now located
| 255 Century Bldg.
|
To. Conserve Time for
Return to His-Plants.
By JOE COLLIER Times Staff Writer
BLUFFTON, Ind, July.20—One of the most important pieces of equipment Charles Deam- once used in writing about Indiana’s flora was an ordinary flatiron.
ed more rest and must take maps at specified intervals. ' So he would
lie down.
grip on the iron would relax and the -iron: would drop to" the floor; bang. That . would awaken Mr. Deam and he would get up and continue his work.
Explained His Method
“You get your greatest relaxation just as you doze off to sleep.” he would explain when friends
‘chided him about his time thrift-
iness and his ingeniousness.
and get more relaxation?” “Don’t need to,” he'd say. is enough.”
“Once
known and most consulted botanist in the United States. This summer- the State Conservation Department is bringing out a book on the flora of the state that he wrote. His wark now lis correcting proofs. | He lives in an ample and cool home on the banks of the Wabash iver here and his vast grounds bntain more than 500 different species of trees, and plants.
Trees Are Marked
| These are all marked and he has 8 complete history of each in his files—where obtained, when planted and subsequent data. Scarcely day passes that someone doesn’t call on him and ask to be taken through the garden. As busy as hé is, Mr. Deam invariably obliges. . He wanders down the paths speaking crisply about this tree or .that—about the circumstance of our relatively early frost here causing his English walnut trees loose its fruit before it is ripe el a thousand other: details that combine to maké a fascinating two hours whether one knows about botany. Mr. Deam is so interested in the
Typewriter Specials! |
We will offer for a limited time a few ex-. cellent reconditioned Woodstock Typewriters at a special price of only $22.50.
In addition we also have Royals, UnRemingtons at special
Students . . . see us about our esol student rental rate for a late style typewriter for va-
Woodstock Typewriter Co.
As he dozed off to sleep; his:
SE ————
e seen to be appre-
at our new address.
LI-4712
nut-bearing trees that he sent for|
Invents Own ‘Alarm Clock’
‘Relaxation So He Can j
The doctor had told him he need-
grasp a flatiron in one ‘hand and
|“If that’s so,” they would reply, “why don't you doze off again
| Mr. Detm Is one of the best- }
Charles Depm . . . among the trees he loves.
Doctor Ordered a Walk a Day for cdi odind, So Indiana Druggist. Ascended to T 0p as Botanist|
8 other person. He has collected in
“he has followed every stream and
¢
still,
i a walk a day for his health. Just
seeds of English walnuts that came from trees that grew the farthest north and sti bore ripe fruit.
He got eight seeds and seven of them now are seedlings in his garden. He is 74, and he talks excitedly about how he will know, 15 years from now, whether these will bear ripe fruit in this climate.
Has 65,000 Plants Then inside his office, which is’
a wing of the house, he will show|p
some of his collection of more than 65,000 plants he has collected from Indiana and which, on his<death, will go to Indiana University.
Those who know say, it is by far
STRIKE SETTLED
AT SINGER PLANT
moan 900 Workers Expected to Return to Jobs in Two Weeks.
SOUTH BEND, Ind, July 20 (U.
P.) —A three-month strike at the Singer Sewing Machine Manufac-
turing Co. plant was at an end today, Dale 1. Parshall, plant manager, announced. He said that the agreement with Local 917 of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers Union of America was reached through Max Schaefer, representative of the State Labor Commission. Approximately '900 workers are expected to return during the next two weeks. Pickets will be withdrawn Saturday-:and 200 men are to start Monday to prepare the plant for work. The strike started April 11 when the plant hired a 19-year-old: girl who had not been employed by Singer previousiy. The union contended that former employees should
be given preference and the company replied that no former employees were qualified for. the job
|| in question.
HOT-WEATHER SPAGHETTI DISHES
Spaghetti With Cold Sliced Ham
-
® Heat Heinz Cooked Spaghetti according
to directions on the label. Arrange slices of of platter. de. Arrange he spaghetti
cold. cooked ham on one side Then heap spaghetti on other si sprigs of water cress between t and ham. You'll find this
d-looking,
quick-to-fix dish grand for family lunches
and sunporch suppers!
in moderate oven (375°F.) 45 or until onion and brown
i ! 1 ! ) Bd. T:
Spaghetti With Sausage Cakes
- @ Place 1 large (2414-0z.) tin Heinz Cooked Spaghetti in greased casserole, then cover top with very thin slices of 1 medium onion. Form 1 lb. sausage into cakes, brown on both sides in skillet, and ar< . range over top of onions. Cover and bake
on slices are tender. Uncover ‘ slightly. (Serves 4 or §.)
THAT WIN APPLAUSE »
Pe UP wilted appetites — cut down cookstove hours—by serving Heinz Cooked Spaghetti often! Ready to heat and eat as it comes from the tin, this substantial one-dish meal is grand alone —or mixed with leftovers! Heinz chefs make their own luscious spaghetti - —drench it in a spicy, cheese-flavored sauce of Heinz tomatoes. The work is all done for you! Why not keep your kitchen cool by serving
minutes —
A
Heinz Cooked Spaghetti?
COOKED
SPAGHETTI
NZ
‘| blaze. was b
the finest collection in existence. It is nicely cased, beautifully put up, and laboriously documented. He has a notation of each plant he has collected and its county. * “If I'm ever collecting there again,” he points out, “I'll know I don’t need to look for those that are listed.”
Friends of Mr. Deam say that he eal and does sit down with other ople’s collections when invited to look them over and verify them and | go lover thousands of specimens. “That's right. That's right. No. that's something-or-other (giving the correct name).”
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., July 20
freedom wil be arraigned on kidnaj
Court tomorrow.
Mark Storen, Prosecutor, said he would ask that the ‘death’ penalty ‘be voted against them.
The convicts were Richard Sweet, Alphonse = Skusewich and Earl Niverson, named in indictments returned yesterday by the County Grand Jury after a two-day investigation. They were served with warrants immediately in their solitary confinement cells at the state prison. It was believed they would be moved ‘to court under shackles tomorrow. The convicts seized Mrs. Ruth Joiner, Crawfordsville, as she toured the prison June 7, and rushed her into a prison physician’s office while they bartered with Warden Alfred Dowd for guns, a car, and a path to freedom.
Mrs. Joiner was freed when guards and state police rushed the room in a barrage of gunfire. She was wounded in the melee but had recovered sufficiently to appear befqre the Grand Jury.
Others who testified were Warden Dowd, his secretary, Ed Wetzel, who was wounded during the rescue; L. C. Schmuhl, deputy warden; Joe Piotrowski, a guard who was knifed: by the three convicts; Le Roy Hunt, a fourth convict who was forced to join the break attemp?, Mark Roser, prison classification department head; August Funk, assistant deputy warden, and eight State Police who joined in blasting out the ‘convicts.
The indictments charged they ‘unlawfully and feloniously kidnaped and detained Mrs. Joiner for the purpose of obtaining from Warden Dowd certain property, dom.” guns, automobile and freeom
MANIA FOR GASOLINE ODOR FATAL TO BOY
Times Special NEW CASTLE, Ind, July 20. — Gasoline fumes for which he apparently had an irresistible craving today had caused the death of 15-year-old Gene Cummins, Straughn. Coroner Ralph Niblock, upon advice of two physicians that such manias were not uncommon among the adolescenta.returned a verdict that death was due to excessive inhalation of the fumes. Young Cummins’ body was fpund near an open can of gasoline at the home. His mother told physicians and the coroner that her son had had a pronounced’ desire to smell gasoline for some time.
BLAZE SPREADING IN YELLOWSTONE PARK
YELLOWSTONE PARK, Wyo. July 20 (U. P.).—A forest fire in Yellowstone National Park spread rapidly through virgin timber on Mirror Plateau today, defying the efforts of 600 volunteers, CCC enrollees and Forest Service employees to contral it. The fire, which broke out Saturday, was under control until a heavy. wind fanned it into activity late yesterday and whipped the flames into the virgin tree tops. The around White
Lake and advan * toward Tern
‘| Lake in a remote section of the. park
“destination, was wasting time in Mr.
3 Convicts May Die for Escape Plot Kidnaping’
(U.P) Three state prison convicts who attempted to escape June 27 by holding a 28-year-old woman welfare worker as a hostage while they bargained with prison officials for ping charges in La Po.te Superior
STRIKE IS NEAR END
l' Deam’s Book on Indiana Flora to Be Published By State Conservation Offices This Summer.
‘Or perhaps hell look up and question this way: “You sure you got that there?” “Yes,” the collector will say. : «Hfimph, 1 didn’t know it grew in that township.” Knows State Intimately
Charles Deam probably knows Indiana more intimately than any
every township. of every county and
ditch.’ He Knows, because he has an excellent memory, an astonishing number of farmers. Friends say that on some occasions when they have been driving with him he will suddenly
up against the windshield. He will hop out of the car, dart around behind some tree or fence and come out with a rare flower which they insist was hidden from view on the road. They will argue with him that he has a mysterious new sense about the preserice of flowers ‘and he will describe their arguments as noasense. 2 ‘ “But,” .they will dargue, “you couldn't have seen that flower from the car.” “Of course I saw it.” he will reply impatiently, “or why would I have stopped.” And that’s that, except that the friends are of the same opinion
Formerly a Druggist
Mr. Deam was a druggist and didn’t know a thing about botany when a doctor ordered him to take
walking, for health and no afher
Deam’s opinion. So he began to collect plants. He got so fascinated with the hobby that he soon had a respectable col-
lection and spent more and more of |
his time at the store mounting and classifying them.. : A few years ago some wandering tree ‘surgeons noticed a crack in ‘one of his trees and offered to fix it for a fee.
He’ asked them how they would
do it and other technical questions|'
which| they answered wrong. “Listen,” he said as he blew up, “you’ve been reading my books but you didn’t read them right.” He didn’t do anything about the tree and it got well by itself.
ON HOUSING PROJECT
unit Federal Housing project were expected to return to their jobs today to end their week-old strike.
Negotiations and labor leaders continued toward a compromise. Meanwhile, a Federal mediator participating in the negotiations threatened that “if the
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation will be called in’ to investigate.” ; Officials of the Vincennes Sand and Gravel Co. where cement blocks are manufactured reportedly agreed to organize ‘part of the labor in their plant, but refused to grant de-
Haute, district head of the International Operators and Engineers union, who demanded that a union operator be placed in charge of the steam curing: plant at the gravel company, it was said. Gravel company officials said that common labor has always filled that post.
contractor on the project, charged today that union officials “are prac= ‘ticing Qiscriminasion Sgsingt us.”
PLANS ARE MAPPED FOR TOMATO SHOW
Times Special
LAFAYETTE, Ind. July 20.—Ar-
tomato show and tomato-picking contest were being made by a com-
Fieldmen’s and Fertilizer Salesmen’s
School at Purdue University today. The committee will select a date and place for the show, to be held in the week of Aug. 14. It will be sponsored by the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce and Junior Chamber of Commerce, Indiana Farm Bureau, Purdue Agricultural Extension Department, Indiana Canners Association = and the Tomato Tournament, Inc. A contest will be held to determine which Indiana farmer grew the best hamper of tomatoes.
at Kempton, Tipton Counly, early in September. ._. The annual tomato inspectors’ school - to train young men how to inspect tomatoes will be held at the Klondike Canning Co., Klondike,
Ind., July 24 to 26. ,
DIES AFTER ACCIDENT
| BEDFORD, Ind. July 20 (U. P.). Mrs. Everett Jones, 68, of near West Baden, died yesterday from shock after an automobile accident Sunday. She was pinned beneath the car when it skidded and overturned on loose gravel near Orleans. Physicians ‘said she was injured only superficially physically.
FALL FATAL TOL FARMER
LA PORTE, Ind. July 20 (U. PJ. —Elon M. Seymour, A La Porte
VINCENNES, Ind. July 20 (U. 'P.)—Striking workers on the 42-|
between contractors|
plans. are not satisfactory, an agent|
mands of O. B. Soucie of Terrt|.
C. E. Brunson, St. Louis, general]:
rangements for the annual state
mittee appointed at the Tomato|:
BEDFORD DOCTORS PROTEST NEW LAW|
BEDFORD, Ind, July 20 wv. B).
protesting against new state laws requiring all indigents needing
hospitals -at Indianapolis.
lution asking repeal of the laws and authorizing the president to name a committee to pass on cases in which a petitioh has been pre-
versity hospital. If the committee rejects the petition the ‘Court would be asked to refuse permission to transmit the patient to Indianapolis, Judge John C. Grannainan of the Lawrence-Jackson - Circuit said he would co-operate with the physicians’ programy.
WHEATLAND, Ind, July 20 (U. P.).—Wilma Jean Weible, 21-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs:
Howard Weible, was killed yesterday when a huckster’s truck backed over her. She had followed her
—The Lawrence Coynty Medical] Association today was on record asjmedical care to be sent to university | -
The - association adopted a reso-|
pared to send a patient to a uni-|
Court | .—Puneral services will be held
{former superintendent of public
INFANT KILLED BY TRUCK
screech the brakes and throw them :
mother to the truck while she pur-|
Forecasts He May Die;
Body F- Found
: EDINBURG, Ind, July 20 U.P.) ~—Before he. went_ to bed Tuesday, Elmer Israel remarked to neighbors: “If you . don’t see my window blinds ‘up tomorrow, youd: better come over and look me up. Yesterday the neighbors noticed his window blinds were down and found his body. Acting Coroner A. W. Records said he had died from a heart attack.
FUNERAL TOMORROW "FOR J. H. SHIPP, 54
Times Special WASHINGTON, nd.
July 20. here tomorrow for John H. Shipp,
schools here who died yesterday after 10 years’ illness. He was 54. Mr. Shipp, who came here from Mitchell, headed the school system for 10 years before retiring because of illness. He was educated at the Indiana State Teachers’ College,
Valparaiso University, Oakland City |
College and the University of Chicago. His wife and three children sur-
Io FRANKLIN BOYS 12-DAY BICYCLE LOAF
ON °
Times Special, + + bel a * FRANKLIN, , July 20.—The 12-day bicycle oe. ’ something new and different: in games played on two wheels, was under way here tody. “Four high schocl youths have
. |started a continuous 268-hour ride
around a city block here for some reason that hasn’t been explained. The riders are Mark Bowen, Hollace Chastain, Richard Lagle and Jones McQuinn. They ride in two- | hour shifts’ and have perfected a method of changing riders without stopping the bicycles. Three of them have jobs and that complicates things. One is a waiter, another a newspaper carrier and another a newspaper mailing-room employee.
POTTER NAMED ON FOUNDATION BOARD
LAFAYETTE, Ind. am, (U. P.).—A. A. Potter, dean of the Purdue University schools of engineering, has been appointed to a four-year term as trustee of the Engineering Foundation, it was announced today. : The foundation is an organiza‘tion of engineering societies. Its |purpose is to further research in science and engineering and ad-
chased some vegetables.
vance the profession.
The picking contest is to be held|
County farmer, died yesterday from njuries ved last week wk
AMOUR fur of 1040
—uhdisputed fashion favorite
of Parisl
Unparalleled for
richness and velvety beauty. Luxuriously deep-furred, yet
supple
and light as fabric. Pel-
tries from the Province of
trends.
in Wasson's August Sal Furs from
os low re of
: AA $297.50 to PA Ask About Our Special/ Fur Charge Account —
Terms of Payment Arra
ged te Your Satisfaction
