Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 September 1939 — Page 8
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TUESDAY, SEPT. 5, 1939
COP ERRS AT LUNCH leaving a forwarding address. BURLINGTON, Vt, Sept. 5 (U.| Whether this meant he forgot to P).—A policeman was suspended |punch the timeclock was not ree
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES | . Is 389 Years Old . Getting Ready for he Judging ois
PAGE § . A Bit of Spice in Fair Life . . .
. This Book
Those blue ribbon cakes at the judges know just how they taste.
over for a good bite.
Marcella Patterson of Fairland was trying to sample a spice cake but she'll have to wait until the Fair is And did you ever eat a week-old cake?
State Fair look fine but only the told Fair officials he used it in the
The Rev. William Heine, 1634 S. State St. Biblical explanations printed in 1550, in Witteburg, Germany.
displays a book of He North Judson church, where Lieut.
Gov. Henry F. Schricker’s parents attended.
Just before the judges inspected his Herford bull, Donald “Gilstrat,
10-year-old Bedford Fair exhibitor, the comb. He didn’t finish “in the
first-year B. & O. Potato Club contest.
for “going out to lunch* without | corded.
« « « But First to H. H. Mayer, Inc. Optical Depariment
Give your children a break this semester—have their eyes examined-—if they need glasses let our registered optometrist fit them with glasses that will help them see and study better. Poor eyesight retards their knowledge.
OR. J. W. FARRIS
IN CHARGE
Phots
put on the finishing touches with money,” in this class, but won the
1
FINAL ARGUMENTS SET IN MOAG TRIAL
and There at Fair
Kicked in the right leg by a horse topped with the championship pur-
lin one of the stables, 15-year-old ple ribbon.
CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind, Sept. 5 (U. P) —Final prosecution arguments in the trial of J. Cameron! Moag, New York broker, will start at 1 p. m. tomorrow, Special Judge Howard Hancock said today. Evidence in the case against Moag, charged with being an ac-| cessory to Margaret Cheney in| making false entries in the books | of the Tippecanoe Loan & Trust| Co. of Lafayette, ended yesterday! when the defense rested its case. | Miss Cheney was found guilty of] the charge in 1935. Moag, the sole defense witness, denied generally all charges against him. Before the broker took the stand, | Judge Hancock overruled a defense motion for a directed verdict of acquittal. Miss Cheney was a witness for the State yesterday.
|
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{and he was discharged.
| noon,
{wood made the rainbow look pale] | were layers colored lavendar, white,
{had green frosting—and then was
8 & & State Fair traffic police, annoyed with motorist honking incessantly in trying to drive through the large crowds, advised the offending drivers to “try using 8 #4 & your brakes instead of the horn.” W. R. Johns of Beech Grove en- Rami tered the largest and most nearly Fair visitors paused longer than perfect dahlia at the Fair. It was |usual before the prize-winning phoa brilliant yellow one, almost a |tograph submitted by Clifford Reese. foot in diameter. Titled “Lest We Forget,” it is a phogd & 4 tograph of a cannon outlined
against barren trees. By demonstrating the best ability | 3 8 8
in dressing a horse for the show ring and Oi the horse without | Mrs. Frank Kirkpatrick of |assistance or whip, David Munt-| Frankfort can’t have the 450 zinger of Van Wert, O, won the| cakes Hoosiers have brought to grooms’ contest. No Hoosiers have ... Fair but she has eaten samwon this contest since 1932, year) ples of every one. In her expert after the competition was started. opinion, Hoosier cakes compare favorably with those made anywhere,
Herbert Thomas, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Thomas of Glens Valley,
was taken to Riley Hospital yesterday afternoon. X-ray disclosed the bone was bruised but not fractured,
= 2 = It takes 62 ushers, ticket sellers
and ticket takers to handle the $ 5 8 | Grand Stand crowds which usual-
Far from the noise and crowds of the Fair are the new Youth buildings on the northeast corner of the grounds. In dedicating these sleek structures, Lieut. Gov. Henry F. Schricker said, “How much better it is that we pour half a million |dollars to build the character of our youth in buildings such as these instead of pouring the money into bullets to destroy character.”
ly number 10,000 during the Grand Circuit races in the after-
2 = = Mrs. Hollis Worman of Green-|
with her prize-winning cake. There
pink, green, yellow and brown—it
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JUVENILE UNITS MAY BE MERGED
County Council Plan to Consolidate Home And Court.
The County Council is considering a plan to consolidate Juvenile Court and Detention Home, it was! learned today. According to the plan the County would abandon the present wii
Detention Home at 538 W. New york | St. and lease a new and smaller | building to house the Juvenile Court and Home, Consideration for the move was prompted, it is said, by a suggestion by Juvenile Court Judge Wilfred Bradshaw at a Council budget review session last week, that a building, the size of the present Detention Home was not needed by the welfare agencies.
Rental Now $2100
The present building is leased at an annual rental of $2100. The lease expires Jan. 1, 1940. Judge Bradshaw told Councilmen that many of the detentions in the (Home were not necessary and that la smaller home would force welfare agencies, with access to the institution, to place children in foster homes for temporary detention purposes, | The plan to include the establishment of the Juvenile Court in the same building with the Home is not new, previously having been
I {urged. The setup has been urged ll|| by social agencies. {|| Juvenile Court is now located in
the basement of the Courthouse. Opnosit.on Foreseen | Judge Bradshaw has attempted to {move his court to the fourth floor of (the Courthouse, but projected plans | for the removal of court records now have stacked on that floor to make way for the court have not ma-
I |terialized.
Any plan to decrease the size of
[2 Detention Home is expected to
{meet strong opposition by the
| Home’s Auxiliary, |clared the present
space in the
I | Home is needed to permit segrega{Ill tion of children. i
| RUSSIA IN JAPAN'S
AXIS SPOT--TROTSKY,
MEXICO CITY, Sept. 5 (U.P) .— exiled former Soviet leader and associate of Lenin, charged today in his first statement on treaty that Russia had | taken Japan's place in the Rome- | Berlin axis. He said the treaty had “broken the Comintern’s backbone” and | “provoked chaos in the minds of the workers.” (The Comintern is the Third In-
||| ternationale, the Communist organs
|ization devoted to speading coms [munism throughout the world.) “The pact is a capitulation of
||| Stalin before Fascist imperialism, |
with the end of preserving the So-| viet oligarchy,” he said. | “Stalin, above all, is afraid of war,
| tifies to this. with
Stalin cannot make | discontented workers,! a decapitated Red Army.| In reality the U. 8. 8S. R. took Japai} s place in the structure of the! ax
FORMER JUDGE OF
FT. WAYNE, Ind, Sept. 5 (U.P).! —The body of former Judge John | Fletcher Kelton of the Wabash! Circuit Court was returned today to | his home in North Manchester. He died last night at the Methodist! Hospital here of coronary throm-| bosis. Judge Kelton had practiced law! at North Manchester for 24 years. | He was 10.
Considers |
which has de-|
| the Russian-German non-ag-| || | gression
His policy of capitulation to- | ward Japan in recent years tes- |
WABASH COURT DIES,
LABOR ‘HOSTILITY’ CITED BY WHITNEY
PRINCETON, Ind, Sept. 5 (U. P.) —“Labor is facing an ultrahostile world,” A. F. Whitney, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, told 35,000 persons at a southern Indiana Labor Day meeting yesterday. Labor has always faced hostility, Mr. Whitney said, but warned that it faces it twofold today. Reactionaries at home and a European war have intensified labor's situation, he said. “You will now be subjected to a drive by capitalists to drag you into a war in order to save what they |are pleased to call our liberties and our democracy,” he warned.
OUT-OF-STATE
Take Championships at State Fair.
large crowds of spectators at the State Fair yesterday.
In the hog judging, both the| grand champion and reserve grand | champion barrows were owned by | out-of-state persons. Arnold Moore | of Union City, Okla., Wolcott, Ind, owned the grand] champion, a Poland China, and Stewart & Klein, Camden, O., exhibited a Duroc to win the reserve| championship. Three Clark County boys won the junior dairy cattle judging contest and will represent Indiana in the national contest at the International Golden Gate Exposition at San. Francisco next month. The | winning trio is composed of Joe| | Erni, Bob Jackson and Newton Hatfield, who were coached by Clayton | Dixon, assistant Clark County agri-| cultural agent. | There were 75 entries in the seven classes of the Gold Medal Colt | show. Scott Henry of Marion! {County was winner in the grade colt class; Lynnwood Farms, Carmel, Percheron stallions; H. C. Horneman, Perrvsville, Belgian stallions: Lynnwood Farms, Carmel, Percheron fillies; James L. Scott, Greentown. Belgian fillies; J. C. Penney-Gwinn, Noblesville, Percheron get-of-sire: |H. C. Horneman, Perrysville, Bel | glan get-of-sire.
SHELBY COUNTY | HAS | FIVE NEW T. B. CASES
SHELBYVILLE, Ind. Ind, Sept. 5. —| The fourth Shelby County tubercu-| losis clinic of the year discovered | five new positive cases in 22 per sons | examined. The clinics are sponsored by the Shelby County Medical Association and the Shelby County Tuberculosis Association.
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UPSTATE BUDGET PARED Times Special MICHIGAN CITY, Ind, Sept. 5. —Michigan City’s 1940 budget and tax levy ordinance was slashed 7 cents to $1.14 and then passed by the Common Council.
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HOGS WINNERS
Oklahoma and Ohio Entries :
The Judging of livestock drew)
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